Managing Partner archive
Volume 12 Issue 7
Good tidings we (aim to) bring
AS THAT familiar festive feeling comes around once again, many business marketing teams may be wrestling with a classic communications roast chestnut. Which positive message are they going to wish on their cherished clients over the holiday period?
“Happy Christmas” is on decidedly dodgy ground of course, but I was recently alerted to the fact that the seemingly innocuous “Season’s Greetings” is also best avoided.
Thames Translations, which offers its services to the likes of PriceWaterhouseCoopers and Microsoft on such matters, urges more careful consideration, with managing director Simon George arguing that Season’s Greetings is “a western phrase”. “Many think that using this phrase as an alternative to more religious connotations is a safe option, but you could end up leaving the recipient bemused or at worst offended,” he points out.
Here at Managing Partner I think we will therefore opt to wish all our readers and advertisers pleasingly old-fashioned ‘good tidings’: some good news for all their businesses and loved ones in 2010 after a short break from a challenging year.
In the UK, in spite of predictions to the contrary, we stagger to the end of 2009 yoked to six consecutive quarters of economic contraction – the longest run since such records started in 1955. The Office for National Statistics may have found Q3 contraction was slightly more optimistic than first reported at 0.3 per cent, but economists are now forced to pin their hopes on the current Q4 for the start of what will certainly be a very vulnerable recovery proper. The UK is trailing France, Germany, Japan and the US in the upturn, unemployment is expected to keep rising in 2010, and people in most walks of working life will remain under considerable pressure for some time.
In this edition of Managing Partner we revisit some of what seem to have been the major themes dominating business debate this past year – tightening financial management; the balance of risk and remuneration (as highlighted by the recent Walker review on corporate governance); the effect of a weak economy on workplace conflict and stress; and the way in which carefully crafted performance-management programmes can still try to keep the focus on positives and potential in such times of trouble.
Moreover, at the same time as redundancies and profit falls have clearly hurt, many law firms have still seen opportunities for adding new expertise though the targeted lateral hiring of those committed partners and fee-earners looking for a new home.
Confederation of British Industry director general, Richard Lambert, certainly offered a hearty ‘glass half full’ perspective recently. The recession would be a “catalyst for a decade of business change” he suggested, with four key lessons that leaders could choose whether to embrace. Alternatives to bank funding would help reduce risk, greater transparency and corporate responsibility could build trust and morale, while rethinking relationships with partners and clients might go some way to reducing supply-chain instability in future.
Finally, he explained, an employee “flexiforce” of more mobile and adaptable workers could help firms to recruit and retain valuable, business-critical personnel, while simultaneously expanding the scope to scale operations up or down.
With half-year revenue drops of ten per cent or more, the leaders and managers I have spoken to in recent months are understandably cautious when predicting the future of their profession. However, they also seem increasingly open to just such change.
Good tidings indeed.
Richard Brent
Editor
Features
Investigating within the law
Economic downturns often bring more fraud to light and drive demand to uncover such activity. Unethical or disproportionate investigation practices can compound the problem, however; sometimes even tarnishing a companys reputation more than the potential fraud itself.
Out of this world?
The past year has seen unprecedented turbulence for the legal profession, but is perhaps simply a portent of what is to come.
The worst of times
?
It was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, wrote Charles Dickens some 150 years ago. It might also seem to serve as a summary of the credit-crunched past two years. As the legal profession prepared to bid a taxing 2009 farewell, Managing Partner asked law firm leaders for their reflections on a year in recession.
Opinion: What women want - feedback from a real woman
I felt quite queasy earlier this year when I read the report of the right-leaning Centre for Policy Studies think tank, What Women Want and How They Can Get It.
Masterclass: A virtuous circle
Law firms are right to expect high performance from all their partners and professionals. But what can they do to bring that about? There are various elements that need to be in place to achieve high performance in practice.
Opinion: Back to basics - a question of culture
Worship her or loathe her, Margaret Thatcher delivered some memorable one-liners, including: Being powerful is like being a lady. If you have to tell people you are, you arent.
The recovery position
In the first half of a two-part article, three leaders in professional development consider some of the key management decisions law firms should be taking as economies around the world slowly emerge from a damaging recession.
The Legal Services Act: growing concern?
The potential impact of the Legal Services Act on the typical high street solicitor model has been widely debated, with predictions many may pass away. But what competitive threat does a more diverse legal market pose for the UKs larger law firms?
Stress - the importance
Claims for workplace intimidation and harassment were among those expected to increase markedly as the economic downturn impacted on everyones workload. HR policies could usefully include information about effective time and stress management.
Cashing up
Having the firmest grip possible on the key processes in a firms revenue cycle has become an even greater priority in the cash-strapped course of 2009.
Reaching hire
While many businesses may have been tempted to cut back on recruitment through the downturn, some have seen opportunities to strengthen their offerings by taking on new senior talent. In 2009 regional UK law firm SAS Daniels LLP boosted fee-earner numbers by ten per cent with its first ever team lateral hires.
Forwards march?
Lisa Pevtzow asks whether the economic downturn has served to dampen law firms international ambition.
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