Lexpert Magazine

June 2017

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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50 LEXPERT MAGAZINE | JUNE 2017 | OUTSOURCING | Willis says that, before finalizing the arrangement, McMillan had discussions with the Law Society of Upper Canada about what they were planning to do and how they were proposing to structure it: "We wanted to get their input to make sure McMillan wasn't doing anything that caused the Law Society concern." Blessing duly received, Prefix Legal LLP had to set up accounting, financial man- agement, marketing and its own web page. e new subsidiary was officially unveiled this spring, about 18 months aer that first lunch, with Peter Willis as its Chief Op- erating Officer. Will Prefix be looking at acquiring other types of legal outsourcing companies or technology in areas such as e-discovery, document management, con- tract management or due diligence? "No, we expect the growth from this point for- ward to happen organically," Willis says, "but if something came our way that made sense, we wouldn't rule it out." at's kind of the problem. As firms like McMillan look at ways to bring down costs and grow revenue, they're finding outsourc- ers that specialize in one thing and can of- fer a certain type of work at low cost and high quality. e question becomes not so much whether to use them and their plat- forms, but how. Dating, going steady, marriage — or staying single and using the same tools to build from the ground up? AT THE START OF THIS YEAR, there was something of a small revolution at Mc- Carthy Tétrault LLP, and it speaks volumes outsourcer it's had a relationship with for four years. And it's building an in-house due diligence program with a number of technology providers for use in mergers and acquisitions. "We're testing it out on some deals right now," Peters says. Neither of these will be made available to other law firms: they're for McCarthy clients only. at's important because M&A is frothy high-end legal work and due diligence is an essential piece of it. With a growing num- ber of outsourcers offering due diligence, Peters says it's a "defensive move" to keep the work inside the firm. "We're all competing for this type of work, and if law firm A can find a way to drive more value for certain types of litiga- tion or M&A or whatever, that gives them a competitive advantage in the market." IN THE OLD DAYS — just a few years ago in this fast-moving area — it used to be that the external legal advisor did every- thing on a deal. With an increasing num- ber of in-house counsel coming from the ranks of big firms, many have found it's a better value proposition to do a lot of this work in-house rather than getting a law firm to do it. e next natural progression, Peters be- lieves, would be for in-house law depart- ments to either go directly to outsourcers or — far better from a law-firm perspec- tive — partner with a law firm that can do the work using the same automation or about where the legal market is headed when it comes to outsourcers. e firm ac- quired Wortzmans, a respected firm with about 100 contract lawyers that specializes in litigation support and data governance. Unlike Prefix Legal and LexLocom, these firms aren't going steady; this is a marriage. Wortzmans will remain in its existing of- fice and retain its own email and document servers, but founder Susan Wortzman is now an equity partner at McCarthy. In Toronto, McCarthy's e-discovery people moved over to the Wortzmans office at the start of the year. Here's where the revolution part comes in. While Wortzmans, now a division of McCarthy Tétrault, is maintaining its brand, it "will absolutely work with and continue taking mandates from other law firms and working with clients directly," says Matthew Peters, McCarthy's national innovation leader and a technology part- ner. Other law firms have been very recep- tive to the arrangement, he adds. e financial arrangement? "Susan Wortzman is a partner at McCarthys and, while we're keeping it as a separate division with separate servers, the financials are all part of McCarthys." In other words, in the hyper-competitive Canadian legal market- place, with firms grappling to grow revenue and market share, some law firms will be paying McCarthy for things like e-discov- ery, data searches and data management. It's a whole new world in terms of the tra- ditional law firm model. McCarthy has also built a contract-man- agement platform with a South African "[Formal alliances are] window dressing to some extent. I think a lot of it is a rush by firms to look like they're reacting to changes in the market. People want to look like they're being proactive and minimizing costs by pushing stuff out to outsourcers." SARAH MILLAR OSLER, HOSKIN & HARCOURT LLP

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