Legal Business

GC 2.0 – The GC Powerlist Summer Reception

Do you know your cash-burn phase from your TLDNR? Welcome to the buccaneering, hierarchy-lite world of the fast-growth, tech-driven ‘disruptors’, the kind of business that a growing number of lawyers aspire to work in or advise.

Following the launch earlier this year of the 2017 GC Powerlist, which focused on early-stage companies and rising stars at major plcs, we teamed up with DLA Piper to assemble an audience of more than 70 in-house counsel at London’s private members’ club Home House for an informal discussion from the lawyers working at the digital coal-face. The debate covered the launch of the much-touted Disruptive GC group, the challenges of working with impatient entrepreneurs and how lawyers can slot into the culture of a constantly-evolving company.

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Alex Novarese: One of the things that we are looking at is the launch of the Disruptive GC group. We have several members on the panel. I am going to ask Lisa to give us some background.

Lisa Gan Tomlins, Made.com: I describe it as group therapy for me. I had been in private practice for ten years, in two large American law firms. I then moved to another disruptive company of sorts called Just Eat. That was already slightly traumatic, in that it was a move from a huge network of partners, lawyers, paralegals and secretaries to being in a six-man legal team.
From there I moved to Made.com two and a half years ago, as their first and only lawyer. It was a pretty exciting but also a very lonely existence. Very challenging. I could talk to myself in my own head about things. I would sometimes randomly call people I used to work with. There are only so many times you can do that before you get a bill.

Alex Novarese: You have to develop a rota.

Lisa Gan Tomlins: You do. That was the genesis of it. I decided early on that it would be really helpful to have a network of lawyers. When I went to groups like this, conferences or law firm events, and met someone in a similar situation, who has a small team in a start-up that is venture capitalist-backed, there was a commonality of challenges. I was also into branding. Branding is key, particularly in any kind of tech start-up or disruptive business.

‘I thought I’d do it for a year and have loads of time to think about my business. I have never worked so hard in my life.’
Karen Kerrigan, Seedrs

Simon Levine, DLA Piper: When I saw the launch of the network, I wondered whether it was general counsel (GCs) of disruptive businesses or whether you want to be disruptive GCs.

Lisa Gan Tomlins: A little of both. There was a play on words. The companies that we work for are disruptive, but to be successful as a lawyer in those businesses, you have to be a bit disruptive in challenging the assumptions about what lawyers are, such as that they are boring and say no. The original founders of the business I work for are younger than I am and have never worked in a big organisation. The way they approach issues and the way they manage teams is very different from more established organisations.

Alex Novarese: What sort of issues do you find you are addressing that would be very different to those that a lawyer in a large plc would face?

Karen Kerrigan, Seedrs: The point that Lisa raised about dealing with the founders and entrepreneurs is a big one. The personalities you are dealing with on a daily basis can be emotional. They have sometimes never worked in a traditional business. You are not just a lawyer. You are a counsellor and that is pushed to the absolute fore.

My role is a little different to some of yours. We definitely are a financial technology organisation. Fintech recruited lawyers in an earlier stage. There were five of us in the office and they thought they needed a lawyer. I took on finance, I took on HR, I took on compliance and, obviously, legal. Since the company has grown, that has not changed.

I came straight from Simmons & Simmons. You were in a place where someone did the printing for you. I walked into Seedrs and I was handed a box with my computer in. And I had to construct it. What I have become very used to in this role is, on a daily basis, trying to work out where my conflicts lie as a shareholder, as the legal adviser or as the FCA-authorised person that deals with compliance.

Alex Novarese: Were you aware of those kinds of challenges and that cultural shift from being in a large corporate law firm?

Karen Kerrigan: I wanted to start my own business. I came across Seedrs because I was looking at funding options. I thought that I would do it for a year and have loads of time to think of my business idea. I have never worked so hard in my life. Four years on I am still there as chief legal officer. I certainly embraced it.

Simon Levine: Matt, Uber is often cited as a classic disruptor. You are going on that journey of being in a company that has gone from one end of the scale and is travelling up to the other end. Do all of these things still apply?
Matthew Wilson, Uber: When I joined Uber in July 2015 we had a ramshackle office behind King’s Cross Station – 50 or 60 people. I was the first lawyer. On day one I had a queue of 15 people at my desk who said: ‘We have been waiting for you to arrive. Have you ever dealt with the police before?’

‘On day one I had a queue of people at my desk who said: “We have been waiting for you to arrive. Have you ever dealt with the police before?”’
Matthew Wilson, Uber

It was a really odd environment for a corporate commercial lawyer. The whole spectrum of legal issues was on my plate by the end of day one. I started working through the list, trying to prioritise things and getting to know the people in the business. By the end of the first week I thought: ‘I have made it to the weekend. This is great!’ Saturday was just like a normal work day. That continued for a few months.

After a couple of months I had a good view of the business and had started to work out what kind of lawyers I needed to hire to scale the team. My remit at that point was the UK, Ireland and Scandinavia.

I started recruiting. I should credit the GC at Lloyds Bank for this, as it came up in a conversation that we had a few months ago. I looked for people with T-shaped experience. They may have depth in litigation or antitrust, but they will roll their sleeves up, pick up whatever comes in through the door and do a 75-80% quality job on it.

Since then we have grown to a team of ten covering the UK and Ireland. It is a mixed bag of a couple of employment lawyers, a couple of litigators, three corporate commercial and a real estate lawyer who covers the whole of EMEA. You probably all know about the issues we face. They are plastered all over the papers. We need the lawyers to think in that roundabout way, and make sure they are taking into account all of those different angles that might affect the future sustainability of the business.

Alex Novarese: Amol, you work for a company with huge reach. Do Barclays lawyers have that kind of flexibility?

Amol Prabhu, Barclays: It is something that we increasingly look for. Being an in-house lawyer, even in a very big organisation, is a great opportunity. There is so much going on, particularly in the financial services industry. That ranges from how we handle Brexit, to MiFID II and the structural reform programme.
The trusted-adviser concept is often rolled out. You rapidly realise that, even though there are 836 of us, you are in a huge organisation of around 120,000 people. The majority are non-lawyers and do not care much about lawyers. You have to be talking their language and, to a certain extent, playing to their rules. They are certainly sometimes more aggressive, and you have to handle that.

Matthew Wilson: The point about a lot of them not really caring about the law is one of the big differences between the bigger plcs and corporates, and our companies. Pretty much everyone in the office down in Aldgate is really interested in what we do. With the stage that our companies are at, it is still pretty central.

‘The mission is key. If you cannot deliver that you can’t get past the starting line.’
Lisa Gan Tomlins, Made.com

Many of our staff are very young. They are very clever but not particularly experienced. They would not know where to start when dealing with contracts. It is important to educate them and almost turn them into junior lawyers. We try to scale our teams without adding extra heads.

Karen Kerrigan: This is where this comes to a head, because all of our businesses are pushing the boundaries of the regulation. Crowdfunding had to have a whole new regulatory regime designed for it. Today I was at the British Bankers’ Association. Tomorrow I am at the FCA. A lot of my role is about lobbying for change or lobbying to inform the regulators about how things work.

Alex Novarese: You have vetting procedures, for the Disruptive GC group. How does the procedure work?

Lisa Gan Tomlins: In the early days, it was word-of-mouth referral. As the group grew to a certain size, we instituted a more formal application. It is just a simple Google form, which asks you who you are, what company you work for, how long the company has been around. We then balance everything. It is a bit of a subjective exercise.

Matthew Wilson: It is things like: ‘Are you venture capitalist-backed? Are you the only lawyer or in a team of one to three?’ Frankly, I am going to be kicked out pretty soon.

Going back to the point about GCs and plcs coming into this kind of group, there are some that are doing really innovative stuff. I have a good relationship with Ed Smith at O2 and Maaike [de Bie, GC] at Royal Mail. I have stolen lots of things from Ed, like making sure people in the team have one-to-one responsibilities and relationships with business sectors, and recruiting young lawyers and giving them broad responsibilities. Things Ed did five years ago work really well for us.

Alex Novarese: What advice would you give to lawyers joining fast-growth companies?

Matthew Wilson: You have to know who you are working with. My boss when I joined Uber was in San Francisco. How much did I speak to her in a week? About half an hour. The rest was up to me. The second thing in your early days is that responsiveness and willingness to not just be a lawyer, but to also be a business person and to get into the weeds of every aspect of a small, high-growth company.

If you are to be advising accurately, you have to take the right view on risk at every stage of the company’s development. The view of risk I took two years ago would be very different to the one I take now, because of the size of the company we are today.

Lisa Gan Tomlins: I love mnemonics and I love the rule of three. I came up with the ABC of being a Disruptive GC. My ABC was strained, but bear with me. It is to Abbreviate, create a Brand and be Concrete. Abbreviating means being concise. No-one wants to spend thousands of pounds on a memo. My emails, even to the CEO or the board, are three paragraphs at a maximum, or three bullet points with headings.

Matthew Wilson: Do you think that is because you have developed that relationship of trust?

Lisa Gan Tomlins: A little bit. I have occasionally sent longer emails of things when I have thought that it was warranted, such as share options, and people have responded saying: ‘It is too long. I did not read it. Just tell me what I need to know!’ It is TLDNR: too long; did not read.

Simon Levine: How important is it to find young lawyers who are technologists as opposed to just lawyers?

Lisa Gan Tomlins: Technology itself, in terms of using it in the businesses, is less important than you might think because a lot of the technology is still tailored towards the very big organisations.

Matthew Wilson: I am interested in knowing how many people’s teams in the room use functionality like shared documents as found in Google Docs. I started using Google Docs and it was revolutionary. It cut down review times and turnaround times on mark-ups and things like that by a huge amount. It means that we can all be in the document at the same time. I thoroughly recommend it.

Alex Novarese: How good are large law firms at dealing with fast-growth companies?

Lisa Gan Tomlins: It varies a lot, even within a firm. You will have some lawyers who are great at being nimble, concise and concrete. They will then introduce you to another partner and you think: ‘No way.’

Simon Levine: Are you thinking that you want to continue being a lawyer or about learning a lot of skills to become an entrepreneur?

Karen Kerrigan: Since working for Seedrs I have found out that I like the law a lot more than I thought I did. It may just be the variety and the application of different skills. I would still like to create my own business at some point, but for the time being I have found that balance between the risk-taking, being an early joiner and being a shareholder, while not being totally by myself. I have learned a huge amount. It has scratched the itch.

Alex Novarese: Amol, have you ever been tempted to cross the floor for a commercial role?

‘There is so much potential opportunity internally that you can grow your career.’
Amol Prabhu, Barclays

Amol Prabhu: It does pass one’s mind. We are increasingly doing a drive around the internal mobility concept. It is not just within the business, but obviously compliance and risk are sister areas. We have also had lawyers going into chief of staff roles. Again, there is a focus on what legal skills you have, and how those skills are transferable in other areas of the organisation. That is one of the great advantages of a huge firm. There is so much potential opportunity internally that you can grow your career. As you become more senior you end up being involved in projects that touch the entire plc. Brexit is a great example.

Simon Levine: I guess you discuss Brexit a lot in Barclays. I wonder whether the other businesses discuss Brexit.

Karen Kerrigan: We do. We have a MiFID passport, we are regulated by the UK and we take investment, and have three offices throughout Europe. Ultimately, we will be on the coattails of whatever happens with the big financial services institutions. The difference is that we can leave that decision to much later.

Alex Novarese: What are the big-picture trends that in-house lawyers are not thinking about but should be in the next five to ten years?

Matthew Wilson: This is not trendy, but it is politics and regulation. It is moving to a position where it is more protectionist. There is more regulation of innovation rather than regulation of outcomes.
If, as a country, we want to embrace things like artificial intelligence and automation, and the benefits that they could bring to the economy and society, we need to guard against that prescriptive regulation. That worries me. I see the Finnish, Swedish and Estonian governments coming up with some open and liberal regulations, which welcome some of this technology. We need to be mindful that we are in competition with other countries.

Alex Novarese: We can take a couple of minutes’ worth of questions from the floor.

Martin Cook, Funding Circle: I work at Funding Circle. We are technology-enabled but mission-led. To what extent are you mission-led?

Lisa Gan Tomlins: It is absolutely key, because it is what distinguishes many of our businesses. The technology is almost taken for granted. Being able to deliver that mission, because often there will very quickly be copycats, is important as it is survival of the fittest. Everyone wants to be an entrepreneur now. Money is just flowing around. If you cannot deliver that then you cannot even get past the starting line.

Kelly Harris, Simply Business: We are an insurance tech disruptor. You have just described my life. It is great to hear you talk. I do not feel as lonely anymore. I wondered whether you had some comments on being a business leader rather than a legal leader.

Karen Kerrigan: You go from that environment, where you have to build your own career path, but it follows along the track, to a business like ours where you are so lean that people are so very important. Last year I was losing sleep because of a regulatory issue. This year, because my team has doubled in size, I am concerned about losing employees. I am spending a lot of time developing those employees. To the point you raised about being mission-driven, that really feeds into how you develop your staff as well.

Alex Novarese: This is probably a good place to leave it. Thank you. LB

alex.novarese@legalease.co.uk

Please click here to view our 2017 GC Powerlist: The Clients of Tomorrow

 

The panellists

Lisa Gan Tomlins General counsel, Made.com

Karen Kerrigan Head of legal, Seedrs

Amol Prabhu Head of emerging markets legal, EMEA, Barclays

Matthew Wilson EMEA legal head, Uber

Chairs:

Alex Novarese Editor-in-chief, Legal Business and The In-House Lawyer

Simon Levine Global co-chief executive, DLA Piper