[Originally posted at Gruntled Employees on 18 February 2008]
Finally! The writers' strike is over and we can all get back to work. Thank goodness I can now live off my DVD residuals, or whatever. Ahh, the power of the Union. Nothing like sticking it to The Man ... and the makeup person, and the costume person, and the hair stylist, and the gaffer (whatever that is) and the best boy (just what makes him so good?). Shutting down an entire industry for a hundred days and billions of dollars is a small price to pay for a tiny-but-respectable percentage of the revenue generated by webisodes. Because everyone watches webisodes ... right? Ka-ching!
[End of management-biased sarcasm. Actually, I'm just a little cheesed off that "24" has been pushed back to January 2009 because of the writers' strike. For a Gruntled take on "24" from last year, please see "What would Jack Bauer do? Use plain English."]
Since we last spoke, the hourly billing debate has been going full throttle. The current issue of Crain's Chicago Business reports that "only 16% of in-house lawyers say hourly billing is their preferred arrangement." Yet hourly billing remains the dominant way that lawyers bill their corporate clients. Samantha Stainbaum's article, "The end of hourly fees?" quotes Northwestern Law dean David Van Zandt, who offers a possible explanation: "It's difficult for companies to evaluate what they're getting, so they fall back to hourly billing."
That's possible. Still, if five out of six in-house counsel would prefer something other than hourly billing, don't we outside counsel have an obligation to provide it? The February issue of the ABA Journal has a story by David Gialanella called "Taming the Billable Beast." In it, he talks about three law firms who he says are "changing the billable equation last year in hopes of reducing associate and client dissatisfaction."
Two of the firms focused on first-year associates' billing requirements: Dallas's Strasburger & Price, who cut first-year billing requirements from 1,920 hours a year to 1,600; and Atlanta-based Ford & Harrison, who got rid of first-year requirements altogether.
The third firm went even further. (This may sound familiar.) David writes:
Shepherd Law Group in Boston has thrown out the billable hour altogether in favor of flat fees and fixed prices, and it could not have asked for a better result.
In 2007, says CEO Jay Shepherd, the firm “billed exactly 0.0 hours [yet] more than doubled our revenue for all of 2006.” He adds, “It sounds too good to be true. It’s not.”
Now there’s no looking back for Shepherd, whose firm handles labor and employment law. He recently added a sixth attorney, and he denies secretly keeping track of the hours spent on each case.
In their new billing model, Shepherd and the other partners can get together to brainstorm strategies—something that would have required billing for several different attorneys. Most clients would never stand for those sessions if charged by the hour.
It’s easier for a boutique firm to institute a change, but Shepherd cannot argue with results: Research becomes more focused; soon, efficiency improves. For the Shepherd Law Group, at least, eye-popping numbers are to follow.
(Thanks, David.) The point here isn't to trumpet our firm's successes (at least that's not the main point). The point is that clients want a better system, one that puts their interests in line with their lawyers' interests — rather than in conflict with them. And it can be done successfully.
But there are plenty of naysayers.
Next post: The naysayers say "nay." Stay tuned ... (unless there's another writers' strike).