Revolving doors: Cooley recruits another Latham partner as Harbottle makes private capital play

City of London

Cooley has kicked off the February lateral market in London by returning to US rival Latham & Watkins for a capital markets hire as Harbottle & Lewis and Dechert also made plays.

Cooley hired from Latham’s capital markets practice for the second time in under a year, recruiting partner David Boles. He advises on international capital markets and securities regulation and represents investment banks, issuers and investors. Continue reading “Revolving doors: Cooley recruits another Latham partner as Harbottle makes private capital play”

‘Unlikely to be repeated’: SDT justifies sanctions in Freshfields’ Beckwith misconduct case

Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer

The Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal’s (SDT) controversial decision to fine instead of ban Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer partner Ryan Beckwith was because his misconduct was ‘a lapse in his judgement’ and ‘unlikely to be repeated’.

The SDT published today (4 Feburary) its judgment detailing its full reasons after the tribunal last October fined Beckwith £35,000 and ordered him to pay costs of £200,000 for engaging in sexual activity with a junior female colleague in circumstances in which she was ‘intoxicated to the extent that her judgement was impaired’. Continue reading “‘Unlikely to be repeated’: SDT justifies sanctions in Freshfields’ Beckwith misconduct case”

Sponsored briefing: Q&A – Vefa Resat Moral

Vefa Reşat Moral

How would you describe the current state of the Turkish legal market?

In two words, ‘fragile’ and ‘optimistic’. For the last half decade Turkey has been busy with national security, all types of elections, geopolitical developments and positioning, global mind games and, consequently, a recessed economy. Such uncontrollable developments are naturally pressing on business law and the legal market. Due to the above stated facts there have been several conditions precedent over the investment climate that negatively affect the legal market.

Given Turkey’s recent economic problems and the government’s new 5% growth target, how is this affecting your clients and what adjustments are they making given the current investment/economic climate?

All clients have been repositioning their status while revising business plans and budgets as the conditions are redealt with. Export and new markets are main ways out for manufacturing businesses as the Turkish lira has been devaluing over the past year. As a general overview, apart from clients’ short term, midterm loans have been restructured in a lot of big names in the Turkish market where our clients may have benefited. Clients aim to be transformed to sharp sharks from big whales by trying to increase profitability rather than revenues via certain measures such as cost cutting, reduction of headcount, prolonging maturities and other measures over procurement.

How can you and your clients mitigate the risks should there be an economic downturn?

Generally, they have been extremely diligent over their risk management in order to avoid potential unexpected disputes. They reduce national sales since there may be collateral problems with their dealer or clients. Therefore, they have been transformed conservatively by reducing their appetite for risk. Since collection and maturity are two big problems in the national market, they try to increase their liquidity. As stated above, they also experience certain day-to-day measures when trying to increase their export, while exploring new markets as much as possible. Furthermore, potential collaborations, alliances and partnership opportunities have been increased, since clients need market expansion.

What practice areas are busy and why, and which are the biggest originators of work, and why?

In the beginning of 2019, we have been appointed by two leading conglomerate companies in Turkey active on wide areas of business such as FMCG [manufacturing, fast-moving consumer goods], energy and logistics. As we also advise them on dispute resolution, litigation and employment, we took over more than 3,000 files from ten different law firms. That means our dispute resolution, litigation and employment departments have been very busy.

As a compliance department, we have also been appointed by several worldwide big names on wide areas of practice such as technology, FMCG, entertainment and cryptocurrency. Therefore, the compliance team is always busy and this is also an optimistic development regarding Turkey, with newcomers considering entering the market.

The M&A department has always been regularly active, especially for the last three to four years as we have been into ten law firms on deal counts under reputable tracking platform records. Despite the negative developments stated above, the first two to three quarters of the year were slow, however there have been optimistic developments that will keep our teams busy.

What changes have you noticed this year in the type and origin of work?

M&A work has slowed down due the stated political, geopolitical and financial developments, while dispute resolution, employment and compliance work have been substantially increased. We have the advantage of being a full-service firm with a strong, multi-skilled team.

Do you anticipate a resurgence in infrastructure/project finance?

Not in the short term as the market has reached saturation. However, there may be a spring in the mid term.

How is the local dispute resolution market – what types of disputes are prevalent?

Always busy even if the clients try to reconcile and diligently mitigate the risks. Our dispute resolution department both focuses on mass commercial disputes and employment disputes from well-respected clients, but also a high number of niche, unique cases that may turn into litigation battles.

The Turkish central bank’s drive to reboot growth, slashing benchmark rates by 7.5% since July and offering incentives for banks to offer credit – what impact is that having on bank advisory work?

Unfortunately, that was not efficiently reflected in the real market, excluding restructurings.

Which sectors are of most interest to M&A/private equity investors?

Export-oriented manufacturing, technology, e-commerce, services, energy and F&B [food and beverage].

What Turkish legislation has provided an impetus to foreign direct investment (FDI) and in which sectors?

There are certain legislations that were brought in for simplifying the investment climate, employment incentives and increasing free zones. However, there were also legislative developments questioned by foreign investors, such as limitations on contracts with foreign currencies, which kept legal world very busy. Currently VW’s choice of Turkey as a greenfield hub will certainly be a great indicator for FDI.

As the Turkish energy sector is being rapidly reshaped, what opportunities does this provide?

The market has been energetic for the last two years due to national tenders on renewable energy. Such tendered projects will most probably be the subject of takeovers that will increase the energy M&A market.

What impact is there for Turkish companies in compliance with global regulations and new national regulations, eg Turkish Data Protection Law, modelled on GDPR?

Data protection compliance in line with GDPR has been a trending topic since 2016. However, apart from highly affected sectors such as healthcare, banking, insurance and retail, international companies and some conglomerates have high corporate governance and awareness levels. More than 50% of the Turkish business world is not yet compliant with legislations. That has kept a new legal services market despite the cost concerns of the business world, especially when considering the high amount of consequences in administrative, financial and legal due to non-compliance.

For more information, please contact:

Vefa Reşat Moral, managing partner, Moral & Partners

T: +90 212 232 3595
E: [email protected]

www.moral.av.tr

Moral & Partners

‘Deeply upset’: Law Society’s historic HQ suffers damage after outbreak of major fire

law society entrance

Firefighters were called out to The Law Society’s headquarters over the weekend after a major fire broke out, damaging the historic building late on Saturday, 1 February.

The fire was brought under control early on Sunday, with no injuries sustained as a result. The alarm was sounded on Saturday night after the annual Junior Society dinner was held at the premises, 113 and 114 Chancery Lane in central London. Continue reading “‘Deeply upset’: Law Society’s historic HQ suffers damage after outbreak of major fire”

MoFo ups City revenue an impressive 25% as US reporting season begins

City of London

Morrison & Foerster (MoFo)’s City revenue has lifted 25% for a third consecutive year, outpacing a strong global showing and kicking off US reporting season with a showing of expansive City growth.

The firm’s revenue increase to £38.6m comes amid a 10% global increase in the last fiscal year, from $1.04bn to $1.15bn. Meanwhile, revenue per lawyer grew 4% and profit per partner grew 5% to the highest levels in the firm’s history at just over $2m. Continue reading “MoFo ups City revenue an impressive 25% as US reporting season begins”

LLP: CMS lifts profit amid Hong Kong and Istanbul restructuring as year-end move dampens NRF’s turnover

Operating profits at CMS Cameron McKenna Nabarro Olswang rose 20% to £192.8m after the firm restructured its Hong Kong and Turkish offices, the LLP accounts have revealed.

Norton Rose Fulbright (NRF) also filed its LLP books this week (31 January), showing a £2m decrease in revenue in its EMEA business to £480.7m following a move to the US calendar year-end in 2018. Continue reading “LLP: CMS lifts profit amid Hong Kong and Istanbul restructuring as year-end move dampens NRF’s turnover”

Freshfields lags Magic Circle as management pay drops 20% amid muted top line growth

Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer

The management of Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer has seen a 20% drop in pay even as its Asia business offered a silver lining with double-digit turnover growth.

Published today [31 January], the City giant’s LLP accounts for the financial year to 30 April 2019 make for subdued reading as the firm grew its top line by only 4.2% – or £61m – to £1.493bn from £1.432bn the previous year. Management pay fell from £18.6m to £14.9m. Continue reading “Freshfields lags Magic Circle as management pay drops 20% amid muted top line growth”

DLA cracks £1bn international revenue after pumping ‘tens of millions’ into offices and IT

DLA Piper office, Aldersgate

DLA Piper has increased profit at its international LLP for the fourth year running despite a sustained period of investing ‘tens of millions’ of pounds in office moves, refurbishments and IT systems.

A strong year for its European offices – and the implementation of new accounting standards – simultaneously saw revenue lift 18.5% to £1.09bn, although on an underlying basis it climbed about 7%, slightly up on last year’s 5% increase. Continue reading “DLA cracks £1bn international revenue after pumping ‘tens of millions’ into offices and IT”

Essential to success: A&O reviewing equity point cut in Germany

Allen & Overy (A&O) is reviewing equity points for partners in Germany, following a gruelling few years which saw a shift to corporate from a declining banking business.

The proposal, reported to amount to a 15% reduction in equity points but still under discussion, will be an unwelcome development among partners in the firm’s Frankfurt, Hamburg, Düsseldorf and Munich offices. It comes after unease bred from the firm’s previous restructuring led to a number of high-profile departures in 2018, including Frankfurt global head of employment and benefits Tobias Neufeld and German dispute resolution head Daniel Busse, who both set up their own boutiques. Continue reading “Essential to success: A&O reviewing equity point cut in Germany”

City’s new disputes hub launches home for independent arbitrators

The team behind the City’s new cutting-edge arbitration centre has launched a membership service for independent practitioners, with full clerking and admin support as well as a home in the heart of London’s legal community.

The new business, Int-Arb Arbitrators, is backed by the International Arbitration Centre (IAC), the world-class disputes hub launched last year at a four-floor site at 190 Fleet Street in central London. Continue reading “City’s new disputes hub launches home for independent arbitrators”

DWF continues global expansion with £14.2m managed services play

DWF has continued its expansionist strategy following last year’s initial public offering (IPO), dipping into its war chest to acquire managed services company Mindcrest in a £14.2m deal announced today (29 January).

Chicago-based Mindcrest offers managed services across contract management, compliance, legal analytics, litigation and investigations for international corporates. The majority of the business’s staff are based in Pune, India, where it has operated for over 15 years, but smaller offices are spread across Chicago, New York and London. The business has expected sales of £9.2m for the 2019 financial year. Continue reading “DWF continues global expansion with £14.2m managed services play”

Taylor Wessing loses practice head as Latham targets UK mid-market for first City tech laterals

latham ship illustration

Latham & Watkins has become the latest US player to expand its City emerging company capabilities by targeting two mid-market UK firms for a double-partner hire.

Taylor Wessing has seen one of its more senior departures in recent years as its head of technology, media and communications Mike Turner decamped to the US firm alongside Bird & Bird’s corporate partner Shing Lo. Both hires, announced today (29 January), were voted in by Latham’s partnership in early January and will join the firm over the next few weeks. Continue reading “Taylor Wessing loses practice head as Latham targets UK mid-market for first City tech laterals”

Revolving doors: Goodwin recruits CMS private equity head as Shoosmiths adds cyber partner in London

Selecting recruits

In a relatively subdued week for the London lateral market, Goodwin Procter and Shoosmiths made the only noteworthy hires in the City.

Goodwin secured a prominent hire to its private equity group, recruiting CMS’ private equity head James Grimwood to its London office. Grimwood has experience in advising on M&A, joint ventures and corporate reorganisations. He has acted on private equity transactions for institutions and management teams. Continue reading “Revolving doors: Goodwin recruits CMS private equity head as Shoosmiths adds cyber partner in London”

Lawyers rank top for satisfaction, value for money, but access to justice gaps persist

law society entrance

Solicitors in England and Wales received a glowing review in a new survey of legal needs but evidence of gaps in access to justice shows the profession has a perception problem.

The survey – the largest legal needs survey of its kind – was conducted by the Legal Services Board and Law Society using data collected by YouGov covering the experiences of 28,633 people. Solicitors ranked highest for service satisfaction, with nine out of 10 people who had used a solicitor satisfied with the service they received, while 84% believed the solicitor provided value for money. Continue reading “Lawyers rank top for satisfaction, value for money, but access to justice gaps persist”

International round-up: Squires enters Italy as NRF shuts Bahrain outpost

Milan

Squire Patton Boggs has entered the Italian legal market with a four-partner Milan base while Norton Rose Fulbright has become the latest to join a long series of office closures in the Middle East.

Squires said today (23 January) it has picked the Northern Italian city for its 45th office with a team from US rival Curtis, Mallet-Prevost, Colt & Mosle, led by Italy managing partner Galileo Pozzoli. Continue reading “International round-up: Squires enters Italy as NRF shuts Bahrain outpost”

HSF brings German offices into UK LLP to mitigate Brexit concerns

EU cliff edge

Herbert Smith Freehills (HSF) has finalised a move to absorb its German partnership into its UK LLP, as firms enter the final stages of preparations ahead of a 31 January Brexit.

The move was implemented in December last year as the firm faced a complex regulatory environment in Germany due to the UK’s imminent departure from the European Union. Without the change, HSF would have been incapable of existing as an English company domiciled in Germany. Continue reading “HSF brings German offices into UK LLP to mitigate Brexit concerns”

Outsourcing legal teams – Will it ever be more than flavour of the month?

It’s not often a FTSE 100 GC and a law firm offer themselves up to the media to discuss a deal. Even panel review stories rarely elicit comment beyond a few contrived lines about ‘innovation’, ‘alignment’ and ‘deeper relationships’. So when BT legal chief Sabine Chalmers and DWF arranged conference calls in the summer to announce a five-year managed services contract, it was difficult to not get caught up in the (relative) excitement. True, BT had spent more than a year assessing dozens of potential providers and DWF was talking up its first major post-IPO client win, but the mood music was quite catchy: ‘Law firms are going through a period of tremendous transformation’ proclaimed Chalmers, ‘It’s an incredible opportunity,’ gushed DWF’s managed services head Mark St John Qualter.

But are they? Is it?

Managed services deals involving transferring staff are far from new, but this was a substantial, multimillion-pound arrangement for insurance and real estate work that saw 40 of BT’s in-house legal team switch to DWF. It is a model GCs often espouse but rarely follow.

Yet it is the direction an increasing number of law firms are expecting and banking on. When Eversheds Sutherland chief executive Lee Ranson recently opened a client function launching his firm’s New Law arm, Konexo, he invoked Hemingway to describe the threat new delivery models pose to law firms: ‘How did you go bankrupt? Two ways. Gradually, and then suddenly.’

The past decade has also seen a boom in new legal service providers and investment, as well as the much-hyped re-emergence of the Big Four accounting firms in law. It is not that long ago that the New Law market was basically a coin flip between Axiom and Lawyers On Demand (admittedly with a bunch of legal process outsourcers toiling in the background generally failing to live up to their early-2010s sales pitch).

But it has gone quiet again over the past six months. The only industry figures who bring up the BT/DWF deal are law firm leaders, with few GCs having even noticed it. And yet there are still predictions of legal departments rapidly shrinking courtesy of a fresh wave of outsourcing, as experienced by other corporate departments such as finance and HR.

As Chalmers notes in the first of IHL’s new series of set-piece interviews with leading GCs, however, law firms will struggle to get the business model to work unless they land long-term commitments from a handful of clients at once. DWF’s competitors on the BT deal, for instance, still argue the firm offered a cut price nobody else could match.

GCs, meanwhile, complain that firms oversell their ambitions and that New Law providers are still too risky for much more than contract lawyer resource. One EMEA law head of a global financial services giant also contends regulators would be ‘crawling all over us’ if they outsourced in-house lawyers.

Outsourcing of staff is therefore consistently hamstrung by law firms requiring immediate scale to build the necessary platform and a lack of partnership buy-in on the one hand, and GCs having little appetite to ship off swathes of their own empires after decades of sustained in-house growth on the other.

For all the ambition of advisers, managed services deals – at least those based on wholesale staff transfers – are destined to be nothing more than the flavour of the month they were once again over the summer of 2019. ‘Innovation’ and ‘alignment’ do so often end up as mutually exclusive.

[email protected]

Significant matters – Winter 2020

National Grid drops three from panel

BDB Pitmans, Irwin Mitchell and Norton Rose Fulbright have been dropped from National Grid’s panel, understood to be worth about £12m a year in the UK. Womble Bond Dickinson is the sole new appointee on a roster that reduced the number of advisers from 12 to ten. Addleshaw Goddard, Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner, CMS Cameron McKenna Nabarro Olswang, Dentons, DLA Piper, Eversheds Sutherland, Herbert Smith Freehills, Linklaters and Shakespeare Martineau have retained their spots. Continue reading “Significant matters – Winter 2020”

The BT interview – ideas from the bath

The In-House Lawyer (IHL): Eighteen months in the group general counsel role, what have been some of the key projects you’ve been doing since you landed? The wider business has been through a lot of transformation, how is legal keeping up?

Sabine Chalmers (SC), group GC, BT: When I joined Gavin Patterson was my boss. He’s since left the business and we’ve transitioned to Philip Jansen from Worldpay. During that time the focus has been on learning the company and industry, getting to know and work with a new CEO, new board, my team, and as a result of all that identifying as quickly as possible what the strategic priorities for the function are and how to best support the business. Early on I reorganised my leadership team to mirror the evolving structure of the business, to ensure we had GCs reporting to me that were lined up with each of the business and corporate units: we announced that in June last year.

IHL: How many in the leadership team?

SC: I have nine reports. GC of corporate, Bruce Breckenridge; GC of technology, Chris Fowler; the GCs of each of our business units: consumer, Russell Johnstone; enterprise, Jeff Langlands; global, Liz Walker; and then Openreach, which is a 100%-owned subsidiary, Nigel Cheek, who reports directly to Clive Selley, the CEO, but we have a dotted-line relationship. Initially, Chris was GC of technology and also my head of ops, but given the scale of the technology and transformation agendas at BT, we quickly concluded that Chris should be dedicated to technology and Dave Hart was promoted to director of transformation. In that role, Dave focuses on the evolving opportunities for the function being brought by technology and alternative service providers, talent retention and management, managing our budget, etc. In addition, when our former company secretary Dan Fitz moved to the Crick Institute as their GC, we promoted Rachel Canham from within the legal team, also reporting to me. Lastly, given the strategic importance of data to our business, a new data privacy officer role will be joining the leadership team and we plan to make an announcement in that regard within the next few months.

IHL: So you had the first crack at changing the structure, then tweaked and refined it, how’s it been bedding in?

SC: Well. Phase two of that was working with the leadership team and their direct reports to further align around the strategic priorities for the function and the business and how we want to deliver them. There were a number of areas core to business in which we definitely require deep internal expertise and business partnership – examples of that would be anything to do with telecoms regulation, competition law, data, security, big commercial agreements. We need to build the deep expertise internally and partner with the right advisers externally. And then there are other areas that are less bespoke – for example, certain aspects of litigation, commercial property – where a better way to deliver services and build careers for the talent involved and take advantage of technology and best practices across different industries was to partner with someone like a DWF.

IHL: Did you look at the strategic objectives per business line at first or overall?

SC: We did the two in tandem. It takes time to arrive at the right and thoughtful answers. But what’s challenging is that people in the teams also want speed and certainty. Getting that balance is hard.

IHL: DWF took what, a year?

SC: Yes, mainly because it was a robust [request for proposal] process with lots of different potential providers and ways of doing things. We went through various stages to whittle it down to a shortlist of four or five. We found the right firm to partner with and a home where a number of our people were going to be happy and add value.

IHL: Can you explain what that deal involves?

SC: It’s a five-year managed legal services mandate covering our insurance and part of our real estate work, which has seen 40 of our people transfer to DWF.

IHL: There were some suggestions another chunk of the team was heading over as well?

SC: There were headlines that BT Law – which is limited to our ABS-licensed claims business only – was later acquired by DWF and I think the name caused some confusion, which led people to think that the entire legal function was somehow impacted, but that’s completely wrong. It was always part of the agreement that BT Law would go across to DWF in the deal we announced over the summer. The changes on Companies House that were picked up were simply the final formalisation of the managed services arrangement.

IHL: Lots of change, any particular highlights immediately coming out of that or still ‘wait and see’?

SC: What’s always fun is having the opportunity to engage the wider team. Coming from consumer goods into telecoms, there’s no way I could do this role without really talented people. It’s been fun creating the solutions with them but also having an eye to moving people around to create new career challenges and opportunities. Rachel moving to the co sec role, Dave moving from litigation into the transformation role, Chris building out a technology team – that’s the fun part of this job.

IHL: How have you found learning about a new industry and new company?

SC: The big difference for me from where I came from is that in consumer goods it’s often the case that you land on what the business wants to do first and then legal and regulatory is more about execution. In telecommunications, it’s the other way around, not completely, but you almost always have to take into account the legal, regulatory and policy framework within which you are operating to define the business options and it’s much harder. But it’s also, especially for people in legal, really interesting. That’s how as a team you can add real value to the business by being knowledgeable and creative.

IHL: How does the function need to evolve? What’s next?

SC: I believe that with the way we’ve set up our structure, we’ve got the right mix of deep specialism and people that are physically co-located and partnering with the business. But as the business evolves, we are going to have to continue to change and evolve to keep lockstep with them. If the business priorities change, or we enter into new areas of business or experience challenges in particular areas, we’re going to have to evolve, both in terms of structure and skills, to adapt. We will likely also look at the way we partner with external law firms.

IHL: How much is the DWF deal a sign of things to come in that field?

SC: I genuinely don’t know. One of the big realisations I’ve had, particularly living outside the UK for the last 25 years, is that the market has changed enormously both in the fragmentation of providers and the many different offerings we now have. Therefore, the ‘Let’s have a re-look at the landscape’ is as much about the fact that’s changed, not just because BT’s changed. To ask, ‘What’s out there? What’s on offer? Where are the good people? Where’s the good technology? What are the different ways of doing things?’ It’s not a cost-cutting exercise, it’s about identifying the best ways to deliver, making best use of technology, creating the best career paths for our talent.

IHL: How hard is it to get around all those different providers? You spoke to 26 for the DWF one.

SC: Chris set up a fantastic foundation for that by building his transformation team and they are focused on that agenda. That’s the only way you can do it. Full-time, bringing in new thinking that challenges the status quo.

IHL: How big is that transformation team?

SC: There’s seven.

IHL: When we spoke at the time of the DWF deal you said this was the direction of travel and you’d expect other companies to do this sort of thing. How high are your expectations for those providers over the next 18 months?

SC: It’s going to be interesting. It used to be the case that the big law firms kept doing what they were doing and then you had a handful of alternative providers who were offering managed services or different bespoke services, often with a lot of offshoring. What’s interesting now is virtually every good law firm is at least looking at this for, if nothing else, to identify pockets of new growth. The only way the business model can work for some of the larger law firms is if they get scale and the commitment of a sufficient number of clients that are going to provide volume. A really interesting evolution would be if the top firms can bring together a consortium of, say, four or five GCs that say, ‘We’ll give you the work’, so they can build the platform and make the maths work, and then also provide the quality that only a big law firm can bring.

IHL: They’re very different business models. Eversheds Sutherland recently spun out their alternative services arm, do you give much to the idea of it needing to be a separate entity that can have its own strategy and investment or can it operate in the law firm environment?

SC: It can operate in the law firm environment. It’s a bit like the successful consumer goods companies, right? They have their luxury, premium end of the business that works in a particular way, but they also have the high-volume core business. At the end of the day the totality provides the customer with a broad range of products. The law firms that crack that nut and can come to a GC and say, ‘I can partner with you to solve multiple problems for you’, will do well.

IHL: Do you see much of that thinking from law firms at the moment?

SC: Not yet, but I’m sure they’ll get there. If you look at the way the world and the legal market has evolved, there are loads of talented lawyers who at some point in their career just need a different sort of flexibility: where they live, when they work… They lend themselves to different models of legal service delivery.

IHL: But you could see a consortium of maybe four or five GCs coming together…

SC: Consortium’s the wrong word. Maybe a law firm aligning four or five anchor GCs, who say ‘we’ll try this for five years’ and building over time the confidence that the model would work.

IHL: It does feel like it needs that tipping point or more momentum before this happens. Have you spoken to other GCs about this?

SC: No, this is an idea I had in the bath. I do get asked by law firms for my thoughts on this kind of thing and it came to me that to make the maths work they need the volume, right? But they are probably approaching it the wrong way around, by starting small to building from there. It would be interesting if you did it the other way around and went to four or five GCs and said: ‘Look, we’re thinking of building this, will you come?’

IHL: You mentioned talent retention at the start, is it something you’ve been looking at?

SC: There’s a lot that’s being done by BT as an organisation around leadership and development and we’re therefore just ensuring that we are putting folks from the legal and co sec team forward to take advantage. Within the legal and co sec function, Jeff Langlands’ team always manages to knock the ball out of the park on our annual engagement survey. He’s very thoughtful about it.

IHL: He’s a nice guy.

SC: He is leading the charge for us on talent, being clear about the different building blocks you need to have in a career. In my experience, it’s not about just getting successive promotions, it’s about getting that variety of experience so you have a well-rounded career. So, it might be making sure that folks that are in one business unit, say consumer, also get some B2B or corporate unit experience at some point, or a different legal qualification or language.

IHL: What about introducing non-legal professionals in some way?

SC: We have the mix that you’d expect of paralegals, new graduates who may want to become lawyers, obviously, the transformation team has a good mix of analysts and tech experts. At BT, because we have such a broad range of skills across the business, often rather than building it within the team, we harness the rest of the organisation.

IHL: What are the differences you’ve noticed between the US and UK markets?

SC: When I left the UK in 1995 and moved to the US I was shocked and, frankly, pleased at the relevance and stature in-house counsel had in the US. Company GCs that did not report to the CEO or form part of the executive team were in the minority. A lot of that was driven by the litigation environment and regulation but also it’s just a country in which lawyers have forged careers in business, in politics, in many fields. The UK is not quite where the US is and maybe it never will be, because the litigation environment is so different, but the gap has definitely narrowed.

IHL: Is that just because it’s had to?

SC: The world’s become a much more global place. I’d like to think it’s not just, ‘Oh my gosh, there’s many more lawyers in senior positions just because we need them’, but it’s because the profession is showing we can add value in many different ways.

IHL: What are the downsides to that? How does it evolve further?

SC: It’s great when people get moved around and have different challenges. In terms of the teams that I’ve worked with and had the privilege to lead, some of the proudest moments are when members of the team move outside the function into M&A or finance or general management. That trend will continue. But a lot of lawyers like being lawyers.

IHL: How far has legal technology come in the last few years and how much impact do you expect it will make?

SC: The GC is sometimes the worst person to ask that question because they’re so far from what the technology’s actually doing. There is a dizzying array of potential solutions out there and you can fall into the trap of investing in technology for technology’s sake. It’s important to be thoughtful about what is going to make peoples’ lives easier, are they going to embrace it, and what training are you going to have around it? The great thing about the partnering with DWF and others is they’ve tried and tested heaps of technology.

IHL: And they have dedicated tech budgets as well?

SC: Exactly, which would never make sense. If there’s a choice between putting the pounds behind our network and serve customers or some new piece of tech for the legal team, I know where the money will go.

IHL: What are the goals for the next 18 months?

SC: First, making sure that the team is ready to support the four or five key business challenges/opportunities that our CEO and ex co want us to address. Second, continuing the work on talent development and nailing succession planning, while third is getting the model of external partnership right.

Hamish McNicol

At a glance Sabine Chalmers

Career

1987-93 Associate, Lovell White Durant, London
1993-95 General counsel, Guinness, London
1996-99 General counsel, Guinness/Diageo Latin America, Miami
2000-01 General counsel, Diageo International Markets, Miami
2002-04 General counsel, Diageo North America, Connecticut
2005-08 Chief legal officer and company secretary, InBev, Belgium
2008-17 Chief legal and corporate affairs officer and company secretary, Anheuser-Busch InBev, New York
2018-present Group general counsel, BT, London

BT – key facts

Size of team 340
External legal spend More than £40m annually
Preferred advisers Allen & Overy, Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner, CMS Cameron McKenna Nabarro Olswang, DWF, Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer