October 2014

The concept of insourcing by corporate legal departments has generated some press recently. Jennifer Smith’s Companies Curb the Use of Outside Law Firms highlighted the issue for law firms and judging by the reaction, it explained for some law firm leaders what has been happening to them. Other writers and commentators (here, here

Invested capital at law firms varies widely and reflects the differing philosophies between firms. The amount invested says something about a law firm’s values, speaks to its fiscal approach and provides commentary about a law firm’s culture. Traditionally, the more capital in a given firm indicated a strong institution with the shared value of fiscal

I am interested in the interaction of a group of people who have a common goal, or a common obsession, each contributing something unique to make something greater than the sum of its parts. I don’t know why, but from day one, that has interested me. – Steven Van Zandt, Bruce Springsteen’s E Street

I’ve seen more people fail because of liquor and leverage – leverage being borrowed money. You really don’t need leverage in this world much. If you’re smart, you’re going to make a lot of money without borrowing. – Warren Buffett

It is typical of all businesses, including law firms, to utilize some form(s) of

Some recent news and commentary drives home the idea that the legal industry and its law firm participants are facing transition. Jennifer Smith of The Wall Street Journal reported that more law firm clients are insourcing-taking in work heretofore performed by outside counsel. That development, by some accounts impacting large law firms in particular, occurs

Law firm mergers have continued this year and are approaching last year’s record. For law firms, any number of motivations can lead to merger, but the common denominator is the perception that merger serves the greater good. Despite the onslaught of mergers, a vast number of mergers are less than perfect. And while a