Law Department Spending, Outside Counsel Expenditures Up New Survey Reports
New Providence, NJ & Newtown Square, PA, September 20, 2006 — The newly released 2006 Altman Weil Law Department Metrics Benchmarking Survey, published in partnership with LexisNexis® Martindale-Hubbell®, reports total legal expenses per lawyer up 7.9% over the previous year.
”Despite all the talk about finding ways to reduce outside legal spending, some law departments still appear to have a difficult time walking the walk, since the largest part of the increase was attributable to external legal fees and expenses,” said Altman Weil principal James Wilber.
“After holding the line on expenses for the past several years, we’re now seeing a significant jump. General Counsel can only do so much in response to billing rate increases, and there will always be critically important work that is predominantly price insensitive.”
Law Department Expenditures
Total law department expenses in all companies surveyed averaged $914,229 per lawyer, up 7.9% in fiscal year 2005.
The internal costs of operating an in-house law department rose to an average of $332,823 per lawyer, a 2.6% increase over the prior year. Lawyer compensation and benefits, the biggest internal expenditure, averaged $258,205 per lawyer.
Outside expenditures rose 5.5% to $602,070 per lawyer on average for all law departments nationwide. The Computer/Electrical Manufacturing and Chemical Manufacturing industries had the highest average outside counsel expenses: $1,017,948/lawyer and $935,402/lawyer respectively. The Insurance industry had the lowest at $292,134/lawyer.
Outside Counsel Relationships
Despite rising costs, only 25.2% of law departments formally evaluate their outside counsel. Those that do evaluations indicated that ‘Results’ was the top evaluation criteria, followed by ‘Knowledge/Expertise’ second, with ‘Cost’ and ‘Responsiveness’ tied for third.
“Performance metrics are a critical component of managing outside counsel costs,” noted Barry Solomon, Esq., Vice President and General Manager of LexisNexis Martindale-Hubbell. “Client reviews also give in-house counsel the opportunity for a dialogue with their outside advisors on what’s working and what’s not. Adding transparency and candid communications about strengths and weaknesses can only improve the relationship.”
Asked about serious relationship mistakes made by their outside counsel, law departments pointed to lack of responsiveness, over-billing and over-lawyering as the top three problems.
When selecting outside counsel, law departments consider firm specialization first by a big margin, followed by responsiveness, cost and prior history with the company. Nationally, all law departments employ an average of 54 law firms, and large law departments of 26 or more lawyers use an average 136 firms each year.
“Despite convergence efforts, law departments are still employing a wide variety of outside law firms,” noted Solomon. “And they’re still being guided by the bedrock standard of firm expertise in making those selection decisions.”
Law Department Staffing
Lawyer staffing in corporate law departments was up in 2005, with the key measure – lawyers per billion of revenue – rising to 3.49 lawyers/billion compared with 2.93 lawyers/billion in 2004. This increase was reflected in both the number of management lawyer positions and the number of general lawyers.
“The size of this increase (19%) is a bit surprising. We’ll have to wait to see if it denotes an upswing in the hiring of in-house lawyers,” Wilber said.
In looking at the average distribution of lawyers by practice areas within the law department, the survey reports 23.8% of in-house lawyers specialize in commercial and contracts law, 9.4% are litigation specialists and 7.8% focus on IP law.
Operational Issues
Perhaps related to the difficulty controlling outside legal expense, law departments continue to favor the more traditional billing arrangements with their outside counsel. Most frequently used methods are hourly billing, reduced hourly billing and time and expenses. 40.2% of reporting law departments never use alternative fee arrangements, while an additional 35.6% report negotiating non-standard fee arrangements for only 1-20% of fees.
The use of e-billing systems that allow outside counsel to submit their invoices electronically continues to increase slowly. In 2005, 13% of law departments used e-billing, up from 10.3% the previous year.
The Survey
The Altman Weil Law Department Metrics Benchmarking Survey is published annually in partnership with LexisNexis® Martindale-Hubbell® and tracks U.S. law department expenditures, outside counsel relationships, operations and staffing.
The Survey includes data from 138 companies, reported by sales revenue, number of corporate employees, industry type and law department size. Data were collected in the spring of 2006 and reflects fiscal year 2005.
About Altman Weil
Founded in 1970, Altman Weil, Inc. (www.altmanweil.com) provides management consulting services to law firms, law departments, government legal offices, and legal vendors throughout North American, Latin America, the U.K. and Europe. The firm is independently owned by its professional consultants who have backgrounds in law, industry, finance, marketing administration and government. Altman Weil offers a broad range of consulting services, including strategy, management, governance, M&A, compensation, marketing, finance, organization and training.
Altman Weil Publications, Inc. (www.altmanweilpubs.com), a subsidiary of Altman Weil, Inc., has collected and published management information for law firms and corporate law departments for over thirty years. The company conducts market research and publishes numerous surveys of the legal profession including the Law Department Compensation Benchmarking Survey, the Paralegal Compensation Survey and the Survey of Law Firm Economics. Altman Weil surveys are the industry standard and are often utilized in courtroom expert testimony.
About LexisNexis
LexisNexis® (www.lexisnexis.com) is a leading provider of information and services solutions, including its flagship Web-based Lexis® and Nexis® research services, to a wide range of professionals in the legal, risk management, corporate, government, law enforcement, accounting and academic markets. A member of Reed Elsevier Group plc [NYSE: ENL; NYSE: RUK] (www.reedelsevier.com), LexisNexis serves customers in 100 countries with 13,000 employees worldwide.
LexisNexis Martindale-Hubbell (www.martindale.com) provides client development solutions for the legal profession, partnering with its law firm customers to meet their practice development goals. An integral part of Martindale-Hubbell’s service to the legal community is its Peer Review Rating system, which evaluates lawyers and law firms in the U.S. and Canada based on peer review. Peer Review Ratings attest to a lawyer’s legal ability and professional ethics, and reflect the confidential opinions of members of the Bar and Judiciary. The Martindale-Hubbell database of more than 1 million lawyers and law firms, accessible at www.martindale.com and www.lawyers.com, is the number-one lawyer directory on the Internet (as measured by Nielsen//NetRatings). The company provides lawyers, business executives and consumers with detailed information to help them identify, evaluate and select legal counsel.
Contact Information
James S. Wilber
Altman Weil, Inc.
(414) 427-5400
jswilber@altmanweil.com
Order the survey: www.altmanweil.com/LDMBS
