Managing Partner archive
Volume 9 Issue 2
Editor's letter
As some of you may know, I have been working hard in recent weeks to launch a new edition of Managing Partner magazine, in the
The rationale for publishing two separate magazines was based on our ability to produce highly relevant content, designed to meet the specific needs of our readership. Managing Partner has now been published in the
By publishing a
The
And, of course, there will also be areas of overlap between the
Recently, for instance, I attended an Ark Group masterclass in
The main challenge, however, revealed itself as potential inter-departmental conflict. For instance, which department should be responsible for which CI function? Who should take the credit for gathering CI (library or marketing departments)? And how can lawyers be better educated to understand when and how such research is useful?
The discussion on this area was enlightening, particularly in understanding how support departments can compete with and obstruct each other. It is also a familiar challenge faced by expanding firms across the globe. Most have wisely invested in developing their support divisions, which have undoubtedly helped transform the legal business. But many now struggle to integrate those functions to get them to work more effectively and efficiently.
By examining issues such as this that concern all firms, while providing a broader forum for discussion from firms across different regions, we hope that we can continue to provide the very best guidance to the legal profession, no matter where firms are based.
Caroline Poynton
Editor
Features
Q&A: Gearing up for growth
With firms increasingly looking for ways to grow their businesses, Caroline Poynton asks Rowan Williams and Jeffrey Nedas, partners at BDO Stoy Hayward, about the strategic value of mergers, alliances and networks.
Masterclass: The missing link
Bringing people together into teams is one thing, making them work effectively and efficiently for better internal operation and client service is quite another. Firms are increasingly using client and industry teams to compete more effectively in the market, and to organise and coordinate themselves internally.
Getting the people prize
Our success in the Sunday Times Top 100 Companies to Work For list, over the past three years, has prompted many enquiries as to how weve done it. In the 2006 list, we achieved third place nationally (we were fourth in 2005 and sixth in 2004, our first year in the competition).
Case study: Vizards Wyeth
If accountants are bean counters, then solicitors are box-tickers: process-driven automatons. Or at least thats what was revealed about 11 of our fee earners and partners, who underwent psychometric testing as part of a makeover to turn them into salesmen.
Case study: Ashurst
A key part of an international law firms business strategy will be the adoption of a one firm approach that promotes a distinctive firm identity in a competitive international marketplace.
Cover feature: Taking control of the finances
Managing the financial well-being of a law firm tends to be not so much about figures, but more about managing people to get the best out of them.
Regulars
Trend tracker: Digital dictation
When the idea of implementing a digital-dictation system was raised at Barrett & Thompson, Sloughs oldest established firm of high-street solicitors, not everyone at the firm backed the plan.
Opinion: Dancing to the war drums
Just like last year, it leaves the majority of the legal profession and the public at large open-mouthed with disbelief at the enormous earnings potential of relatively inexperienced young professionals.
Predictable talent
A third of a century ago, in 1973, the US Justice Department did a remarkable thing. It provided a grant to an organisation called the HR Chally Group for scientific research into selection methods.
denotes premium content | Jul 26 2008 















