Legal Business

The rise of the lawyer statesman – A new vision for general counsel

In the closing address of the 2016 Enterprise GC summit, GE veteran Ben Heineman laid out his vision for general counsel as lawyer statesman and charted the revolution remaking global law

I want to give you an overview of my theory about the inside counsel revolution. It is clear it has happened in the US. It is happening to a degree in Europe and in Asia. General counsel (GCs) have become much more sophisticated, capable and influential, transforming law and business in two ways. Inside the company, the GC has become the primary counsellor to the chief executive and board, replacing the law firm senior partner. He or she leads corporate units beyond the law. The role has become comparable in importance to the chief financial officer (CFO) due to the increased global complexity and the rising importance of ‘business in society’ issues. There has been a dramatic change in the skill, the experience, the breadth and the compensation of the GC.

The second part of the revolution is the shift of power from outside to inside. Inside, lawyers now control strategy and make the decisions about where the substantive legal or legal-political, or legal-business issue will go. They try to control the money.

GCs also now often have a public role outside the company, as an advocate and negotiator and representative of the company. This all began in the mid-1980s and has increased in velocity ever since.

Four Framework Ideas

1. Mission

I am going to talk about four framework ideas that are critical to this revolution, and what it means to be a great corporation and a great lawyer. The first is the mission of the global corporation. This is usually a lot of baloney but I believe there are three critical concepts to consider. The first is high performance. High performance provides durable benefits to the shareholders but also the other stakeholders.

Performance has to be infused with integrity. Integrity means robust adherence to the spirit and letter of the rules, which are primarily legal but are also financial. It means voluntary adoption of global ethical standards that bind the company.

The third point is employee commitment to the core values of honesty, candour, fairness, reliability and trustworthiness. Fusing high performance with high integrity and sound risk management creates the trust that is the essential part of any corporation’s sustainability.

2. The GC as Lawyer Statesman

A second framework idea is the notion of GC as lawyer statesman. The lawyer statesman asks the first question: ‘Is it legal?’, but also: ‘Is it right?’ It involves broad scope and being a professional but also a citizen, because the problems you deal with go far beyond the law.

There are three qualities of the lawyer statesman: they are the outstanding expert, wise counsellor and an accountable leader. There is a paradox. We think of a statesman as the leader. But we operate within a hierarchical organisation where the chief executive often has the last word. For GCs, being a statesman involves the power of your ideas and your personality in at least asking: ‘Is it the right thing to do?’

The dilemma is to avoid being an inveterate naysayer and excluded or an inveterate yea-sayer and indicted. We have all heard about lawyers as Dr Nos, but there are just as many who are Dr Yeses.

3. The Partner/Guardian Tension

Principle number one is hire the best. That means competing with law firms and convincing your business leader that it is worth spending a lot of money.

4. Integrity culture

You can miss the numbers and survive, but if you miss on integrity it is one strike and you are out. You have to fire people if that happens. There is no balancing test.

Core principles

Hiring the best

Let me end by talking about the legal organisation and law firms. Here are some of the core precepts that I tried to follow in running a global legal department. We had 13 different divisions with everything from NBC to aircraft engines. When I left we had 1,300 lawyers covering 120 countries.

Principle number one is hire the best. That means competing with law firms for talent and convincing your business leader that it is worth spending a lot of money to get a great tax lawyer or a great M&A lawyer. Hire the best. You can do it.

Delegation

You have to figure out how to delegate. If I had any success in people management, it is because I left them alone. I would talk once a year about their priorities. I would say: ‘These two issues are company issues. I am going to be involved in them. Everything else is yours. You just report to me at the half-year point and at the end of the year.’ Being clear about delegation is critical to keeping great people.

Accountability

There has to be a system of accountability between legal and business. The shibboleth I followed was that both hire and either can fire. Whether you have a decentralised system or a centralised system where all the lawyers work for the GC they have to be embedded in the business. They have to know the culture of the business, the business unit, the P&L centre, but also have loyalty to the GC. That system of accountability is critically important.

The lawyers failed in the financial services mess because they never asked what would happen if things went wrong.

Innovation

There has to be global innovation, whether it is by region, country, business or specialty. Trying to create one legal organisation with one mission and one culture where you can use all the talents and knowledge inside the organisation is critically important. I always thought one of my ethical duties to the inside lawyers [was] to give them fair evaluations about how they were doing and what their career possibilities were or were not. We do a terrible job for young lawyers. Companies do a terrible job. The law firms do a terrible job. We have to address that. We have to educate about the law of lawyering.

Diversity

There must be diversity. That is happening in the US, not as fast as it should, but it is happening. We need to do pro bono work and we need to worry about letting people have a life. The breadth they get in other activities gives them a sense of perspective that comes back in their jobs. I deeply believe that.

Cost creating value

You have to make the case that the cost of your activity in the law department creates value. You must do this in a very increasing systematic and sophisticated way, whether it is increasing productivity and reducing direct cost to the company, avoiding important risk or addressing catastrophic problems. You can come up with themes as opposed to just line items in the budget. Involve the finance function to help you do this.

The legal organisation

Lastly, how do we deal with the legal organisation? Let me give you some key thoughts. The most important point is segmentation of work. It is a tough job but a simple concept: you separate low-complexity and low-risk work from high-complexity and high-risk work. Who we hire will depend where it is on the segmentation ladder. We want to understand how the cost in each segment creates value and what the right margins are.

If you are dealing with a high risk and complex matter, you may not care what the lawyers charge if they are terrific. With a commodity matter you may care a great deal and want to drive margins down. You want to analyse all the provider options. You can bring work inside. There are non-firm lawyers for routine and peaking work. There are lots of different choices.

There is this terrible productive disconnect. Law firms are trying to ramp up profits per equity partner. They want the exact opposite of what we want: more with less. What do we do? We do competition in the segments. And we do cost control, whether it is at the front end through budgeting and fixed fees or at the back end through audits and disallowances.

I am saddened. We are repeating the same arguments we have had with law firms for 20 years. Money is still the cancer in many of the relationships. Their business model is not driven to serve the customer; it is to increase profits per partner. There has to be a better way.

Conclusion

With this revolution, one thing I am sure you are thinking is: ‘How can I possibly do all this?’ You cannot. I could not. You can have the vision but you have to hire great people and delegate. You need to make alliances with the other staff and have the right alliances with outside experts. The second obstacle is a lack of vision. It is not just GCs; it is the business leaders. You have to show that legal cost creates value and you have to have the right relationship. These are the core issues that you have to deal with if this revolution is going to work.

The inside counsel revolution is going global. With the changing world and the importance of dealing with commercial complexity, and running that against the huge growth in business in society issues that demand for the partner/guardian and the lawyer statesman, the inside revolution is going to be driven by necessity not theory. Thank you for listening. LB

Ben Heineman is the former general counsel of GE. This article is an edited version of the closing speech at this year’s Enterprise GC, a joint forum from Legal Business, GC magazine and The Legal 500. Heineman’s new book, The Inside Counsel Revolution, is available now.

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