Canadian Lawyer InHouse

Dec/Jan 2014

Legal news and trends for Canadian in-house counsel and c-suite executives

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INHOUSE www.canadianlawyermag.com/inhouse Director/Group Publisher: Karen Lorimer karen.lorimer@thomsonreuters.com Editor in Chief: Gail J. Cohen gail.cohen@thomsonreuters.com Editor: Jennifer Brown jen.brown@thomsonreuters.com Staff Writer: Charlotte Santry charlotte.santry@thomsonreuters.com Copy Editor: Mallory Hendry Art Director: Steve Maver Account Co-ordinator: Catherine Giles Advertising Sales Representatives Legal Suppliers: Kimberlee Pascoe Tel: (416) 649-8875 E-mail: kimberlee.pascoe@thomsonreuters.com Law Firms: Joseph Galea Tel: (416) 649-9919 E-mail: joseph.galea@thomsonreuters.com Grace So Tel: (416) 609-5838 E-mail: grace.so@thomsonreuters.com Steffanie Munroe Tel: (416) 298-5077 E-mail: steffanie.munroe@thomsonreuters.com Canadian Lawyer InHouse is published 6 times a year by Thomson Reuters Canada Ltd., One Corporate Plaza 2075 Kennedy Rd., Toronto ON. M1T 3V4 (416) 298-5141. Fax : 416-649-7870 Web: www.canadianlawyermag.com/inhouse LinkedIn: www.goo.gl/9tytr Twitter: twitter.com/@clinhouse Editorial advisory board: Sanjeev Dhawan, Hydro One Networks Inc.; Kari Horn, Alberta Securities Commission; Jonathan Lau, TVO; Janis Vanderburgh, York Region Rapid Transit Corp. All rights reserved. Contents may not be reprinted without written permission. The opinions expressed in articles are not necessarily those of the publisher. Information presented is compiled from sources believed to be accurate, however, the publisher assumes no responsibility for errors or omissions. Canadian Lawyer InHouse disclaims any warranty as to the accuracy, completeness or currency of the contents of this publication and disclaims all liability in respect of the results of any action taken or not taken in reliance upon information in this publication. Publications Mail Agreement #40766500 ISSN 1921-9563 Copyright © 2013 H.S.T. Registration #R121349799 To subscribe or change addresses Call (416) 649-9926 Fax (416) 649-7870 or e-mail Ellen Alstein at ellen.alstein@thomsonreuters.com RETURN UNDELIVERABLE CANADIAN ADDRESS TO: CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT One Corporate Plaza 2075 Kennedy Rd., Toronto ON. M1T 3V4 E D I T O R ' s b o x By Jennifer Brown Testing alternative billing models I n this issue you will read about the ongoing debate about the billable hour in our annual report on the Canadian Lawyer Corporate Counsel Survey. The discussion has become more heated in the last year as some in-house counsel defend their preference for using the billable hour while others rail on it as failing to help them meet budget demands. Price pressures mean in-house counsel want to reduce legal spend without compromising value. In some cases, firms say the client has become their direct competitor essentially building their own internal law firms and pushing them on pricing. In response some firms have proactively been tackling this issue to address the demands from their in-house counsel clients and provide solutions that involve a mix of service providers. Matthew Peters, national leader for markets with McCarthy Tétrault LLP's Vancouver office, recently told me discounts, fixed prices, and other "alternative fee arrangements" don't really address the problem. It means the law firm has less margin and the client saves but does it really get to the core of finding a permanent solution? Some firms will tell you in-house are never content with a discount — they will continuously push for deeper discounts year over year. But what if the firms rethink how the work gets done more inexpensively with the same oversight? Over the last two years, McCarthy's has been working to come up with options. That means striking strategic relationships with external parties such as outsourcing service providers. If they move it offshore or even onshore it could be more cost effective. Paralegals are also one of the "untapped resources" in the puzzle, says Peters. Not every file justifies the approach but multiple leasing transactions or M&A matters are examples that can drive savings for clients. So when the work comes in for an M&A deal, the firm may suggest the client move the due diligence offshore or have a staff lawyer do the work. By doing a significant portion of the due diligence themselves a client was able to save 25 per cent. There's also an effort from the firm to be more transparent on pricing. "When you break the pieces apart and you can have an open conversation with clients it becomes much more trustworthy. They say, 'OK, you're going to ship this offshore but you're still going to review it?'" But are general counsel buying this new approach? Peters says many are still skeptical. The firm has been approaching clients proactively asking: "What if we could reduce the cost of what you're doing with us right now?" Some are open to it but others are happy with their current system. The reality is the market is driving firms to take this approach. A year ago, Peters says RFPs didn't ask about legal process outsourcing relationships but in the last 12 months that has changed and many are asking about what the firm is doing to reduce costs. So while clients are still "dipping their toe" into this alternative delivery model and they like what they see the majority are saying: "Maybe next time." Part of this may be about the work required on the part of in-house — many may be too busy to tackle the issue of billing when they're just trying to get their day-to-day work done. Clients need to be involved in the process, says Peters. "You can't do it well if the client isn't prepared to rethink how they are buying the services." IH Send your news and story ideas to jen.brown@thomsonreuters.com Indexed in the Canadian Periodical Index www.canadianlawyermag.com/inhousE december 2013/january 2014 • 3

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