Sponsored briefing: The rise of the law firm IPO

Sponsored briefing: The rise of the law firm IPO

An oft-cited phrase from partners of law firms is that ‘the partners are the guardians of the firm for the next generation of lawyers’.

However, cultural changes and behavioural traits, particularly those of Generation Y and Millennials, has – and is – leading certain professional services firms to consider the appropriateness of their existing corporate and organisational structures, as well as their working environment and culture. Continue reading “Sponsored briefing: The rise of the law firm IPO”

Sponsored briefing: Reputation management – who to call in a crisis

Sponsored briefing: Reputation management – who to call in a crisis

Gus Sellitto of Byfield Consultancy discusses the trends he is seeing in legal PR and the role of external advisers

When someone’s in trouble, they call their lawyer, but who do lawyers call in a crisis? With over 20 years’ experience in the legal PR industry, Gus Sellitto is well known for both defending and promoting the reputations of UK and global law firms and their clients. We spoke to Sellitto to find out more… Continue reading “Sponsored briefing: Reputation management – who to call in a crisis”

Sponsored briefing: The lawyer’s lawyer

Sponsored briefing: The lawyer’s lawyer

The risks and exposures facing law firms have dramatically changed over the last decade. The legal industry now faces a significantly more complex risk landscape and one that will continue to evolve as technology transforms the way firms operate.The risks and exposures facing law firms have dramatically changed over the last decade. The legal industry now faces a significantly more complex risk landscape and one that will continue to evolve as technology transforms the way firms operate.

That is certainly the view of Sarah Clover, partner in Clyde & Co’s specialist lawyers’ liability practice. She believes that while the risk landscape is already more complex than ten years ago, new products and services will shape and test the boundaries of liability, and law firm’s regulatory and ethical obligations.

Clover says: ‘Working alongside our clients to identify the current and future threats facing their organisations, it is apparent that law firms continue to face pressure from consolidation, globalisation, increased regulation and ethical dilemmas, but in the near future this list will continue to grow rapidly.

‘As law firms find ways to operate using technology, automation, data analytics and artificial intelligence, to name a few, their exposures will become increasingly more complex.’

Clyde & Co’s specialist lawyers’ liability practice has defended the interests of law firms for over 40 years. The team has in it a large number of solicitors whose practices are dedicated to lawyers’ liability and regulatory work. Firms will be familiar with the work of partners such as Richard Harrison, Andrew Blair, Fergal Cathie, Neil Jamieson, James Preece, Tony Nurse-Marsh, Clive Brett, Tom White and Helen Rowlands. The current team’s roots stem from lawyers’ professional liability, their predecessors having drafted the first solicitors’ professional liability policy in 1928 and devised the first professional liability insurance scheme for solicitors in the mid-1970s.

It has acted in a series of landmark cases that have developed professional liability law. A very few of the notable highlights include:

  • The Football League v Edge Ellison [2006] EWHC 1462 (Ch), led by Clover, which looked at the boundary between legal and commercial advice.
  • Paragon Finance plc v Freshfields [1999] EWCA Civ 955, led by former Barlow Lyde & Gilbert senior partner Richard Dedman, which concerned the extent of the implied waiver of privilege by a client suing his solicitor.
  • More recently, Solicitors Regulation Authority v Leigh Day & ors [2018] EWHC 2726, led by Fergal Cathie, was the most high-profile and longest-running disciplinary prosecution ever brought by the Solicitors Regulation Authority.

Although the team has acted for over 40 of the top 50 law firms over many years, they will not descend into specifics, client confidentiality and discretion being of paramount importance to them.

Current risk landscape

According to Clover, some of the key threats currently facing law firms include:

Globalised civil exposures: The threat of civil claims is nothing new, but law firms are increasingly facing claims of greater severity and complexity. As firms operate in a more globalised marketplace, a growing number of liability claims traverse jurisdictional boundaries. Law firms must also grapple with a changing litigation environment, not least the growing prevalence of litigation funders who view professional liability claims as an attractive hunting ground.

Regulatory exposures: These represent perhaps the biggest shift in the last decade. The threat of regulatory investigation and enforcement is now as high as that in respect of civil claims. Indeed, civil and regulatory claims can feed off one another, with firms often facing parallel proceedings, which throw up a myriad of issues. Firms must now also navigate ever-more burdensome regulatory self-reporting obligations and an increasingly politicised atmosphere. In recent years this has led individuals at large firms to be brought before parliamentary committees in the full glare of the media spotlight and often without the procedural safeguards that a more formal regulatory process would entail.

Criminal exposures: Broadening criminal liability regimes, particularly in the tax sphere, have the potential to snag law firms. In line with other professional advisers, there is also concern about getting embroiled in criminal investigations brought against a law firm’s clients.

Data issues: Data breach issues are a core risk for all organisations and law firms are no exception. Firms must ensure they have the systems and controls in place to manage the risks posed by the introduction of the GDPR regime as well as the changing modus operandi of increasingly sophisticated cyber criminals. As recent history has shown, a significant data breach has the potential to destroy a firm.

In line with the increasingly global nature of exposures, Clyde & Co’s specialist lawyers’ liability team now boasts the largest global professional liability practice, and regularly acts in international and cross-border claims for global law firms.

Clover explains the reason for having an extensive global team: ‘Litigating overseas presents a number of challenges for organisations, including law firms. In addition to the practical difficulties of securing local representation and managing the translation process, firms must navigate cultural differences, local court systems, procedural requirements and the selection of local experts. Having boots on the ground is essential to consistent delivery of the highest quality service to our clients.’

Recognising that law firms face a broad range of exposures and challenges, Clyde & Co has developed a reputation as ‘the professional’s professional’, handling, in addition to civil claims, disciplinary and regulatory issues, a long list of other advisory work for professional services firms, including employment, bribery and sanctions, partnership and other corporate structures, as well as  commercial and intellectual property advice. It has also built up a leading practice advising on the structuring of insurance and reinsurance arrangements for global professional service networks.

‘Our close-knit team works in tandem to draw on each other’s expertise and ensure our clients are equipped to face the evolving risk landscape that continues to threaten the operations of the world’s leading law firms,’ concludes Clover.

Sarah Clover has been a partner at Clyde & Co since 1992. She has specialised in lawyers’ professional liability for 30 years and advised on a wide range of professional liability claims against lawyers, including claims involving corporate finance, tax, pensions, commercial and residential property, litigation and commercial contract. She also advises clients on regulatory and disciplinary issues, risk management and policy coverage. Sarah has a wealth of experience in mediation and other forms of alternative dispute resolution.

For more information, please contact:Sarah Clover

Sarah Clover, partner, Clyde & Co

T: 020 7876 6386
E: sarah.clover@clydeco.com

www.clydeco.com

Sponsored briefing: Challenges in leading law firms – the Cambridge approach

Sponsored briefing: Challenges in leading law firms – the Cambridge approach

Leading a law firm has always been demanding, but the extent and pace of change engulfing the global legal industry today is undoubtedly taking the challenge to a new level. As a result, leaders of firms are understandably seeking additional guidance and insight as they navigate a complex strategic landscape clouded by unprecedented levels of uncertainty, ambiguity and disruption. The key drivers of these dynamics – which include exponential advances in technology, significant changes in client expectations and buying patterns, and the increasing volume and competitive impact of new entrants and new models – are well documented. The big questions we are now exploring with law firm leaders and partners centre on what this new paradigm means for the traditional law firm business model, strategic decision making, differentiation, organisational structure and agility, the development of talent and the leadership skills needed to deliver fundamental change.

Continue reading “Sponsored briefing: Challenges in leading law firms – the Cambridge approach”

Sponsored briefing: Tracing assets – what you need to know

Sponsored briefing: Tracing assets – what you need to know

K2 Intelligence’s Darren Matthews on what successful asset search and recovery looks like

Understanding the form, value and recoverability of an adversary’s assets is an essential part of legal strategy in any dispute. What may appear relatively simple – locating material assets and determining their value – invariably turns complex when assets are held through multi-level corporate structures layered over multiple jurisdictions. Methods used to hide assets are becoming more sophisticated and asset-recovery experts must keep up to date with the latest asset-searching techniques, practices and technologies. Understanding the form, value and recoverability of an adversary’s assets is an essential part of legal strategy in any dispute. What may appear relatively simple – locating material assets and determining their value – invariably turns complex when assets are held through multi-level corporate structures layered over multiple jurisdictions. Methods used to hide assets are becoming more sophisticated and asset-recovery experts must keep up to date with the latest asset-searching techniques, practices and technologies. Continue reading “Sponsored briefing: Tracing assets – what you need to know”

Legal technology sponsored briefing: The anatomy of a digital-age legal service business

Legal technology sponsored briefing: The anatomy of a digital-age legal service business

 

Chris Bull of The Intuity Alliance/Kingsmead Square considers the structure, funding and skills needed for a legal service business in the digital age

Note I am talking about ‘legal service business’, not ‘law firm’. ‘Law firm’ suggests a partnership – too outdated and narrow a term in an era when very few new partnerships are being created, and more existing firms are converting to corporate structures. Continue reading “Legal technology sponsored briefing: The anatomy of a digital-age legal service business”