by Bruce | July 14, 2008 | Articles, Cultural Considerations, Finance, Practice Group Management, Strategy, Technology strategy
Here’s an addendum to the coverage I gave to Eversheds’ Report on The Law Firm of the 21st Century, as well as to the story I published last month on the conference held here in New York sponsored by Eversheds. This email came in over the weekend...
by Bruce | July 10, 2008 | Articles, Cultural Considerations, Finance, Globalization, Leadership, Strategy
Richard Turnor, a partner in the Private Client Group at Allen & Overy, has penned for Managing Partner Magazine one of the more thoughtful pieces on the implications of the Legal Services Act in the UK. In particular, he asks the same question...
by Bruce | July 3, 2008 | Articles, Finance, Innovative Managing Partners, Leadership, Practice Group Management, Strategy
This is a column about wringing our hands. Our first text, from the Old Testament conventional debate, stems from today’s WSJ story on "Axiom Legal," headlined Newcomer Law Firms Are Creating Niches with Blue-Chip Clients, discussing the business model...
by Bruce | June 21, 2008 | Articles, Cultural Considerations, Finance, Practice Group Management, Strategy
Last week Eversheds sponsored a conference in New York, primarily targeted at senior inhouse counsel, to discuss the current and future state of relations between law firms and inhouse departments. It was not pretty. About 90% of the attendees were the chief...
by Bruce | June 18, 2008 | Articles, Finance, Leadership, Practice Group Management, Strategy
Over at LegalOnRamp there’s an interesting discussion underway about the extent to which GC’s do—or don’t—seek genuine innovation in the way BigLaw provides services. I’m taking the liberty of republishing it here (with...
by Bruce | June 13, 2008 | Articles, Globalization, Strategy, Technology strategy
Did you know that the venerable Booz Allen & Hamilton has truncated its name to "booz&co."? Not only abandoning a name with tremendous recognition and brand equity but, in a "what were they thinking!?" blunder, shining a spotlight on...