Compared to what we were once used to, BigLaw’s 2015 financial results can pithily be described as “crummy”—at least as reported in the just-released 2016 AmLaw 100 figures.  We won’t go into the reality-TV zone of which particular firms were up and which were down except to observe that the biggest individual moves in top-line numbers like revenue and headcount (Morgan Lewis and Locke Lord) were driven by mergers. Results for other standout winners and losers tend to be driven by circumstances unique to each firm and as such embody little learning for the rest of us, no matter how much drama the outlying firms had to go through to produce their numbers.

However, this year will finally be the one where we commission a gas chromatography analysis of the water in Wachtell’s offices: How on earth do those guys do it?

The #1 headline number—total growth in the 100 firms’ revenue—is reported at 2.7%, but if you adjust for inflation and headcount growth, the real, constant-dollar figure is closer to 1.4%.  Net income growth came in at 3.3% (nominal) or about 2.0% (real).  Even the normally exuberant American Lawyer had to characterize these results as “mediocre” and “middling.”

We take an even more sober view: Half-buried in the detail is the eye-opening fact that, excluding the Great Meltdown years of 2008 and 2009, these were the worst results for the AmLaw 100 in nearly 25 years—going back to 1993, when we lived in a very different world.

On the other hand, this year again confirms what has been reconfirmed like clockwork with every annual AmLaw release since the Meltdown:  The dispersion between firms at the top in performance and those at the bottom is growing wider and wider.  (We use the terms “top” and bottom” not to refer to size, or mere throw-weight, but in reference to performance metrics like RPL, PPP, and the newish PPL.)

Call it the rich getting richer if you wish, but the unmistakable message it sends is to remember first and foremost that the reported figures are averages, and averages mislead at best and lie at worst.  We’ve long known this to be critically true of PPP.  Yes, the reported figure is $1,613,439 across the 20,337 equity partners in the 100 firms, but how many individuals make exactly that figure?  In Cesar Alvarez’s immortal words, “the only thing that matters is profits per me.

The equity partner numbers do, however, signal a far more important story: In our opinion the most important single piece of data, bar none.  That’s that calculated ranks of equity partners actually declined by -0.6%. To us, this is the buried headline: It reveals a business model embodying a traditional career path under severe stress.  To begin with, if you’re an AmLaw 100 associate, this signals that your prospects of partnership just went from dim to laughable; someone’s going to have to die (or retire) first.

But more fundamentally, we read this as delivering the clear message that it’s time to retire the “tournament” model of BigLaw careers from its decades of faithful service.  Whatever new rules of the game emerge to replace it have yet to be written.  And because BigLaw lives and dies through its talent, we submit that nothing could be more urgent. It’s not being alarmist to say firms ignore this at their peril.

Now, to the question everyone’s dying to ask:  When is it all going to get better?

We take no glee whatsoever in responding, “on the present course, never.”  This year’s AmLaw figures are clearly of a continuum with their predecessors in this series since the Meltdown (and there were signals of market maturity and the concomitant stagnation it entails before that).  For the results to be dramatically different, we may need to…do things differently.

But whether firms actually will change their business model, on the recognition that expecting different results from the extant model may have passed its expiration date, depends not in the least on the clear message we think this data series has been delivering for nearly a decade.  It depends on something else altogether:  How and whether firms are able to overcome the tremendous forces of internal inertia and stasis that build up in successful organizations.  Especially organizations owned and operated by ranks of breathtakingly skeptical and financially comfortable people with short career or firm-loyalty time horizons.


We provided this article to Thomson Reuters’ Legal Executive Institute  yesterday and we appreciate their kind permission to republish it here.

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