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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52 LEXPERT MAGAZINE | JUNE 2017 | OUTSOURCING | recruitment numbers much lower than a decade ago, she says. "But this work is at the lower end of sophisticated law work. It's highly repeatable and highly commod- itized, so it's not particularly great training for sophisticated legal thinking … so I don't see it as a huge concern." WHEN IT COMES to managing out- sourcing strategy, Fasken Martineau Du- Moulin LLP, like McMillan, sees "going steady" as the model that makes the most sense to them. Vera Toppings, a partner in the litigation and dispute-resolution group in Toronto, says back in 2013, when the firm was wrest- ling with the explosion of big-document trials and how best to manage e-discovery, it narrowed down its options to building its own group or partnering with an ex- isting provider. She says it quickly became apparent that building their own group would not be the most efficient way, partly because of the upfront investment needed, but also because of the ongoing costs of buying and constantly retraining its own people on quickly evolving technology. In the spring of 2014, the firm put out a request for proposal and eventually signed a "managed-services" agreement with PwC, which came into force in the fall of last year. PwC has the technology capabili- ty as well as worldwide access to e-discovery experts for Fasken's clients in Asia, South America "or anywhere in the world," Top- pings points out. "Before, you'd need a whole team flying from Toronto to somewhere in Asia to do Canadian businesses has been overseas, he says, pointing to the pension funds as an example. "When they go overseas, they don't use Canadian law and they don't use Canadian lawyers." Even in cross-border deals, which ac- count for most of the high-end M&A deals that make headlines, "the lawyering's being done in New York even if it's a Canadian company. at's the frothy work that is fairly price-insensitive. Clients don't really care whether the legal bill is $2 million or $4 million on something like a $2-billion takeover." What they do care about, he says, are the smaller pieces of work, "and they want firms to do it for, say, $300,000. If you say no, then they say they'll go to someone else even though you've been their lawyer of choice for 20 years." Firms see some of the lower-end docu- ment review and due diligence work as a form of education for junior lawyers so, instead of putting an associate on it and billing them out at $350, they've been writ- ing the time off. But at the end of the day, Sweeney says, "that model's not sustain- able. You've got to make money somehow." at pressure is why so many law firms are developing outsourcing strategies, if not outright relationships, with outsourc- ing firms. But it comes with a cost: those junior lawyers. Sarah Millar, who heads the discovery management group at Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt LLP, says an increased use of outsourcing means "firms will take fewer juniors," and it's already caused law firms to rethink staffing, with overall student the data collection, you'd need translators — there'd be a whole symphony you'd have to create every single time. We have clients all around the world, and PwC operates all over the world. ey have people on the ground who have the resources, the infra- structure and the language capabilities to assist our clients directly where they work." USING OUTSOURCERS is "an absolute fact of life," these days, says Sarah Millar at Osler, which is taking a different ap- proach from that of McMillan, McCar- thy and Fasken. Osler favours playing the field — for now. e firm uses a variety of legal services outsourcers, with Deloitte LLP as one of its main suppliers in e-dis- covery and due diligence. In 2014, Deloitte acquired ATD Legal Services, an e-discovery firm launched by former Davies Ward Phillips & Vineberg LLP partner Shelby Austin, and last spring it announced the formation of Conduit Law LLP. "I'm not sure what their plans are for their new firm, but it is certainly going to eat our lunch to some extent," says Mil- lar. Deloitte declined to be interviewed. But Osler is not interested in going steady in any event, says Millar. She points to the alliance formed between Fasken Martineau and PwC for e-discovery servi- ces as an example of why not. PwC oen acts as the auditor on a file, she says, so they may end up being excluded. Also, an Osler client may have its own relationships to bear in mind, and may want a say in who does the work. Millar sees formal alliances between law firms and outsourcers as "win- dow 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." Toppings at Faskens says that is abso- lutely not correct. In arriving at a deal with PwC, she says, the firm negotiated a bulk rate: "e rates our clients are paying are far below what they'd be paying if they just went and scoped out providers each and every time. e goal was ensuring that the rates are significantly below what the mar- ket rate would otherwise be." She also says Fasken's clients aren't bound by the PwC arrangement if they have an outsourcer they prefer, and that the law firm has a "We have clients all around the world and PwC operates all over the world. They have people on the ground who have the resources, the infrastructure and the language capabilities to assist our clients directly where they work." VERA TOPPINGS FASKEN MARTINEAU DUMOULIN LLP

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