Lexpert Magazine

April 2016

Lexpert magazine features articles and columns on developments in legal practice management, deals and lawsuits of interest in Canada, the law and business issues of interest to legal professionals and businesses that purchase legal services.

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LEXPERT MAGAZINE | APRIL 2016 53 | GENERATIONAL CHANGE | THE TRUTH IS, when the last wave of Baby Boomers like Teas- dale joined large corporate law firms in the 1980s, they were small bugs in the workplace hierarchy. ey could forget – or better yet, not even consider – attending con- ferences, direct client interface and offering their perspective. "We were just units of produc- tion," is how Kevin Coon of Baker & McKenzie LLP puts it. But if they worked hard, the Boomers made partner in lockstep with the rest of their cohort. Once admitted, they continued to work hard, championing a work-work- work mentality that saw many at their desk 60 or 70 hours a week, 50 weeks a year. ey could reli- ably be found in the office late into the evening and at some point over the weekend. Coon, now Managing Partner at his firm, says Baby Boomers have to deal with mindsets that are in many respects "dramatically dif- ferent" than their own. "All I have to do is walk through my office at any given time to see it. "e Boomers are in their of- fices and there's a very traditional model. e ratio of assistants to partners is high, they've had their assistant to deliver the work that they've done for the last 20 years. "And then I have the Millen- nials leaving the office at certain times — going to work out in the evening, for example. en they're back on their laptop at 8 o'clock working through to midnight remotely. e ratio of assistants to the younger lawyers is far lower than it is with the Boomers because they're practising differently. ey're doing stuff electronically so they don't need to put it on paper and give it to their assistant who, in turn, puts it in the system — all those kinds of things. "ey also like to work somewhat more collaboratively. If you look at what's hap- trault LLP, which is giving its offices more of a "Starbucks" feel. IF YOU WANT to talk about the young- er generations, the conversation increasing- ly has to include Generation Z. People born pening in most of the downtown buildings now, they're thinking about their work- space, creating a workspace that fosters a more collaborative approach." His firm is in the middle of that exercise, he says. So are firms like McCarthy Té- ANNE RISTIC STIKEMAN ELLIOTT LLP "You need to make sure you've got deep relationships at all levels, which means you're thinking about and planning ahead for the time when either our lawyer or their contact retires. You have to make sure that there's a relationship coming up behind that with the next generation on both sides." PHOTO: SHUTTERSTOCK

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