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Edge International
Jordan Furlong is a Partner with Edge International. One of the world's leading management consultancies, Edge has been providing strategic planning to law firms for more than 25 years. Learn more about Edge.
Stem Legal
Jordan Furlong is a Senior Consultant with Stem Legal and leads its Media Strategy service. Stem provides online profile and business development services for law firms in the U.S. and Canada. Learn more about Stem.
Speaking Appearances
Law21 Twitter Updates
- @TheNakedLawyer So long as we're headed to a market with more accessibility, better service, and happier clients (and lawyers), I'm good. :) about 14 minutes ago from webin reply to TheNakedLawyer
- New blog post at Law21: Goodbye to all that: http://t.co/k66GSVJ #ILTA11 about 1 hour ago from web
- Great roundup by @MonicaBay of law firm technology innovation presentations at #ILTA11: http://t.co/5qMVw8O about 6 hours ago from web
- Look out, Britain: Oz's Slater & Gordon is eyeing ABS status: http://t.co/7ZbjsBe (Via @legalfutures) about 6 hours ago from web
- "What we are approaching now is beyond Tesco law" Must-read article by Louise Restell in LegalWeek about Rocket Lawyer: http://t.co/gH0Dvvw about 6 hours ago from web
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Publications & Podcasts
Publications
- "The talent portfolio: where, how and by whom your work is done"
Edge International Review, Vol. 6, No. 1, Spring 2011 - "Demographic business development"
Attorney At Work, March 21, 2011 - "Using new media to access old media"
Law Firm Web Strategy Blog, March 8, 2011 - "How to use new media to access old media"
CBA PracticeLink, March 2011 - "Merger mania"
National magazine, March 2011 - "Law firm diversity beyond the platitudes"
The Lawyers Weekly, February 25, 2011 - "Exploding some law school myths"
Slaw, February 22, 2011 - "Create legal annual reports for your clients"
Attorney At Work, February 21, 2011 - "Reluctant publishers: helping lawyers generate content"
Law Firm Web Strategy Blog, February 15, 2011 - "The art of we"
Attorney At Work, January 27, 2011 - "Can a full-service law firm use Twitter?"
Stem Law Firm Web Strategy Blog, January 25, 2011 - "How to get ahead in publishing (law firm edition)"
Stem Law Firm Web Strategy Blog, January 6, 2011 - "What surprised you in 2010? Perspectives from legal professionals"
JD Supra, December 28, 2010 - "2010 brought many changes to legal world"
The Lawyers Weekly, December 24, 2010 - "Your client is not your enemy"
Slaw, December 21, 2010 - "All together now: The value of practice group blogs"
Stem Law Firm Web Strategy Blog, December 15, 2010 - "Seniority pay must die"
Precedent Magazine, December 10, 2010 - "The future of continuing legal education"
The Lawyers Weekly, December 10, 2010 - "The No Homers Club: Collective branding in the law"
Stem Law Firm Web Strategy Blog, December 1, 2010 - "What are you prepared to do?"
Attorney At Work, November 24, 2010 - "A million tiny pieces: the social media mosaic"
Stem Law Firm Web Strategy Blog, November 12, 2010 - "The Law of the Pencil"
Edge International Review, Vol. 2, 2010 - "First impressions: make your Twitter biography count"
Stem Law Firm Web Strategy Blog, October 26, 2010 - "Your call is important to us,"
Slaw, October 22, 2010 - "Leading the way,"
National magazine, September 2010, p. 20 - "Stop the press: news releases and rote communication,"
Stem Law Firm Web Strategy Blog, August 24, 2010 - "Law school and the risk of irrelevance,"
The Lawyers Weekly, August 20, 2010 - "Letting the clients decide,"
Slaw, August 19, 2010 - "Talk to me: putting an end to canned conversations,"
Stem Law Firm Web Strategy Blog, August 13, 2010 - "Associate compensation meets the merit system,"
The Lawyers Weekly, August 6, 2010 - "Rethinking the case law update,"
Stem Law Firm Web Strategy Blog, July 27, 2010 - "The 21st-century law firm,"
CBA PracticeLink, August 2010 - "Blogging for law firms,"
Stem Law Firm Web Strategy Blog, June 23, 2010 - "Managing your online brand and reputation takes work,"
The Lawyers Weekly, June 21, 2010 - "LinkedIn for law firms,"
Stem Law Firm Web Strategy Blog, May 3, 2010 - "Twitter for law firms,"
Stem Law Firm Web Strategy Blog, April 6, 2010 - "How to be an effective client,"
Construction Law Musings, April 2, 2010 - "Here comes the LPO tsunami,"
The Lawyers Weekly, April 2010 - "Facebook for law firms,"
Stem Law Firm Web Strategy Blog, March 29, 2010 - "What to do when a reporter calls,"
The Lawyers Weekly, March 2010 - "Legal recruitment in 2010,"
The Lawyers Weekly, February 2010 - "Will 2010 be the year of the fixed fee?,"
The Lawyers Weekly, January 2010 - "Making the most of Twitter,"
TRIAL Magazine, American Association of Justice, January 2010 - "Metamorphosis: Five forces transforming the legal services marketplace,"
ABA Law Practice Magazine, November/Dcember 2009 - "We don't run this show anymore,"
ABA Journal Legal Rebels Project, October 2009
Podcasts and Teleseminars
- Part 1: Podcast on the Future of the Legal Profession with Solo Practice University's Susan Cartier Liebel, March 2011
- Part 2: Podcast on the Future of the Legal Profession with Solo Practice University's Susan Cartier Liebel, March 2011
- Interviews with "ABA Now" at American Bar Association's Bar Leadership Institute 2010, March 2010
- Interview with Greg Bufithis of Project Counsel at Georgetown Law School's Law Firm Evolution Symposium, March 2010
- Solo Practice University Guest Lecture, January 2010
- Charon QC, September 2009
- Legal Research & Writing Pro, July 2009
- Cole Silver, June 2008
- Law is Cool, August 2007
- "The talent portfolio: where, how and by whom your work is done"
Current Clients
Here is a selection of some current Stem clients:
Law21.ca © 2010 Jordan Furlong
Goodbye to all that
Last week, having written about the rise of online disruptors and the emergence of super-boutiques, I promised that the final entry in this de facto trilogy would identify how lawyers and law firms can ensure their profitability in this new environment. But then I spent three days at ILTA’s Rev-elation, the 2011 annual meeting of the International Legal Technology Association, and it seems to me that that ship is already sailing out of the port.
What I saw and heard at ILTA, about document assembly and contract standardization and reverse auctions and KM advances and outsourcing services and a host of other developments, is that the storm we’ve been warning about for the past few years has finally broken (read the linked articles for more details). Tired of waiting for law firms to lead change, the market has itself developed tools and processes to provide the certainty, efficiency, transparency and cost-effectiveness that legal services have long needed. Clients love these innovations and are telling law firms to use them, even (and especially) where they conflict with firms’ traditional ways of working and making money. And firms are obeying, with the vague but dawning realization that they’re now being told how to do their jobs.
What’s happening is this: law firms are finally losing control of the legal marketplace.
Law firms used to dictate the terms upon which legal services were performed — work assignment, work flow, scheduling, timeliness, format, delivery, billing, pricing, and many others — because buyers had no other options. Those options have now emerged, powered by technology and driven forward by market demand.
But the emergence of these options isn’t the real story. The real story is that firms are buying these new products and services, not selling them. They’re taking marching orders about their use, not issuing them. They’re accepting the new realities of the marketplace, not inventing them. Law firms are now drifting to the periphery of the marketplace, trading places with technology-driven outsiders whose own importance increases daily. Law firms, whether they realize it or not, are settling into a new role: sources of valued specialists called upon to perform certain tasks within a larger legal system that they did not create and that they do not control.
New providers and new technologies are not going to replace lawyers. But they are going to marginalize lawyers and render law firms mostly irrelevant.
Lawyers are smart, knowledgeable, creative and trustworthy professionals who, unfortunately, suffer from poor business acumen, terrible management skills, wildly disproportionate aversion to risk, outsized revenue expectations, and a business model about 25 years out of date. The market won’t abandon them — they have unique and sometimes extraordinarily valuable skills and characteristics — but it will find the best use for them: expert specialists with limited influence over the larger process.
Law firms are widely decentralized partnerships that charge on a cost-plus basis, retain no earnings from year to year, and pray every morning that their best assets will walk back through the same doors they exited the previous night. That’s not good enough. The new legal market demands systematization, collaboration, transparency, alignment, efficiency and cost-effectiveness within and among its providers. A few law firms have already adapted these traits, and some more will follow. Some law firms are so powerful they won’t have to change. The rest are in grave danger.
Here’s a revealing thought experiment to illustrate these points. Consider the flurry of investments and acquisitions that have taken place in the legal technology area recently. I’ve already written about Google Ventures’ $18 million investment in Rocket Lawyer and LegalZoom’s acquisition of $66 million in venture funding. During ILTA, Aderant acquired Client Services and CompuLaw for an undisclosed but certainly massive sum. And in the biggest news of the week, Hewlett-Packard purchased Autonomy, which among other things is a leading e-discovery provider, for no less than $10 billion.
With those figures in mind, ask yourself: what would you pay for a law firm? What price would you meet for any of the world’s ten largest law firms? Some very smart people discussed that question during a conversation at ILTA, and we reached this likely conclusion: nothing. Not a cent. Because really, what do law firms have to sell? They have no patents. They have no unique business methods. They have little unique knowledge. They have few long-term client commitments under contract. They have limited goodwill. Their only real assets are a handful of partners with great technical expertise or amazing rainmaking skills, and these assets can leave anytime with no penalty. What, precisely, would you be buying?
I said at the outset of these posts that lawyers and law firms need to decide carefully what they do and how they do it if they want to remain profitable and valuable. Let me instead suggest more questions for lawyers and law firms to ask themselves in order to even remain in the conversation.
What: Identify your inventory — what you sell to clients — and determine how much of it involves the application of lawyers’ high-value performance or analytical skills. Assume that the price for everything else you sell will plummet, and that you’ll be able to stay in these markets only if you adopt various high-efficiency systems. Absorb the reality that you will need many fewer people within your law firm to be competitive in these areas.
How: Study the means by which you accomplish the work you sell to clients and determine whether and to what extent you can adopt new technologies and processes to be not just more efficient, but also more effective in terms of quality, relevance and responsiveness. Don’t think in terms of adapting your current approaches; think in terms of starting from scratch. Use your creativity and ask: How should we go about doing what we do?
Who: Identify every person who receives a salary or a draw from your firm and ask: what is their primary contribution to the firm? Good answers will include proven business development skills, outstanding professional expertise, and amazing management abilities. These are your irreplaceables, and you’re probably underpaying them. Everyone else will require a clear demonstration of why they occupy a place in your office.
Where: In association with the previous entry, determine the best physical location for the services you provide. We are past the time in which a law firm’s four walls house all or almost all of its functionality. Some services might best be performed in a suburban location, others in a home office, others in a low-cost center elsewhere in the country or in the world, and others from a server farm.
Why: This might be the most important question of all, and I posed it in an article last month: what is the point of your law firm? I don’t mean generating profits for partners; I mean your marketplace purpose. Why do you exist? What specific need for what specific audience do you meet? If you disappeared tomorrow, who would find the loss irreplaceable? Believe me when I say: The market is asking you that question right now.
We’ve begun crossing over from the old legal marketplace to the new one. Lawyers still have outstanding value to offer in certain quarters, but we need to concentrate our market offerings around that value, and we need better platforms for our services than traditional law firms provide. We need to understand what technology is doing to legal services and either adopt that technology, adapt to the client expectations it’s creating, or leave. We need to understand our role in this new market and appreciate that it does not lie at the center of the legal universe. We’ve missed our chance to lead the new market, but we can still flourish inside it. It’s up to us.
Welcome to the crucible.
Jordan Furlong delivers dynamic and thought-provoking presentations to law firms and legal organizations throughout North America on how to survive and profit from the extraordinary changes underway in the legal services marketplace. He is a partner with Edge International and a senior consultant with Stem Legal Web Enterprises.