Thursday, April 30, 2009

Confusing Times for Law Firm Advisors?

The stress and financial turmoil roiling through law firms must make marketing very difficult for established consultancies such as Altman Weil and Hildebrandt. Let me give you one personal example.

This week, I will attend a meeting where we'll hear from Ward Bower of A-W on "Opportunities for Mid-Sized Firms in the Current Economy." Many of my friends at places like the Legal Water Cooler, Law Firm CI and folks I've seen speaking recently have been referring to the compression in legal budgets among corporations as a chance for mid-sized and boutique firms (read: less costly) to make some inroads in a market that has been dominated by large "safe bets" among the AmLaw 100.

I listened avidly at the Legal Marketing Association Conference the first of this month to Tom Clay of the same firm detail their recent "Legal Transformation Study" that used scenario planning to posit the possible fields of play in 2020, about a decade away. When the researchers asked a wide group of law firm managers and partners which of the four scenarios were most likely to be reality in 2020, there was almost an even divide among them. By this we see clearly there is no agreement among law firms on the likelihood of a particular end point for the legal industry.

So, we'll hear Mr. Bower opine on the kinds of opportunities firms like the one I work at might salivate over and, frankly, need to keep growing.

Then, in my email yesterday, comes a missive from Pam Woldow, a "Ramper" at LegalOnRamp.com, and a consultant at...Altman Weil. In this lengthy opinion, largely designed, it seems, to show the benefits of LegalOnRamp.com membership and participation, Ms. Woldow says:

"Dear General Counsel or Chief Legal Officer:
If you feel like you are in a classic double bind these days, you are not alone. I have spoken with dozens of GCs in the last few months, and Altman Weil has surveyed hundreds more, many of whom report themselves on the horns of a risky dilemma.

They say they are inclined to join the cost-saving trend to move "down market" (their term) to midsized and boutique firms that have lower costs bases, but are afraid the move will put them in hot water, no matter what the cost savings."

Later, after a long description of the process by which a corporate general counsel might put the squeeze on its current BigLaw vendors and use LegalOnRamp.com as the big stick to "help firm XYZ convert to your religion", she continues:

"The bottom line in law is that quality is quality. Cost is not quality. Risk-reduction is not quality. In every instance the highest quality firm will be the lowest cost, but that means you have to think about quality in terms of outcomes, not inputs - or even likelihood of substandard performance by outside counsel. Once you start focusing on true quality to the client - that's you and your company - you'll see a variety of ways to reduce costs. You'll also find that lots of firms, including, ultimately, your incumbent service providers, will be willing to play ball according to the new rules of the legal game."

Oh, oh, oh. I wonder how these consultants reconcile their various messages. Which opportunities do the corporate clients hear, the large providers get told about and which are left to the mid-size and boutiques? Are they talking among themselves about this? At Altman Weil, the evidence is that they are not. This double-speak may eventually trip them up and a fall could be disastrous in this economy.

Would you hire a consultant from a company that pitches your possible clients and competitors on a way to prevent your success?

Monday, April 13, 2009

Tweets Out Amazon

OMG! Twitter bitch-slapped Amazon over the weekend and it will leave a bruise. Check out http://tinyurl.com/ddhpghl. Demonstrating once again, Twitter is the word-of-mouth of the online world.

I can't comment on the rumored anti-gay/bi attitude that may lay beneath the delisting of certain books with specific content (or at least specific content categories) on Amazon. It reminds me of the disputes that some school libraries have experienced in years past about the inclusion of seditious titles like "Catcher in the Rye" and "Lady Chatterly's Lover." Still, the sequence of explanations sound a bit disingenuous, or at least suggest that Amazon has lost control of a portion of its catalog indexing.

Still, the fact that the Twitter hashtag has mounted an effective attack on a policy at the world's largest bookseller gets my attention. Where now, Twitterville? Politics?

Hat tip to NPR's Monkey See blog for the news.

Thursday, April 09, 2009

What's the LMA Buzz? Social life!

I've been away at the Legal Marketing Association Annual Conference held at the Gaylord Resort in National Harbor, Maryland. It was great to see so many friends! Here are my top lines today:

Shout out to Nancy Myrland (http://twitter.com/nancynyrland) for organizing a Tweetup and giving out the cool lapel pins. It was sweet to tweet face-to-face and that's something I'd like to continue doing.

Thompson Reuters and incisive media were collecting videos of participants, and I've posted four below of some of my favorite opinion leaders. Give 'em a hand!

Jennifer Manton on LMA's Most Powerful Attribute



Heather Milligan on Opportunities in Law Firm Marketing



Jayne Navarre on Online Social Media



Lance Godard on Business Development from Twitter


Finally, social media was really rocking, with a couple of powerful presentations (and one slightly underwhelming one from LexisNexis Counsel-to-Counsel - can you say "missed the boat?"). My fave was Jay Berkowitz. More on that next time.

What's your recent social life highlight?