Apperio
Founded: 2012 (as Legal Tender)
Team size: 17
Investment raised: £3.4m
Leaders: Chief executive Nicholas d’Adhemar
Key clients: Dentons, Network Rail, Deliveroo, Octopus Investments
Founded: 2012 (as Legal Tender)
Team size: 17
Investment raised: £3.4m
Leaders: Chief executive Nicholas d’Adhemar
Key clients: Dentons, Network Rail, Deliveroo, Octopus Investments
The Indian courts are proposing new amendments to legislation surrounding arbitration in India to encourage a positive pro-arbitration approach
The arbitration regime in India has undergone evolutionary change in the last few years. The arbitration laws in India have been made more flexible with time, to attract international parties to choose India as their preferred seat for international arbitration. Continue reading “Global Outlook sponsored briefing: Reformation and evolution of the arbitration laws in India”
The Paris courts aim to strengthen France’s appeal as a centre for litigation post-Brexit
Paris has long been positioned as one of the leading centres for international commercial arbitration disputes, so the French government’s latest legal initiative should come as no surprise to its European counterparts. Indeed, Paris is no stranger to international dispute resolution as there has existed for more than ten years within its Tribunal of Commerce an International Chamber, formed of ten English-speaking judges, hearing commercial disputes with an international dimension. Continue reading “Global Outlook sponsored briefing: The International Chamber of the Paris Court of Appeal – France has risen to the challenge”
Recently a surprisingly popular column in Legal Business took a jaded view of the state of leadership in major law firms. The nub of our argument was that the law firm c-suite had descended into technocratic managerialism over genuine leadership, leaving once bold institutions to put off crucial decisions.
That piece drew on years of hanging around with managing and senior partners, which at times means feeling more like a leadership therapist/their mother than a reporter. But in the spirit of lighting a candle rather than cursing the darkness, here are my tips to successful law firm leadership. And ignore the flip tone because I mean it all. Continue reading “16 easy steps to making you a great managing partner”
The white-collar crime arena has seen significant upheaval in recent weeks, with the Serious Fraud Office (SFO) making an uninspiring interim appointment to replace director David Green QC, while Linklaters has hired the divisive Alison Saunders, the current director of public prosecutions (DPP).
Mark Thompson, formerly the SFO’s chief operating officer (COO), took over from the previous incumbent on a temporary basis on 21 April. In an SFO press release, Thompson had said: ‘The search for a new director has been successful, although the individual cannot take up the post immediately.’ Continue reading “SFO makes interim director appointment as Linklaters hires DPP Alison Saunders”
With the war to overhaul disclosure raging on, a new battleground already seems to be emerging. Leading the charge is the newly-appointed president of the London Solicitors Litigation Association (LSLA), Julian Acratopulo.
Clifford Chance (CC) partner Acratopulo, elected LSLA president in April, was quoted as saying witness statements needed reform. Continue reading “Disputes Eye: Witness statements – going loco with Acratopulo”
Marco Cillario finds much more substance to CC’s PE business than the usual critique but stopping managed relative decline will only get harder
‘Look at the team they had in the mid-2000s: strong personalities, industry leaders, primary advisers to any significant private equity house. There has never been a team that strong in Europe. They failed to bring through any meaningful succession.’ Continue reading “Reports of the death of CC’s sponsor practice prove exaggerated but surviving isn’t thriving”
Marco Cillario assesses the latest rounds at London’s big five
The overall number of partner promotions at Magic Circle firms has dropped 10% this year to 89 after nearing 100 in 2017. Continue reading “Magic Circle partner promotions: numbers fall but gender diversity improves”
Global 100 player Covington & Burling is taking a shot at the German private equity market, launching an office in Frankfurt after taking a six-partner team from Heymann & Partner, which has shut down after 12 years.
Focusing on private equity, tech and healthcare, the firm’s third European base opened on 3 April and counts eight partners and ten other lawyers, led by former Heymann corporate partner Henning Bloss, among its ranks. Continue reading “Covington continues European expansion with Frankfurt private equity launch”
Dentons, the world’s largest globetrotting firm, has added 17 partners from an ailing Australian shop and announced a combination with seven firms across three continents over the past few weeks.
As 25-partner Australian firm DibbsBarker shut down, Dentons in May acquired ten of its partners in Sydney and two in Melbourne, while another five launched Dentons’ new office in Brisbane. They strengthened the firm’s financial services, real estate and corporate practices. Continue reading “Dentons gets even more polycentric with seven-way tie-up and Australia hires”
As the inevitable fallout from the $900m Bryan Cave/Berwin Leighton Paisner (BLP) tie-up continues, Addleshaw Goddard is following up on its Asia ambitions by announcing the hire of legacy BLP regional head Bob Charlton.
Based in Hong Kong, Charlton will lead Addleshaws’ Asia-Pacific operations, with firm-wide managing partner John Joyce telling Legal Business the firm is looking to triple the size of its regional capability. He added the firm would look to grow from four to at least 12 partners, spread across its Hong Kong and Singapore branches, and did not rule out adding further bases in the region. Continue reading “Addleshaw Goddard recruits legacy BLP Asia head”
Slaughter and May and Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer have landed pivotal roles on a $13bn deal which sees GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) acquire the remaining 36.5% stake in its consumer healthcare joint venture with fellow pharma giant Novartis.
Slaughters is advising GSK with a team comprising corporate partners Simon Nicholls and David Johnson, alongside tax specialist Dominic Robertson, competition partner Bertrand Louveaux, and finance partners Guy O’Keefe and Oliver Storey. Meanwhile Freshfields is advising Novartis, fielding a team led by corporate partners Julian Long and Jennifer Bethlehem, accompanied by tax partner Paul Davison and antitrust partner Rod Carlton. The in-house legal team at GSK was led by senior vice president and head of legal corporate functions Chip Cale, and associate general counsel Antony Braithwaite. Continue reading “Magic Circle duo secure key mandates as Novartis sells its €13bn stake to GSK”
Continue reading “Dealwatch: Transactional teams move into gear in strong spring showing”
Alex Novarese, Legal Business: Will the UK legal system be more or less trusted post Brexit?
Abhijit Mukhopadhyay, Hinduja Group: As a business, we trust English law and the English courts. Whenever we do business in any part of the world, unless it is in the US, we always go for English law. So long as the courts remain a brand – and they will, irrespective of whether Brexit happens – London will be attractive. Continue reading “The future of disputes debate: The justice brand”
PalisadeSECURE’s Luke Drewer discusses the increased threat of cyber attacks and how law firms should be protecting themselves
There is a new weapon of war being deployed around the world. You cannot see it, but the evidence is all around us. In response to the recent US, UK and French strikes targeting President Bashar Assad’s chemical weapons in Syria, it is thought that Russia will launch a ‘dirty cyber war’ and Britain is getting prepared. Continue reading “Legal tech sponsored briefing: How to prepare for a dirty cyber war”
In the wake of several high-profile attacks on law firms, Kaspersky Lab’s principle security researcher David Emm describes key ways firms can combat cyber crime
Cyber attacks are consistently making the news, with high-profile stories like NotPetya, WannaCry and Shadow Brokers seemingly taking place on a monthly basis. Businesses of all shapes and sizes are increasingly concerned about the impact that cyber crime may have on them. For law firms, the threat is particularly apparent and they are targeted for two key reasons. Continue reading “Legal tech sponsored briefing: Law firms targeted by cyber criminals – six fundamental steps to being secure”
Speech is more than just another channel of communication. It is also the driving force to improve your firm’s productivity
From the technology perspective, speech recognition has a long history with several waves of major innovations. Most recently, the field has benefited from advances in deep learning and big data. The advances are evidenced not only by the surge of academic papers published in the field but more importantly by the worldwide industry adoption of a variety of deep learning methods in designing and deploying speech-recognition systems. Continue reading “Legal tech sponsored briefing: Voice your way ahead of competitors”
With GDPR now the new reality, Andrew Elcock from Xynomix explores how to encrypt and secure your data
In 2017, we saw vulnerabilities such as WannaCry exploit millions of devices worldwide, gaining access to valuable personal information. With many organisations now holding several hundreds of terabytes of customer data, the digital world has never been so heavily scrutinised. Continue reading “Legal tech sponsored briefing: GDPR – achieving business transparency in a changing world”
Andrew Whiteley explains how Lexacom’s latest innovations in speech recognition can provide solutions to law firms
Lexacom is an advanced digital-dictation and document-creation system designed to help your organisation work smarter. Continue reading “Legal tech sponsored briefing: Turning words into action”