Lexpert Magazine

May 2018

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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60 LEXPERT MAGAZINE | MAY 2018 grounds in finance or economics, but hav- ing the ability to communicate value gives them an extra dimension that will help with a law firm's profitability." As Johansen readily acknowledges, his statistics are "imperfect." Most particu- larly, his methodology's focus on the word "pricing" in individuals' titles likely under- estimates the rise of professional pricing and project management at law firms in general. "e legal profession, which is gen- erally slow to adapt, has been slow to adopt a professional approach to pricing and even slower to use the word," he says. By way of example, Bryan Cave, twice ranked as the world's most innovative law firm by the International Legal Technol- ogy Association, includes its pricing pro- fessionals under the rubric of its "Practice Economics" team. (At press time, Bryan Cave had just merged with UK firm Ber- win Leighton Paisner LLP.) It's perhaps not surprising, then, that Jo- hansen has to date failed to turn up a single individual bearing the "pricing" moniker at any Canadian law firm: aer all, the country's legal market has a history of fol- lowing, rather than leading, in its embrace of innovation. Competitive comparisons, aside, however, pricing professionals, project management and AFAs are alive and well at Canada's ma- jor firms. "ere's definitely been growth in the number of pricing professionals at law firms in Canada, but it's hard to come up with specific numbers," Kathuria says. "What I do know is that most of them are at the big firms, whereas in medium-sized firms the pricing professional role tends to be filled by someone who's more into tradi- tional finance department functions." Suzanne Wood joined Norton Rose Fulbright Canada LLP as a lawyer some 15 years ago. "As an associate, I found that I spent a lot of my time doing project man- agement, so I turned my attention to that," she says. At the outset, Wood recalls, it was hard to get lawyers onboard with the program. But as requests for proposals (RFPs) be- came more and more commonplace, it became obvious that responding to clients satisfactorily required lawyers to have a support network. "RFPs are becoming the predominant method of buying services in the legal market," Kathuria says. In particular, consolidation RFPs were a catalyst. "ere was a very steep rise in cli- ents moving from using 50 or 60 law firms to a panel or a handful," Wood says. "To respond to these types of RFPs, we needed much more detailed financial analytics fo- cused on staffing, leverage and rates." In 2011, Wood was the only legal project manager at her firm. ere's now a team of eight analysts and coordinators composed of former lawyers or paralegals and proj- ect management professionals. e team works with a separate pricing group, the Business Planning and Analytics Team, composed of a director, four pricing man- agers and two pricing analysts. "e project management team does the scoping that determines how to staff the file, both internally and externally," Wood explains. "When that's done, we have a separate pricing team that will analyze alternatives, whether they are hourly rates or AFAs, and do a profitabil- ity assessment." At Gowling, Kathuria has instituted a more integrated structure. "I don't like having the project management and pric- ing teams tagged as separate entities," he says. "At our firm, they are the same group." Kathuria reasons that, absent tight inte- gration with project management, pricing professionals tend to focus on the makeup of the legal team and the rates, with per- haps insufficient focus on the nature of the work that has to be done. Gowling's pricing process begins by al- locating work to the appropriate level of resource, be it partners, senior associates, junior associates or paralegals. Next is a his- torical analysis of the firm's use of resources for similar tasks in the past. "Nowadays, we code everything in terms of how much time is spent on particular tasks," Kathuria says. "We also look at the historical details of what resources were required in a proj- ect, such as the number of witnesses or ex- pert witnesses." From the pricing perspective, the firm has developed a bank of about 80 templates that list the common assumptions about re- curring types of work. "We go through the entire project management plan with the facts we have, and estimate how long each phase and task will take," he says. "en we validate our conclusion by comparing them against previous matters." At that point, the firm has established its cost of doing the work and is ready to deter- mine what kind of fee arrangement makes most sense. "If a client is very concerned, for example, about the cost of a transac- tion, especially one that may not come to fruition, they usually want a fee that re- flects a discount for early termination and a success fee if the deal goes through," Ka- thuria says. "For this type of arrangement, it's important to consult with the lawyers involved to determine what the chances of success actually are." Surprisingly, perhaps, clients can be an obstacle to creative fee arrangements. "Some of the procurement folks employed by companies just want to drive the re- sponses to RFPs by an Excel spreadsheet," says Vancouver-based Matthew Peters, National Innovation Leader, at McCarthy Tétrault LLP. "In a working partnership model, it's possible to have a conversation about the fees, but not always — which is too bad, because the spreadsheet is only half of the equation and what really wins is | IN-HOUSE ADVISOR: EVOLVING FEE ARRANGEMENTS | MATTHEW PETERS > MCCARTHY TÉTRAULT LLP In a working partnership model, it's possible to have a conversation about the fees, but not always — which is too bad, because the spreadsheet is only half of the equation and what really wins is doing something creative around it.

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