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Legal Technology

What is New Law?

It’s a concept that’s been around for years, but with a rush of new firms claiming to be ​“NewLaw”, the legal industry today is struggling to answer what does it mean.

Andrew Mellett
Andrew Mellett

January 20, 2020

What does New Law really mean?

Recently, it seems that any firm new to the industry can call itself New Law’.

But really, what is New Law?

Peel back the branding and the reality is that most of these New Law firms are not doing anything different.

Sure, maybe they’re charging lower margins or working from home. But are they fundamentally changing the way legal services are delivered? For example, by deploying their own legal tech, servicing clients differently than traditional law firms, or moving away from hourly fees. Or are they just doing the same old things under a new moniker?

Many clients are struggling to understand the true value of New Law. The term has become diluted New Law providers are not yet proving to be serious competition to well-established BigLaw firms.

So, what does New Law actually mean? How does it actually differ from traditional practices? And what should you look for in a New Law firm?

What is New Law?

A term first coined in 2013 by consultant Eric Chin, New Law” is defined as:

Any model, process, or tool that represents a significantly different approach to the creation or provision of legal services than what the legal profession traditionally has employed.” (Source: ALPMA)

Sounds great in theory. But what does New Law mean in practice?

There are three variables to New Law:

  1. How work is won

  2. How work is done

  3. How the firm is run

Let’s break it down:

1. How work is won

In a traditional law firm, partners rely on old-school networking to get business. While they do use some marketing, the emphasis is on individual reputation and personal relationships. The client is engaging an individual that just happens to be at that firm, the name on the letterhead really doesn’t matter.

Perhaps because of this, traditional firms struggle to leave the billable hour behind. They still pin their value on the time input by individual lawyers.

New Law firms win work like every other industry: marketing, business development, and a unique selling point (USP). They create a client offering based around the brand of the firm, not the individual.

This approach means a true New Law firm should find it easy to move away from time-based billing. The client is engaging a service provider for a specific outcome, an outcome that that service provider has delivered many times and so understands well how it should be priced. True New Law firms view their output as a product, not an art.

2. How work is done

In a traditional law firm, partners cascade the work down to senior associates, who give it to lawyers, who delegate to paralegals.

So, paralegals do the work, then the lawyer checks and redoes it. The senior associate checks and redoes it, then the partner checks and redoes it. The client pays for the according to time taken, so why not get as many hands in there as possible?

Another major problem with this model is that hourly rates promote inefficiency. Why work faster or use technology when you are being paid more to take your time?

This means the best outcome for the firm is often the worst outcome for the client. The incentive is to take longer, protract negotiations and make mountains of molehills.

New Law does things differently. Moving away from billable hours does more than just make pricing transparent – it realigns incentives. A true New Law firm creates incentives to drive efficiency in order to make a margin – a faster, better outcome for the client means more money for the firm.

It’s this change in incentive that drives investment in technology, process improvement and new ways of working that drives sustainable value.

3. How the firm is run

A traditional law firm has a partnership structure. The firm is incentivised to make as much money as possible in a year with no incentive for long term vision. All profit is taken out of the firm with no incentive for investment in ongoing improvement. In short, it is set up for the partners, not the clients.

This whole model creates competition amongst the lawyers to motivate them to become equity partners through building their own practice, often at the exclusion of the rest of the firm. The result is a firm run by lawyers who are not necessarily business managers, and in it only for themselves.

So, how do you increase profitability under a traditional law model? This short-term, narrow-focus approach means the firm is unable to change or adapt. To make the most money you must either bill more hours or increase your hourly rates or pay your people less. No wonder junior lawyers become disillusioned.

True New Law uses a different structure. Perhaps it is an incorporated legal practice (ILP), or it’s run by non-lawyers. The key is in structuring with an incentive toward reinvestment in the company and how it runs. There is a focus on long-term thinking and, most importantly, a client first” approach.

Changing things up even more is the emergence New Law firms driven primarily by capital investment. Big capital investments into legal tech and New Law start-ups mean firms are seeking high growth without a concern for margins. This is great for clients and makes it tough for traditional firms to compete.

How can New Law change the game?

It comes down to truly changing how legal work is delivered. The reality is that charging less for the same work is not enough. It’s not good news for the industry or the client in the long term, as they won’t see real value.

Clients seeking true long-term value need to look at how the underlying work is done. That’s where New Law comes in.

Characteristics of a New Law firm

Here are four things to look for:

1. Client-needs driven

Look at how you are engaging your law firms. Is the incentive with you to carefully watch their bills and keep prices in line? Or is the incentive where it should be – with the firm – to ensure they work efficiently to make a margin on your project?

New Law firms make clients the centre of what they do. This means focusing on understanding client needs and delivering an exceptional client service.

2. Embrace technology

Changing billing practices and incentivising client outcomes lead to a big improvement in value from traditional providers, but real efficiency only comes through technology enablement.

New Law firms should be using technology to manage mundane legal work, provide an exceptional client experience and drive efficiency. Any solution that does not incorporate a tech layer should be considered as short term only, it will soon be superseded by one that does.

3. Delivery at scale

There are many boutique New Law firms offering real value to individual clients. But what we will see in the next five years is the emergence of economy of scale in this market as New Law firms grow.

That’s where things get disruptive. It’s the combination of New Law practices with scale of capital, technology and human resources that will transform the dynamic in the industry.

4. A timeless culture

Look for a firm that has moved away from the traditional billable hours and towards value-based or output-based billing. This should be non-negotiable, the incentive must be with the service provider to deliver efficiency and value – not with you as the client.

Over to you

It’s time to look beyond the moniker New Law”. For a law firm to actually provide value, it must truly work differently, have an incentive for efficiency, embrace technology and have access to scale. Whether or not they call themselves New Law” is irrelevant if they can tick the right boxes.

 
Andrew Mellett

Andrew Mellett

Andrew Mellett is the Founder and CEO of Plexus, a global leader in AI-powered legal technology. Recognised by the Financial Times and Harvard Business Review for his pioneering work in legal innovation, Andrew leads Plexus’s mission to train digital lawyers, helping the world’s top companies streamline legal operations and scale expertise with artificial intelligence.

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