Saturday 18 June, 2011

The State of US Firms in London

In the current issue of Legal Week, you can find both a breathless and statistics-distorting lead editorial, which I commend immediately to your e-dustbin (71% is "almost three-quarters," while 61% is "well under two-thirds"—how about the simpler truth that they're 10 percentage points, or about one part in seven, apart?), but you can also find the illuminating and well-reported underlying piece that portrays the state of US firms in the UK (read: London) ca. 2006.

I bring it to your attention primarily for the time-honored truths the story embodies, albeit unarticulated as such. 

Over 60 US firms have set up a meaningful shop in London, and according to the Legal Week survey, two-thirds report that more than half their work there comes from UK clients, as opposed to servicing US clients on transatlantic issues.  The real question is whether this is true (Legal Week, not shockingly, contends it's not), and the strategic issue is nicely summarized in this anonymous quote:

"There is a real danger for firms that follow the argument that ‘if we build it, they will come’," warns the London managing partner of one leading US firm. "You have to think very carefully about how you can fulfil an area not already being filled by a UK firm and [identify] where there is a real need for people to come in.

"I am sure every firm has thought through its own strategy very thoroughly, but I am in no doubt that targeting your practice is the way to go. You move outside the areas for which there is real demand among clients at your peril."

Need I add that I agree?

Aside from the obligatory excursion into lateral movements, and who scored which marquee name—Lovells to Weil-Gotshal, Lovells to Dechert, Lovells to Latham & Watkins, Linklaters to Kirkland & Ellis, Allen & Overy to Kirkland & Ellis, Allen & Overy to Simpson-Thacher, Allen & Overy to Skadden, Allen & Overy to Sullivan & Cromwell, Shearman & Sterling to Hogan & Hartson, Shearman & Sterling to Skadden, etc. (think of Legal Week, in this regard, as a mongrel cross between Fortune and People)—we actually have an interesting picture drawn of one of the most competitive legal marketplaces, for both talent and clients, on the globe. 

I glean these highlights from the piece:

  • Far more partners are moving laterally from London/City firms to US-based firms than vice versa.  Legal Week posits that this is partly the result of "continued managerial ruthlessness on display at some traditional City leaders," but I'm skeptical that that thesis explains very much.  Why?  The implication is that the weaker partners are being culled by the City firms, but why then would US firms want them?  As a default assumption—meaning until presented with evidence to the contrary—I would imagine it's the stronger, not the weaker, partners who are both in a position to move and who the US firms would welcome.
  • Essentially all the US firms anticipate further substantial growth in London—and soon.  80% predict double-digit percentage growth this year, and an amazing one in eight predicts expanding by 50% or more.
  • Despite those ambitions, the growth plans are targeted, focused on growing existing practice areas (which means, almost across the board, corporate, finance, and M&A—not litigation or other areas).  In other words, or so we may at least hope, the expansion plans are grounded in a strategic rationale, not a blunt-instrument "bigger is better" approach.
  • In one of the surest signs of an enduring commitment to a serious London presence, half the US firms now hire trainees there.  As one unnamed US firm partner puts it, "cherry-picking a few stars to get you going" can only take you so far.  Indeed.

The acid test of success will come, I believe, when US firms start growing, and making, their own partners in London.  At that point we'll be able to say the firms have truly taken root there.

The first half of the report (Akin Gump through Morrison & Foerster) is here.  Bizarrely, the second half is nowhere to be found.

No TrackBacks

TrackBack URL: http://www.adamsmithesq.com/cgi-bin/mt5.01/mt-tb.cgi/2441

Leave a comment

Monthly Archives

 
Select a month from the dropdown
 

Recent Entries

     "Wait and [Never] See"
Last week I wrote about innovation and how the early adopters can gain sustainable competitive advantage.  This week is something of a follow-on, albeit one…
     Memorial Day 2011
     Be Innovative? Who, Me?
Jim Surowiecki, writing his regular column in The New Yorker, "The Financial Page," wrote last week about innovation and why it seems to take hold…
     God is in the Details
Alex Novarese, Editor in Chief of LegalWeek, has a smart column this week called "Rugged Individualism--a year of firm-specific achievement in the US." Here are…
     Limits, Still
Normally I don't refer to events stemming from my own experience in commenting on our industry-indeed, this is something of a first in the 8-year…
     Who's Signing Your Paycheck?
A loyal and exceptionally thoughtful reader, and reasonably regular correspondent (also with a strong academic background in economics), writes: Bruce: I enjoyed your 9 February think…
     Adam Smith, Esq. Launches A New Company: JD Match
Today Adam Smith, Esq. takes great pleasure in announcing the launch of a new company dedicated to rationalizing and bringing a measure of order, efficiency,…
     Fifth in Our Series on Strategy: What it Takes to Be Tier 2
Recently, I wrote about what I called the Tier 1/Tier 2/Tier 3 challenge for BigLaw. Briefly, the Tiers are: 1: What everyone aspires to. Think…
     Fourth in Our Series on Strategy: Tier 1, Tier 2, Tier 3?
Toby Brown and Ron Friedmann (both friends) have a thoughtful and well-reasoned point/counter-point going over at "3 Geeks and a Law Blog," which they invited…
     We're Not The Newspaper Industry
When Slate writes about it, it's entered the mainstream. In this case, that would be the "whopping" 11.5% year over year drop in the number…
     Seminar on Value-Billing Fee Arrangements/New York/March 24
I'd like to bring to your attention an all-day seminar happening here in midtown New York on Thursday, March 24th, sponsored by the Ark Group…
     The "Adam Smith" Award for Innovation in Legal Service Delivery
A couple of weeks ago I learned that the legal department of Kraft Foods issued its "Adam Smith" award, for innovation in the delivery…
     Reminder: Brief Survey on Law Firm Leadership
Don't forget to the take the Law Firm Leadership Survey co-sponsored by Adam Smith, Esq., and Vault.com, Inc., the leading online career intelligence site.The survey…
     Third in Our Series on Strategy: Bad Strategy
As a management consultant to law firms, perhaps the most consistently infuriating phenomenon I encounter (all the time and everywhere, I'm deeply sorry to…
     Joe Flom, 1923-2011
We've all heard the sad news that Joe Flom died Wednesday at age 87.  (WSJ, The American Lawyer, The New York Times, DealBook) Over 20…
     A Modest Proposal for Alternative Fees
There's been so much talk recently about "alternative fee arrangements" (AFAs) that, frankly, we're exhausted. But before we give up on the subject entirely…
     Survey on Law Firm Leadership: An Adam Smith, Esq./Vault.com, Inc. Collaboration
With delight I can announce that Adam Smith, Esq. is embarking on a collaborative effort with Vault.com, Inc, the leading career intelligence site for those…
     What's the Half-Life of a Lateral Partner in London?
A-ha! That, at least, was my reaction when reading the research report published this week in The Lawyer.  Here are the top-line results, and then…
     New Client Minimums? Meet DLA
Tim Bratton, the general counsel of the Financial Times, has an interesting perspective on DLA Piper's recently announced plan to revamp its client base.…
     Winners Take All? Yes, No: Debate Among Yourselves
I suppose that when it's in The Wall Street Journal, it's true. Well, it's certainly true that attention must be paid. Which brings us…
     Show Me the Money (And the Love)
Here on Adam Smith, Esq., we've never devoted a lot of ink to work/life balance issues or, for that matter, to lawyers' happiness with…
     Kaizen Comes to The City
A few days ago I had a chance to catch up with my friend Alex Hamilton, now at radiant.law.  (I knew Alex in his previous…
     Second in Our Series on Strategy: Strategic Planning 101
Booz & Co.'s Strategy + Business published something of a primer called "Successful Strategic Planning" last month, and it's worth a quick review for the distilled--if…
     First in a Series on Strategy in the New Normal
"With all respect, I think that's the wrong question. There's always new stuff out there, and most of it's not very good. Rather than…
     We Are Not Alone
This is a tale of how this is not your father's recession. About a year ago I read Reinhart and Rogoff's This Time is…