Clark Hill has taken an evolutionary rather than revolutionary approach in the transition from direct lawyer to LAA relationship. Each lawyer still has an assigned LAA, but these individuals operate within a team of four LAAs working together to support 20 lawyers. Anyone in the team can pick up the work within BigHand Workflow Management, an approach that is both more efficient and provides full visibility of the progress of work for lawyers who may be in different offices or working remotely.
In addition to the LAA teams, the firm’s centralized support service, the Clark Hill Administrative Resource Team (CHART), undertakes general administrative work, high level document creating and formatting, new matter opening and time entry, as well as lower-level tasks such as meeting co-ordination or data entry. Again, all work goes into the BigHand Workflow Management queue and is picked up by an individual with the right skills to complete the task.
Kathleen Sullivan says, “This centralized CHART resource frees the local LAA team to focus on higher level, more productive work that really impacts our lawyers’ capabilities to serve clients.” With some LAAs also undertaking billable tasks, this visible, tracked support model is also enabling Clark Hill to explore further billable opportunities.
Building a Strong Foundation for the Future
Clark Hill is also using BigHand Workflow Management as a succession planning and talent management tool. With all support tasks recorded within BigHand, the firm has new insight for developing targeted training to upskill staff and build new specialties, with staff also able to identify opportunities and gain access to a wider range of work through the system.
In addition, the data from BigHand Workflow Management is providing far more clarity about the level of skills required across the firm. Having undertaken a rigorous process of defining the competencies required for each role, Clark Hill is now developing its training and development program to support career progression from entry to mid and senior levels. In depth information is also helping with attrition management, with the data used to demonstrate that tasks can be absorbed by the existing support infrastructure rather than requiring a direct replacement.
Kathleen Sullivan confirms, “It is hard to find skilled people in the marketplace. We have to focus on developing the right skill but also, do we need it? The insight provided by BigHand Workflow Management shows that we often don’t need to hire a highly skilled LAA with a four-year degree at a higher price tag. A junior person or administrative assistant could be recruited at a lower price to undertake more entry level work and be trained to develop the additional skills.”
Clark Hill is not the only law firm thinking about how they will staff their support teams in the future. Recent research from BigHand confirms 25% of firms expect to lose 11-20% of support staff to retirement in the next 5 years. That is a lot of skills and knowledge leaving the industry. As Kathleen notes, firms need to prepare for this loss of expertise but don’t necessarily need to look for like for like replacements at higher costs.
Achieving Effective Change for the Next Generation
Over the past 18 months, Clark Hill has undertaken a rigorous change management process to improve engagement throughout the firm, from lawyers to office managers and support staff. Now, a total of 30 LAA teams, plus the reception and office services team now use the technology, with 20,886 tasks completed in the month of July.
Kathleen Sullivan advises, “It is essential to approach this change with a strategic lens. This is not a software implementation project. It is a significant cultural change with a really good software application to support that change. Look at it holistically. Understand what you are trying to achieve. Recognize that the behaviour of everyone involved is just as important as the introduction of new software.”
Clark Hill is also pragmatic about the difficulties in changing the behaviour of long-standing, high revenue generating partners, looking instead to achieve a new mindset in the next generation. The incoming Associate class this fall will be the first to start work with the new team structure supported by BigHand Workflow Management. Rather than giving each an assigned LAA, the firm is considering a shift straight to accessing support from the CHART, to ensure this generation immediately learns the new behaviours.
Throughout the process the relationship with BigHand has been positive.