Playing the game

You may not have heard the term ‘gamification’, but the chances are you have experienced a form of it. Perhaps you’re an executive in a FTSE 500 company with a generous bonus triggered when your performance meets certain conditions. You could be a corporate client, flicking through the ranked lawyers in The Legal 500, preparing to draw up a shortlist for your next deal. In each case, you would be responding to an element of gameplay dynamics, subtly influencing your judgement, or motivating particular choices.
gameifaction-board-game

Gamification is a way of codifying these dynamics into a system designed to incentivise desired behaviours or, put simply, injecting game design into non-game fields to make them more fun.

As humans, we all enjoy games. But Yu-kai Chou, a gamification pioneer, loves them more than most. ‘I was a very heavy gamer. I would devote thousands of hours to master a game. But eventually you have to stop playing one game and move to another, and that’s when I felt extremely empty – I felt that all these thousands of hours were lost and there was nothing there,’ says Chou.

‘I started to think: is there a game that everyone is playing, but the more hours you spend on it, the better your real life is? That started me on this pretty obsessive journey of saying “Hey, there doesn’t have to be a divide between work and play, between the things you have to do and the things you want to do.”’

Chou became one of the earliest proponents of gamification back in the early 2000s. Now a specialist in the gamification space and a consultant to progressive corporates like Google, Lego and eBay, Chou has set out to design systems and solutions that can benefit business. All they need to do, he says, is unpack what makes games fun, then reproduce those elements where engagement is lacking.

What makes a good game?
Chou’s thinking isn’t restricted to computer games. A game might not even look like a game – a poster on the wall could be gamified. But rather than simply picking out game elements (like competition, points or badges) Chou believes it’s more instructive to understand why games appeal to us in the first place. He identified eight ‘core drives’ behind human behaviour and built a gamification framework around them, called Octalysis.

‘Some people call it behavioural engineering, but it is a more scientific methodology. The core drivers are the fundamentals of gamification because they are how the brain works. If there are none of the eight core drives there, then there is zero motivation – no behaviour happens.’

Chou’s ‘human-focused’ (as opposed to function-focused) design optimises game design by understanding that people have reasons why they don’t want to do something before considering solutions. His Octalysis framework therefore groups the drives, and offers a structured analysis of when and why they might be best employed.

‘White hat’ core drives – for example: meaning, accomplishment, empowerment, ownership – make people feel good, powerful and in control, but there’s no sense of urgency. Users intend to do something, but they tend to do more of a cost-benefit analysis first because they’re fully in charge.

‘Black hat’ core drives – for example: social pressure or avoiding a penalty – make people feel urgent, obsessed and addicted, but in the long run will leave a bad taste in their mouths.

‘White-hat core drives are more useful for long-term engagement – employee loyalty, committee management,’ notes Chou.

‘Black hat core drives are for more short-term activity – closing a deal or a three-week competition within the workforce. In that period, everyone is pumped and motivated, but if it was a year-long event, then people get burned out.’

Similarly, there are ‘extrinsic’ versus ‘intrinsic’ core drives. In the former, a desired behaviour has a reward attached, driving fast results as people pursue the prize. But once the reward is achieved, they lose motivation. In the latter, the activity itself is enjoyable, and therefore is its own reward. The results might take longer to arrive, but they are self-perpetuating. According to Chou, a good piece of game design will build several core drives into the system to create balance.

Gaming the law
Most lawyers would not characterise their working day as saving the world. But some believe that gamification is about to hit legal services in a material way. In the past year alone, Chou has been invited to present at three of the five biggest legal conferences in the UK. And in the US, law firm consultant David Freeman has sensed a similar movement.

‘I did a small survey earlier this year and it’s happening. One firm was using it in teaching substantive legal skills, for another it was improving time entry, others used it for business development skills, another firm used it to try to identify emerging or overlooked opportunities.’

Freeman has worked with Chou to build a cloud-based system encouraging law firm fee-earners to cross-sell to clients the services of other practice areas within their firm – currently a largely untracked process. Lawyers can sign in and identify specific clients that they would like to give to other lawyers in the firm, or opportunities they would like to receive. They are prompted to go through steps in the process, and the system can send automatic reminders, as well as offer automated guidance and coaching. The system is gamified by allowing users to track their progress and rank themselves against other users, while the firm itself is able to view statistics and manage the process.

‘Lawyers are very difficult people to tell what to do. There are things that, if they are too game-y, lawyers can resist it right off the bat, so they still have to have a certain element of professionalism. There’s a real art form in that,’ says Freeman.

For some system designers that art could come in the form of another of Chou’s behavioural insights, that of ‘implicit’ gaming: if you have a group of people who might refuse to play a game, don’t tell them it’s a game. Implicit gamification could look, for example, like a customer management system, but with a live interface of game elements that nudge different behaviours, like performance tracking, scoring, or a leader board.

‘Even if lawyers resist a mandate from the firm to do it, there’s another part of them that likes to see how they are ranked against others – and if they’re not ranking well, they do not want to be embarrassed. As well as any extrinsic rewards the firm may offer there are intrinsic rewards like the feeling of mastery, of becoming a master of the art of cross-serving your clients,’ Freeman reckons.

Tactics
If gamification pits our unconscious against our conscious to trick us into having fun, the flip side is that a user’s performance could be used against them – which some find insidious. But argues legal services consultant and gamification practitioner Michael Bommarito, it’s the opposite.

‘There are many ways we can incentivise behaviour in an opaque way, which potentially can result in unfair decisions. One of the blessings and curses of games is that they make all of that open. Scores are open, peers are visible, and so there’s an element of public shaming that’s not always easy to deal with. That requires some kind of change management or cultural question and answer internally in an organisation,’ says Bommarito.

‘But we should be honest with ourselves – that kind of reward and shaming happens anyway. The only difference here is we are being open about that dynamic, and giving people the opportunity to see the reality and to improve.’

One of the flagship products developed by Bommarito’s consultancy, LexPredict, is LexSemble, a software platform used with inside and outside counsel. Fundamentally, LexSemble is a knowledge management system built upon data that has been crowdsourced from within an organisation, which is then used to provide insights and forecasts to the business. LexSemble does this by sorting the crowd-sourced data, such as opinions from within the business, and using it to create predictions and present conclusions. Over time, the accuracy of these predictions is fed back into the system, allowing it to adapt accordingly – for example, by learning which of an organisation’s experts has the most predictive value in a given area.

Through his work with LexPredict, Bommarito has found that law firms can be reticent when it comes to applying gamification – but that does not mean that there is not a form of Chou’s ‘implicit’ technique being employed. ‘We may not use the word during our consulting engagements, but it is what we are doing. If you really want to do it, you can hide it in plain sight,’ says Bommarito. ‘But everyone is better off if we are just transparent about what we’re doing. If it is rule-based, then let’s just write down the rules and score the rules and show the score.’

Gaming culture
Ultimately, the decisive factor for whether to go ahead with gamification is understanding your company culture – and gauging whether it is conducive to the approach.

The tagline on the website of French drinks manufacturer Pernod Ricard is ‘Créateurs de convivialité’, which directly translates to ‘creators of conviviality’. But conviviality and compliance training are not natural bedfellows, and so, after hearing of the success that their colleagues in marketing were having with a gamified training tool, general counsel Ian FitzSimons and the legal team at Pernod Ricard decided to give it a try.

The team worked with an external company to design a ‘MOOC’ (Massive Open Online Course) to teach users about compliance, incorporating gamification elements such as competition, badges, and levelling up. A few years on, the MOOC is still in use, and about to re-launch to take account of developments in French compliance law.

The MOOC has improved engagement in compliance training at Pernod Ricard, but legal counsel in the company’s local markets are empowered to use their discretion to provide additional training using the method of their choosing (including traditional, face-to-face instruction) as well.

‘What we have to be careful about in any company is just too many online courses – whether it is with gamification or not – and suddenly every department is doing it. At some point, people are just overwhelmed at the amount of online training,’ says FitzSimons.

‘You have to keep this sort of thing relatively short and sweet. And you have to be selective about what level of training you want to target through gamification and what you are going to do via other means. Let’s face it, if you are talking about Millennials, the level of gamification is mildly interesting in comparison to the games they’re used to playing!’

FitzSimons adds that, in introducing gamification to Pernod Ricard’s compliance training, there have been lessons along the way.

‘We should have made it compulsory and I think we should have made more of a big show when we launched. Timing the launch is important, and how you launch – we made a film to go with it, but it has to be something that brings people in. The timing of the year can also be extremely important – within a company which is cyclical in its business, you have to think about things like that.’

Switching Off
Any process overlay runs the risk of creating alienation if it is not designed sensitively, particularly when progress is being tracked and monitored. In an echo of Chou’s white hat/black hat drives, Bommarito warns of potential adverse psychological effects, particularly in large organisations.

‘It can feel somewhat draconian or Orwellian. There’s a fine line between making your lawyers feel like they work in a call centre and making them feel like they have positive incentives and are part of a group with some social benefits,’ says Bommarito.

‘You want there to be positive incentives and positive reinforcement as much as possible, so these are goals that people strive for, and not things that they are penalised for. There is definitely communication challenges and framing challenges.’

Where it has been implemented properly, gamification has shown the potential to become a novel addition to the legal services toolkit: both as a way of overcoming reluctance to complete the boring routine elements of the in-house lawyer’s job, but also as a way to galvanise service providers. As Chou points out, and as forms a central part of the gamification ethos, understanding how to engage the brain is the foundation to driving human motivation – and ultimately securing a more productive legal team.

[email protected]

Gamification at Pernod Ricard
General counsel Ian FitzSimons describes the company’s online compliance training
‘We work with insurance companies who have panels of outside counsel firms. In the past, a panel of outside counsel firms might exist in a vacuum; they kind of know who their peers on a panel are, but they’re not measured in a way that is made public to them. We do work that changes that.

The panel might have a leaderboard, and all the firms on the panel might have a certain number of points. That could be at the resource level, like the associates or the partners working there, or it could be at the firm level. They might have a score or points assigned based on, let’s say, average time to respond to a call from a client.

The end result is a different experience for the insurance company when their outside counsel firms become aware that, let’s say, “Firm B tends to respond quicker than we do when the client reaches out.” They might start to think along the lines of “Is that something we’re ok with?” Maybe: “We are more thoughtful with our responses”, or maybe: “I need to have a chat with our associates to make sure they’re paying attention to email or phone calls.”

You can say: “This firm responds twice as fast. In a PR issue, or maybe a data breach like Equifax, which firm am I going to pick in an emergency? I’m probably going to pick the firm that’s going to help me get started on this most quickly.”

When you expose this information to the firms, it helps a little. But when you structure that information within a game or an incentive structure, all of a sudden, you start to improve behaviour in ways that are open and transparent.

There’s usually an incumbent owner of the work, and they generally dislike any change. But there are those challenger firms, the second or third firm, often with a younger partner who’s looking to earn a bigger book of business, and they might even be proponents of some of these changes, because they see that it’s an opportunity to overturn the incumbent.’

Significant matters – Summer 2018

EDF and Co-op overhaul panels
Big six energy supplier EDF Energy has almost halved its external advisers in a panel review that cut the number of law firms from 14 to eight. CMS Cameron McKenna Nabarro Olswang and Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner (BCLP) were added, while Baker McKenzie, Herbert Smith Freehills, Pinsent Masons, Eversheds Sutherland, Squire Patton Boggs and Burges Salmon all retained their places. The firms to lose out included Clifford Chance, Dentons, TLT, Osborne Clarke, Veale Wasbrough Vizards, Kennedys, Weightmans and Foot Anstey. The review of the panel – which will run until 2020 – was led by chief legal officer Guido Santi, and was intended to bring EDF closer to firms that could advise across its diverse business lines.

Elsewhere, The Co-operative Group introduced some new blood to its panel of seven firms to work alongside primary adviser Allen & Overy. Fieldfisher and Squire Patton join Addleshaw Goddard, Pinsents, Hill Dickinson, Brodies and Paris Smith for a three-year term, in a panel that will bring together the group’s corporate, commercial and property panels.

Bidding begins on £320m public sector panel
The UK Government’s bid to reduce public sector costs has seen law firms invited to pitch for a multitude of spots on the Crown Commercial Service’s (CCS) new £320m panel. Procurement agency CCS announced last October it planned to set up a £650m ‘legal services marketplace’. However, a tender document released in May showed it had been renamed ‘wider public sector legal services’ and its value reduced to £320m by more than half.

Firms had until mid-June to pitch for spots on the panel, which is set to run for three years from August, with firms eligible for appointment to a maximum of four lots. The panel is split into five lots of differing values, including regional service provision worth £70m, full service lot worth £130m, property and construction at £40m, and transport and rail worth £32m.

Westfield GC exits after £18.5bn takeover

The £18.5bn takeover of Westfield Corporation by Unibail-Rodamco in June saw longstanding Westfield UK and Europe general counsel Leon Shelley leave the company after 13 years. Shelley’s departure from Australia-headquartered Westfield will see his role split in two, with deputy GC Amanda Beattie taking the mantle of UK GC while senior legal counsel Maurizio Redondi becomes head of legal in Italy. Senior Westfield executives, such as Australian billionaire and co-founder Frank Lowy, also quit the company, while group president and chief operating officer Michael Gutman has also since left, with at least one other member the 14-strong legal team expected to depart.

Novartis GC steps down over White House controversy
Longstanding in-house stalwart Felix Ehrat stepped down from his role as GC of Swiss healthcare giant Novartis after becoming entangled in a controversy involving a deal with US President Donald Trump’s personal lawyer. Ehrat had been GC and a member of the executive committee at the pharma company since 2011, but was forced to admit ‘an error’ relating to an agreement between the Basel-based business and Trump’s lawyer, Michael Cohen. It emerged that Novartis made monthly payments, totalling $1.2m, seeking guidance on how the Trump administration might approach US healthcare policies, with the contract being approved by former chief executive Joe Jimenez, who left the company in September 2017. As a co-signatory on the contract, Ehrat said his position had become untenable, and his role has been filled by the company’s chief ethics, risk and compliance officer Shannon Thyme Klinger, who joined the company in 2011 having previously been a litigation partner at Mayer Brown.

Metro Bank unveils new panel
Metro Bank has completed a review of its commercial legal panel, with five law firms scoring new spots on the eight-firm roster. The additions include CMS, Eversheds Sutherland, DLA Piper and Browne Jacobson, while the Magic Circle is represented by Linklaters. Previously the panel was made up of Addleshaw Goddard, Blake Morgan, and Gowling WLG, which retained their spots, while King & Spalding and DWF missed out. The review, which began in February, was conducted by the bank’s general counsel, Sally-Ann James, who had previously been head of contract and commercial at The Co-operative Banking Group until 2010, before joining Metro Bank as GC in 2012.

RBS to kick off panel review
Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) intends to review its legal advisers with the bank informing firms officially that the process will get underway in the coming months. RBS expects to complete the process by the end of the year, with the current roster having been in place since the end of 2015, and running until 1 January 2019. Magic Circle firms Linklaters, Allen & Overy and Clifford Chance were among the firms winning spots during the last overhaul, alongside Ashurst and Simmons & Simmons. The previous review was conducted by former GC John Collins, with Reed Smith, Herbert Smith Freehills and Dentons also making the cut. The next review is expected to be undertaken by Michael Shaw, who took over from Collins in 2016.

Energy and metals giant to pick first panel

Industrial group GFG Alliance is set to establish its first-ever panel of law firms, with expertise in M&A, litigation and employment law emphasised in a roster comprising around four firms. Requests for proposals were sent out in May. The move comes as former Allen & Overy lawyer Simon Nasta became global group general counsel at the company, joining in January from First Bank of Nigeria, where he led the legal team.

Moves that matter
Former Amec Foster Wheeler GC Alison Yapp has been appointed as group GC of contract catering company Compass Group. In addition to her role as group GC, Yapp will act as company secretary for the FTSE 100 business, and will assume her new position on 1 October when current GC Mark White retires after more than 11 years in the role. Yapp was formerly general counsel of recruitment company Hays for almost seven years, before departing for Amec in 2012.
Weetabix Food Company has recruited a new head of legal with the hire of former Shoosmiths partner Helen Wilson. Wilson joins from digital commissioning company Adam HTT and will lead the legal team both in the UK and overseas, succeeding former GC Chris Thomas, who joined Odeon Cinema Group earlier this year. Wilson had previously spent more than six years at Shoosmiths in Birmingham.
EE’s former legal head James Blendis (left) has joined Renault Nissan as the company’s UK, Ireland and northern territories GC. Blendis had been retained as the GC of the EE division following the £12.5bn merger with BT completed in 2016. However, EE’s in-house legal team has since been transferred officially into BT’s wider team. Blendis now departs for Renault Nissan, where he will replace Michael Taylor who was the company’s legal head in the UK for nearly four years.
Sportswear manufacturer Puma has appointed a new GC with Martin Benda joining the company from The Coca-Cola Company. Benda had been at Coca-Cola since 2001, and gained experience acting as senior legal counsel for central and Eastern Europe. Benda started his career at Mannesmann Mobilfunk – now Vodafone – and will succeed Jochen Lederhilger, who has left Puma after 20 years to pursue a career as a self-employed lawyer.
San Francisco-based cryptocurrency exchange Kraken has hired Mary Beth Buchanan – a former federal prosecutor – to serve as its general counsel to help the company navigate the turbulent regulatory environment that surrounds the nascent cryptocurrency space. Buchanan represents a heavyweight addition for Kraken, having been the youngest-ever appointment for US attorney for the western district of Pennsylvania, as well as serving as a partner in legacy Bryan Cave’s white-collar defence and securities litigation and enforcement practices.
Investment firm Leapfrog Investments has hired a new GC after Stuart Bedford left the company to return to Linklaters. Frances Holliday will assume Bedford’s position, having arrived from Kazimir Partners, where she was general counsel.

Disruption is heading in-house. Discuss

A lively debate over coffee recently with Axiom founder Mark Harris took me back to the discussion that manifests most frequently in my line of work these days: the extent that legal services are transforming with new providers and tools.

While Harris highlights many genuine changes in the industry and buying behaviour we disagree on whether this represents a fundamental shift. He sees the rule changing, for me it remains the exception. To be clear, I am an admirer of Axiom as a pioneer that has been a positive competitive force. And as the architect of the world’s most prominent New Law brand, Harris is positioned to see the bleeding edge of change.

Axiom is now betting on huge advances in technology to revolutionise the way clients create and manage contracts. There can be no sensible dispute that sophisticated automation will ultimately transform how companies and legal professionals approach contractual positions, though what that will ultimately mean is far harder to predict. Utopians cast technology as slashing costs to handle existing work. Were aggregate liabilities stable that would likely happen. But not only can that stability not be taken for granted, the recent path of technology suggests quite the contrary. The proliferation of electronic data has, for example, seen the costs of disclosure in litigation and compliance in general explode as more information becomes open to capture.

Consider the notion of all companies grasping their technical assets and liabilities at all times via technology – that would be an exponential rise in inter-party liability. Will that save money? The counter argument of technologists is: ‘Be patient and costs will ultimately fall.’ With something as narrowly defined as litigation disclosure, that may be true. The vastly more complex ecosystem of the globalised economy is another matter entirely.

But the more immediate issue for general counsel raised by New Law service models and technology is what it will ultimately do to in-house teams themselves. In many contexts, this debate has been framed as one of conventional law firms being disrupted while in-house teams drive change merely as empowered customers. Such a reading defies economic realities and wider trends that have seen companies rethink functions like finance and HR in the face of new technology and options to outsource.

In-house counsel have come a huge way in recent years in sophistication and contribution to business but companies are in the business of business, not legal services and good lawyers are hugely expensive to hire. Privately, more GCs are now talking of the likelihood that disruption and technology will rapidly change the skillsets and size of in-house teams, perhaps leading to dramatic staff reductions. Is it sustainable for some companies to have legal teams that rival the size and cost base of major law firms?

The issues such discussions raise are complex and unpredictable and I won’t insult readers’ intelligence by pretending to have the answers. But these strike me as the kind of questions GCs need to be asking. Because I agree with Harris on one fundamental point: the pressure for substantive change in the legal services market is building. When that pressure finally overwhelms the defined order of the profession, I would not bet on an orderly outcome.

[email protected]

Deal watch: City high-flyers land jumbo £4.4bn BA pension deal as Blackstone’s buying spree continues

British Airways plane over City

City heavyweights Allen & Overy (A&O), Clifford Chance (CC) and Eversheds Sutherland have landed key roles on Legal & General’s £4.4bn buy-in of the British Airways pension scheme as advisers cash in on a brace of Blackstone deals.

UK insurer Legal & General is taking on £4.4bn of historic pension liabilities relating to the Airways Pension Scheme (APS) in a bulk annuity designed to reduce risk in the scheme. Continue reading “Deal watch: City high-flyers land jumbo £4.4bn BA pension deal as Blackstone’s buying spree continues”

The no-plan plan – MoJ sets out disputes contingency guidance for a no-deal Brexit

As the UK careens towards the March 2019 deadline, the Government has released a contingency plan outlining rules for cross-border European disputes in the event of a no-deal Brexit.

Guidance was published yesterday (13 September) by the Ministry of Justice (MoJ), with the main conclusion that if no arrangement is reached with the EU, the UK will have to rely on domestic common law rules currently applied to cases involving non-EU countries for cross-border European disputes. Continue reading “The no-plan plan – MoJ sets out disputes contingency guidance for a no-deal Brexit”

Client profile: Julie Smyth, BAE Systems Air

Julie Smyth

‘My husband has virtually no understanding of what I do,’ admits BAE Systems Air chief counsel Julie Smyth. ‘He thinks I sit in meetings all day.’

Secrecy and security at the £18bn defence multinational is paramount. Its mammoth Warton airfield base, which dominates the village of the same name a short drive from Preston, is classified as a ‘List X’ site, meaning it can hold UK Government information considered ‘secret’ and above. Continue reading “Client profile: Julie Smyth, BAE Systems Air”

Life during law: Simon Konsta

Simon Konsta

My father is Greek, my mother was English. There’s been no law in the family, much more of a trading background on my father’s side. But there is a wonderful circularity between his old Greek shipping mates that would be in my environment as a child, and the fact that Clyde & Co is the world’s number one marine firm.

I had an open mind going into articles. I was lucky to have a seat in Paris, which is disputes and arbitration. A combination of that plus the domestic disputes work I did, I just preferred it to corporate or real estate. Continue reading “Life during law: Simon Konsta”

Grieve on Brexit: No great advantage

Dominic Grieve MP

Alex Speirs: Now less than a year out from the UK’s scheduled withdrawal from the EU, how would you characterise the current state of negotiations?

Dominic Grieve: They’re not going well at all. We are not talking the same language. The UK is seeking a bespoke deal recognising our past membership of the EU, our desire to maintain very close links with the EU in a wide range of fields, to have as near frictionless as possible trade in goods and services, and to participate in a vast range of EU peripheral activities. But we want freedom to operate our own immigration policy, not have freedom of movement, the ability to do third-country trade agreements and the ability to deregulate or change the regulatory framework in areas. Continue reading “Grieve on Brexit: No great advantage”

The talent debate: The war rages on

Sarah Wiggins

James Tsolakis, NatWest: One of the great challenges setting this up with Alex is in the long period I have been a banker to the legal profession, the rate of change is faster than I have seen for a long time. The challenge was defining the discussion. It could have been IPOs, artificial intelligence, international expansion – any number of things. I am pleased we chose a subject that will ultimately touch all these other subjects driving change in the sector.

Alex Novarese, Legal Business: Kicking off, Sharon, what worries you about talent? Continue reading “The talent debate: The war rages on”

Letter from… Moscow: Apocalypse now beckons as sanctions and turmoil batter foreign lawyers in Russia

Moscow graphic

Remember the days when Russia was the El Dorado of the Western legal elite? Potent New York outfits like Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton and Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom forged hugely lucrative businesses catering to Russian clients, while oligarchs and their top-dollar disputes were regulars in London’s commercial courts.

Just half a decade on and those days seem a distant memory. Chat informally with local partners and, once you get past the party line about it not being so bad, it is clear they are spending increasing chunks of their working lives merely trying to stay in the game. Continue reading “Letter from… Moscow: Apocalypse now beckons as sanctions and turmoil batter foreign lawyers in Russia”

Enterprise GC 2018: Tumbling into crisis

Gorilla graphic

Corporate crises are on the upswing. A faster-paced R&D cycle, improved but riskier technology, 24-hour news… the list of triggers goes on. But our understanding of such events has not always evolved at the same pace. We speak of a crisis as a single incident but, in reality, a chain reaction will likely ensue – and no sooner than one element appears under control, another pops up.

A tumble into crisis

Let us imagine a company that is consumer-facing and has a large, warehouse-based workforce. Imagine it makes toys, sells them online and is called ‘Tumble Toys’. Speed and efficiency in dispatching little Billy or Betty’s heart’s desire is one of its market differentiators – its marketing campaign features a gorilla called Tumble, who makes his way through various perils to ‘tumble’ into the child’s house in various amusing ways. As with many companies, Tumble Toys has outsourced warehouse staffing to a third party. Continue reading “Enterprise GC 2018: Tumbling into crisis”

Mega-deals and convergence stoke M&A but subdued volumes and volatile conditions linger

Andy Ryde

This time last year, a collective sigh of relief from City dealmakers was reverberating around the Square Mile as the M&A market regained momentum despite a backdrop of economic and political uncertainty. Since then, deal counsel have barely paused for breath, with many juggling multiple deals well into the parts of August in which even the most committed deal junkie would expect to be pretending not to check work emails on a sun lounger.

Such boom-time dynamics are borne out by the latest Mergermarket figures for H1 2018, which saw announced global M&A deals hit $1.94trn, its highest value since the financial crisis. Continue reading “Mega-deals and convergence stoke M&A but subdued volumes and volatile conditions linger”

Who Represents Who: The data behind the story

Freeths map

LB100: The rise of Freeths

Freeths has seen revenue almost double over the past five years (see Legal Business 100 table), and are often mentioned to our researchers by partners and general counsel alike as a firm that has significantly impressed. We take a look at the firm’s The Legal 500 rankings and some of the FTSE clients that it represents. Continue reading “Who Represents Who: The data behind the story”

LB100: Smoke, turmoil and a tonne of cash

'LB100 star' tattooed hands

The latest financial year has not been a vintage period for those wishing the legal industry would fall into concise patterns. Glancing at the LB100, separating the winners and losers by breed is more difficult than at any time over the last 20 years.

But murky as the picture is, some broad outlines can still be discerned. The 2017/18 season was one of the best 12 months of trading since the banking crisis a decade ago reset the legal market. Continue reading “LB100: Smoke, turmoil and a tonne of cash”

A decade since Lehman the profession still mired in the New Normal

Lehman Brothers

Within days of this issue hitting desks, it will be ten years since Lehman Brothers’ collapse marked what swiftly became the great financial crisis. That event was only the clearest symptom of a disease that had been infecting the banking system for more than a year before Lehman filed for bankruptcy on 15 September 2008.

Yet the process unquestionably signalled changes that have reverberated through economies, politics, business and, yes, the legal profession ever since. By the summer of 2009 the UK profession had for the first time engaged in industrial-scale job cuts, axing more than 5,000 roles at top 100 UK firms alone. Through the lens of the LB100, the profession starkly divides into performance patterns pre and post-Lehman. During the long boom, London’s elite was utterly untouchable. Within the Circle they could falter and scrap for fleeting inter-club advantage. But as far as the rest of the industry was concerned, they were in a world of their own. The initial advances of major US law firms had by the mid-2000s been comprehensively repelled – what chance did mid-tier rivals have? Continue reading “A decade since Lehman the profession still mired in the New Normal”

The LB100 overview: Crisis? What crisis?

LB100 Rock punk skeleton

Brexit negotiations stalling, trade wars looming, the high street hit by a raft of collapses – at first sight, there is plenty to suggest the UK has taken a trip back in time. Yet for those with a finger on the pulse in the City, it will come as no surprise to find this year’s Legal Business 100 (LB100) speaks of a standout year for Britain’s legal elite. Turmoil has mattered very little against the backdrop of booming transactional activity, interest rates near historic lows and the cheap pound.

While commercial lawyers spoke with wary optimism of healthy markets in the summer of 2017, caution progressively turned into bemused enthusiasm as the City realised it was living through its busiest winter for years during a period that seemed to resemble the Winter of Discontent. By spring, some were hailing the best financial year since the banking crisis. This year’s survey confirms that there is some substance to such claims. Continue reading “The LB100 overview: Crisis? What crisis?”

LB100 case study: Clifford Chance

Matthew Layton

The only firm among London’s big four to have retained its position in the Legal Business 100 table, Clifford Chance (CC) is the second-largest UK-bred shop after DLA Piper, having added £83m to its top line to hit £1.623bn.

But if the 5% uptick in revenue is broadly comparable to Linklaters, Allen & Overy and Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer, it is the 16% surge in profit per equity partner (PEP) to £1.6m where CC has edged ahead of its rivals. Continue reading “LB100 case study: Clifford Chance”

LB100 case study: Taylor Wessing

Long-serving managing partner Tim Eyles (pictured) received a nice farewell gift in his last year at the helm of Taylor Wessing, as the firm posted one of the strongest financial performances in the top 25.

The tech-focused shop rode hugely on the boom in transactional activity and the high demand for GDPR advice to grow UK revenue by a solid 12% to £144.6m. Globally, Taylor Wessing – which over the last financial year moved from a looser alliance of international firms into a formal verein structure – broke the £300m barrier after hiking turnover 12% to £301.5m. Continue reading “LB100 case study: Taylor Wessing”

Draining the swamp – Do NDAs represent a #MeToo problem for the profession?

Zelda Perkins

A light has lately shone on a legal document which, by definition, should never bask in the sunshine. The saga, which was to trigger reverberations concerning abusive behaviour in many industries – and lawyers’ role in drafting gagging orders – began in October 2017, with disclosures by British producer Zelda Perkins (pictured).

In written evidence to MPs, Perkins called the gagging order she signed nearly 20 years ago with her former boss Harvey Weinstein amid sexual harassment allegations ‘stringent and thoroughly egregious’. Continue reading “Draining the swamp – Do NDAs represent a #MeToo problem for the profession?”