Showing posts with label Legal Service Act; Legal Services Reform. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Legal Service Act; Legal Services Reform. Show all posts

Thursday, January 5, 2012

If it was that easy - we'd all do it..

Anyone who tells you what will happen in the next 3 years - or the next 3 months for that matter is lying. Fibbing. Disingenuous, at best.

No really - it needs saying - the more you search for certainty - the less you are going to find it. Maybe in some parts of the public sector you are able to decide what the plan is and simply make it happen, take a salary and go home. Actually I doubt that - even there. Everybody else has to live with uncertainty. People on the front line in business, actually get comfortable with risk - sometimes Big risk - really quite quickly. It's a beautiful thing.

Tough times for a forecaster then? Well, no, actually. At RBP we leave horoscopes to the credit rating teams. We deal in ’character’. Long term stickability; guts; chutzpah. It’s how it actually works. Nobody really knows what's going to happen. The 'spreadsheet jockeys' least of all, and even more so when they start guessing 9 months ahead of the period being forecast. Its just not real. My favourite definition of entrepreneurial spirit is the 'unreasonable conviction of the improbable'. It's what makes it fun.

Way back when I had the biggest corner office and the biggest whiteboard, I asked the US CEO how he managed over 34 P&Ls. ’Simple’, he said, ’only three are out of plan at any one time, and I know how they’ll react before I even have to place the call’. (He still placed the calls mind - and they were challenging to be on the other end of.)

All we do at RBP is replicate that. For the 87 teams that make up the UK’s legal practice, case and matter management supplier market, for example, we go to town on what they have done and could achieve. Some surprise us - usually positively - but we’re much more often right than wrong. Others will tell you the tech issues - we ’Do’ the numbers.

And No - this is not some Marxian dialectic where the predictability of the economics makes us all pawns in a futile rat race. Quite the reverse. Economics is like history - it can tell you what you stubbed your toe on in the dark last time - not what the flashing lights and alarms mean this time around. You'd be mad not to be better informed - but the wisdom still has to come from within. What we do know, is that over the long term, a company will display its financial 'character'. Some are brave, some are cautious, some paddle slowly on the fast river, some pick fights for the sake of picking them... It matters.

We also know the competitive intensity of the various market sectors and levels. We know some areas need tough guys, and some can coast (comparatively speaking), some need patience, some a good shake, and some are up to their proverbials in alligators. We know what a market share means - and we don’t do ’group think’.

We put it all together and see what this bunch of disparate, individualistic, committed, skint, overstretched, over worked, underestimated and visionary people could and should achieve. We know that there are no green fields. We know that there is no magical better mousetrap. With one bound Jack usually lands in deeper poo, rather than escaping to save the world.

Based on that brick built, micro assessment of each team - looking back to 1995 over 2 business cycles including 2 other dips or recessions - Dotcom fevers and Y2K distractions, .Net, ABSs, Web2...3 etc - we then take an experienced and informed view.

And we are delighted to be able to share it with you and the market overall. It is normally the preserve of global strategy teams, VC researchers, credit algorithm wonks and a handful of paranoid sales directors. Finally - at last - it is available for you and all your top team in an easily accessible format.

So we hope our new approach to business intelligence is refreshing. We aim to tell it like it is. We've been in charge of the P&L(s), we've had unreal targets imposed unfairly, we've had the wind on our back, we've screwed up, we've excelled - and we've built bought and sold companies in all the markets we cover.

If it was simply a matter of finding out what the market will do and pushing levers to get our chunk of it - frankly most of us would go home and find something much more fun to do. It's hard. Its challenging. We hope our approach to the market character and potential achievable is instructive.

When I needed it in the mahogany play pens, it didn't exist. Well, for the markets covered by RBP - it does now. Try the Legal IT Financial Fundamentals Report for size - it's different.

Friday, October 28, 2011

Legal Market Consolidation? Look Again.

The only set of numbers not coming from the Law Society about the number and value of law firms, come from HMRC [i] essentially the statistical estimates used for VAT purposes. They have their problems[ii], but there are lessons on the shape of the profession which are, frankly, surprising.

Market consolidation?

Received wisdom is that the legal market is consolidating, but it really is worth unpacking that a little. Yes, the market overall is growing – but consolidation normally suggests fewer suppliers doing more work. This in turn would then pose problems for suppliers and buyers of their services alike. The problem is, however, that the market is growing both in volume and value terms over the long term – ie there are more firms generating more revenues.

Ah, the argument goes – ‘but not all sectors are growing – the large firms are growing faster than the small ones’. True, but the implication is that the large firms are growing at the expense of the small firms – and this is far from clear. Global pressures and opportunities mean precisely nothing to micro High Street law firms. In competition terms, there is a chain of substitutability – but frankly the span between a consumer law one man band and a global panel law firm is simply too wide now for comparisons this stretched to be meaningful.

So the next time someone says – firms have to spend £50k on marketing or market consolidation will kill them – ask them precisely why. If firms spend more it is not because of consolidation (although, yes, there may be other reasons). There are more mid market firms making more money than ever before – it’s just that the Magic Circle are – well – magic.

This is great news for vendors to leading smaller firms such as Perfect Software, DPS, Pracctice, Peapod and Quill – rumours of the death of the High St are highly misleading. The economic picture for firms with between £1-4m in sales is that since ‘98 (ie the beginning of the last Big recession) there has been an increase of between 869-1040 more firms. A firm with £4m in sales should have 8 partners or over 20 fee earners, so this is not so ‘small’ really. It is great news for consumers of law services - or should be - and if there is genuine disquiet about why law firms are not seen by clients as well as they should be, it means you really have to look harder elsewhere and stop trying to blame the weather.

Global expansion is a good thing for some, but not all.

The market appears to be ‘consolidating’ more through global expansion of the magic and silver circle firms than any significant contraction of the mid market or small firms. This is not a bad thing – someone doing well is good. Comparing their growth with others who happened to attend the same College thirty years ago and implying that these others are somehow wrong is nonsense. They may be missing out somewhere, but they almost certainly are not missing out on the opportunity to be on the panel to do Smith Kline’s Brazilian IP work from their 8 strong regency brass name plate in Bury.

There is a scrap, as there always has been, between the silver circle firms punching above their weight and using technology to do so, but this is not ‘consolidation’ - it is normal hostilities or intra-industry rivalry. For vendors to very large firms like Elite and Aderant, however, there is always the dichotomy of whether to embed more deeply with 25 clients or spread the risk to 250. Stretching to do both is only getting harder, especially as it increases the risk of someone in the top 25 doing something for themselves that works and spawning another credible competitor in due course in their heartland.

Micro firm market contraction is not a problem.

There is contraction both in numbers and value among the very very small part of the market. The VAT definition of this is £0-49k (effectively sub registration thresholds). These are usually small office/home office (SOHO) one man bands. At best they are retiring or ‘life-style’ solicitors stepping back to run a few favours for a handful of long standing clients – probably doing less than 1 day per week in harness. At worst they unfocused, unsupported generalists and the largest source of claims on the indemnity funds. There are 1045 fewer of them now than on 1998. Bear in mind that any self respecting individual solicitor/fee earner should be aiming at minimum billings per year of £150k, and probably over £250k (each) and you get a picture of both the size of these firms and the likely service sector they focus on. The market changing to have fewer micro firms and losing c3.6% market share in relative terms among these micro firms overall is no bad thing.

The numbers in SOHO firms probably also disguise a different trend whereby the rise in capable individuals running micro practices could well be growing, whereas the regulatory framework is stamping out high risk generalists in low growth sectors. The micro sector should be declining more than it is in relative terms – firms with £100-250k sales (ie a full timer 'going for it') grew overall since ’98 by 3% - ie there are 2.2-2.9k more of them now than 10 year ago. This suggests a growing market for experienced sole practitioners for whom the SaaS and cloud based systems from Legal IT vendors will be a God send. Reducing barriers to market entry through reduced or negligible set up costs, and enabling sole practitioners to compete with other specialist teams with comparable facilities will be a growing niche within this an addressable market of 17.6-19k individuals.

So Keep Calm and Carry On

The global race continues and is good news for those that can hack it up there.

The mid-market is growing and will continue to do so irrespective of the legal services noise around franchises and ABSs. The example to watch here is actually the Connect2Law solution – similar versions of it remains alive and kicking even in the much more consolidated accountancy sector. The acquisition of teams and firms to build scale and competitiveness will continue, and frankly would have done with or without the Legal Services Act.

Allegedly franchises (whether ABS driven or not) will consolidate the market, especially among small firms; but there is a problem with this. Law firms tend to be distributed more along supply lines than demand ones. In essence they tend to be sited near courts, not clients. The logistical scale economies behind franchised dentists, opticians and other distributed professional service providers simply do not have as much sway with law firms. And make no mistake, franchise margins can be very tight and if scale economies are not there, few succeed. It would also mean at least 3 of them succeeding on the level of firm take up they themselves project to begin to erode the number of 'firms' overall in the small and medium size categories. We'll see.

The other basic challenges we already know, and frankly have little or nothing to do with ‘consolidation’. Consumer work on the High St is not a legal services market, and hasn’t been for some time now – it is an insurance services market. The Legal Aid market is unsustainable in its current form for basic inefficiency reasons, not contraction. Ironically good firms coping with systemic governmental confusion have no option but to automate or die. The insurance led (ATE and BTE) sectors will get tougher still, and frankly the disruption of the wills and probate market is both inevitable and already well progressed.

Even the (real) sole practitioner market is growing (up 527 firms since 98). The small firm market is growing. There are 2305 more firms making £100-249k a year now than in '98 and over 1500 more firms making £250-£1m. That it’s not growing as fast as Allen & Overy is neither here nor there. So - apologies for raining on the impressive and noisy parade around legal services currently. But the HMRC statistics simply do not back up the hype.

[i] Source: Office for National Statistics: UK Business: Activity, Size & Location Reports 1998-2011

[ii] Rebasing of SIC codes in 2007 appears to have had a significant effect on the number of firms included within the definition; adjustment for this has been made, but it inevitably clouds the precision required around the height of the recessionary impact in 08 to some degree.

Thursday, September 22, 2011

The High Water Mark For Regulatory Hubris

The Government spent over £1m last year finding out if there was market failure in advisory compliance services for SMEs. Nice of them; and the short answer is – ‘nope’, nada, nowt, nine, rien, no way. Having made this ‘investment’ they’ve then buried (‘archived’) their findings in the communications equivalent of Outer Mongolia, which is odd. The detailed findings are important, however, so here’s the headlines.

The research team put a big spotlight on non-lawyers doing compliance work for SMEs. A sceptical, some would say a biased spotlight, should be revealing, so what was the result?[1]. The findings are relevant for the regulatory consultancies (who come out well), and the regulators, quangos, lawyers, insurers, and banks, who, frankly get taught some lessons.

The New Labour administration set a lot of hares running in the legal services arena, and in this instance the Anderson Review[2] concluded that something should be done about compliance advice for SMEs. Quite why they asked a recruitment entrepreneur to assess an area tangential to her core competence at best is unclear, but neither the intentions of the initial reviewers nor the competence of the subsequent teams is in question. It now appears to be more of a high water mark for an administration that simply saw no boundaries to their competence or calling. Until the RSI (The Regulatory Standards Institute) intervened and put the regulatory consultancies front and centre, no-one seemed prepared to argue that Mr Browns’ finest seeking to be legislator, regulator, inspector, insurer, advisor, certifier, prosecutor, defender, expert witness, judge, jury and bailiff all at the same time could be a tad over-reaching themselves.

Two pilot projects and a nationwide research effort were undertaken delivering significant empirical results:

- From an addressable prospect base of 22,500 firms (5% of the North West SME population) one government pilot research scheme (aka ‘no wrong door’) secured interest from 447 firms, 253 of whom registered for a free trial. From these, after the 6 months free period, 12 firms took up long term contracts[3]. Take up of a ‘free’ service for 6 months was therefore notable at 1.12% of the prospects, and 4.74% of those went on to take up a full service. Overall the take up was 0.05%. Frankly no direct marketing B2B services business would find these levels of take up remotely attractive or cost effective.

- A sister project (‘Open Market Campaign’ – OMC) started with direct mail to 30,407 firms, emails to 9,700 and telemarketing to this 30k base, ie 3 hits. They were offered £50 off an existing service. They achieved 1483 registrations: 4.8% take up for a free offer. No firms took up the offer or used the vouchers, that’s right – none, zero. Not being able to effectively give away £50 notes is an odd outcome.

- The cost of the research pilots in total was £1,104,313[4] resulting in a cost per sale of £92k which should pay back in just over 30 years. Even allowing for a direct marketing cost allocation only, the costs for the pilot which generated some sales after the 6 month trial was £74,516 generating a cost per sale £6.2k; this would render each contract heavily loss making from inception on normal commercial parameters. The best that can be said is that it was nice of the Government to prove that direct marketing (as opposed to sales force led) approaches in this market are rarely cost effective. Sadly, this lesson did not need learning – not at any rate by those in the market already.

The other findings from the research are, strangely, not being widely disseminated or trumpeted, despite their relevance to the legal service debate raging currently. Here are the key lessons:

* Compliance is a stress purchase: The most common reasons for not taking up even free pilot offers can be paraphrased as (a) ‘not now’, and (b) ‘maybe later’[5]. Timing is all in stress purchases for compliance. This is easy to forget, but it is absolutely fundamental to understanding the appeal of compliance, and especially outsourced compliance. Entrepreneurs simply do not get up in the morning deciding to really crack on with compliance today

* Awareness among SMEs is high: It should come as no surprise surely that 81% of businesses with no employees are not aware of these services. Awareness is highest among 10-19 and 20-49 employee firms and in effect over 70% of firms in these categories know all about it. Basically those who need to know - know.

* Clients want certainty, insurance is secondary. The government’s research focus on ‘insured advice’ effectively put the cart before the horse by focusing on a prescribed solution. Most SMEs want certainty and whether the advice is insured or not is irrelevant. That some respondents’ expected ACAS to offer insured advice simply illustrates the confusion.

* Awareness does not predict likelihood to purchase. An important finding was that increased awareness of the solutions did NOT make the SME more likely to buy the service. None – yes, None – of those most aware, converted to pilots or policies in this research. The research is open minded about the implications of this, but there are some basics at play: (a) SMEs only very rarely buy weapons in time of peace, and (b) it's noisy out there - upwards of 200 active sales consultants nationwide backed by even more telemarketing staff cycle through over 13million calls a year at present, so even the largest estimates of SME populations mean each firm is called probably 3-4 times every year already.

* Very Satisfied: ‘Overall there was a high level of satisfaction among businesses that have used insured advice with the quality of the advice they have received.’ This finding is startling. Not because it tells it like it is, but bear in mind that there were several vested interests lobbying hard behind the scenes here to prove that law firms must inherently be better than the ‘differently qualified’. Simply put - SMEs like what they’re getting from the regulatory consultancies and their choice is an informed one.

* Never Mind the Quality…: ‘Amongst those businesses that were aware of insured advice but have not used it, quality was the least frequently given factor affecting their decision not to use this type of advice.’ Another startling finding. Strip away the double negatives and basically quality of advice is Not the paramount issue for SMEs – it is not even a major concern – it is the LEAST concern. Frankly this nails the protectionist arguments of the legal lobby in particular. SMEs want the ‘poo’ gone, not polished. It is this mind-set that lawyers almost always get wrong.

* Timeliness First, Cost Second: The issues which are more relevant to clients include: (a) cost (and in this market perceived cost risk and fixed fee elements are writ large); (b) insurance was not seen as a primary issue for end users at all, (all it delivers is a mechanism for fixed fee pricing); and (c) timeliness is key. Basic points all – the Market is saying: ‘Get rid of the problem for a fixed fee – insure if you must (that’s your call as the supplier) – and get out of the way, we’ve got a business to run’. This is the ‘I don’t check the Highway Code when I pop into the car to go to the supermarket’ point. Compliance takes itself too seriously and regulators always confuse their desire to change behaviour with their ability to do so.

* Sour Grapes? Satisfaction was ‘high’ and only 4% were dissatisfied with the quality of advice. This is important as it means the likelihood of breaking into this market by simply offering fantastic advice quality is very low. Quite where the allegations of poor quality come from is a mystery, and maybe the definition of ‘quality’ is revealing here. It is also worth acknowledging that within the regulatory consulting industry there is already much self flagellation about the advice being compromised or not by the insurance backing; they are far from complacent even about the issue the 4% may point up.

* Renewal benchmarks: 8% of the sampled SMEs had used the service in the past and were not using it now[6]. This translates into a 92% renewal rate, which over a 3 year contract (the industry standard) is 78% (of renewables). These are benchmarks the market knows and polarises around. There are good reasons why the annualised renewal rate is 92% and not 97%, mostly inherent in the fact that SMEs merge, liquidate etc more than most, but also that by definition firms facing compliance growth pangs face a higher attrition rate too.

* Tick Box Fatigue? Clearly the efficacy of kitemarks is wearing thin when the desirability of a quality assurance program was raised. What should have been a resounding ‘yes’ or at least a comforting ‘it can’t hurt’ was a very equivocal 50/50 ‘maybe’ or ‘if you must’ response from clients. Noticeably in relation to prospective clients the impact was that only 38-43%[7] would be more likely to use a kited supplier. Again, satisfaction with the choices already there is clearly very high in relative terms.

* Pricing is Personal. Research on pricing is notoriously misleading and basically very few people do what they say they’ll do when it comes to pricing. Economic models rarely manage to cope with the emotional baggage, especially when in a stress purchase situation. So ignore the average price expectation of £450pa; the average of free and £3k skewed among firms with no employees is probably in reality lower than £450pa, but equally tackling a discrimination claim at tribunal for £450 would be nonsense – the average figure is meaningless. Average fees based on a firm’s payroll are the norm and after a determined attempt to cull competitors over several years by the market leader with price competition, if anything prices are now rising again and averages for SMEs are probably now over £175 per month.

* Industry Competition: Comparing costs to other advisors, notably banks, insurers and accountants is also largely meaningless as these are often transactional and commoditised services (usually costing significantly less than £1k pa). An SME is not going to stop paying their audit fee because they sacked someone this year and got it wrong (unless it bankrupts them). Compliance is structurally different – when it happens it can kill a business, and it is inherently an ‘infrequently occurring but complex’ event[8], often disciplinary and redundancy based. The only finding of note was that “where it was found that cost was less of an issue, use of insured advice increased’. This is a backwards way of saying that an insured component simply delivers fixed price certainty for clients – something they value.

* The addressable market: Having identified that awareness was irrelevant to take up, the research still maps both and usage/awareness is highest in the 20-49 employee size category, followed by 50-249 and 10-19. The only rationale for keeping the 'no employee' categories in play would be their propensity to become employers, but the take up is miniscule; clearly the vast majority of sole traders typically remain sole traders. There remains a problem with this research, however, in that 30% penetrations at best simply do not tally with empirical research on the number of organisations and the contract volumes for the 70+ suppliers in this market. Underlying confusion over what ‘insured advice’ is may account for it. Many may simply not know that they have cover through their trade associations etc, but it would be dangerous to assume that there is a massive untapped market lying in wait in the 10-50 employee sector; there isn’t.

* Who’s asking? Funnily enough when asked by a government sponsored research project how confident they were in their compliance, over 97% of SMEs said they were ‘fine, thank you’.

* Freebies. When the category ‘external advice’ includes everything free via Google as well as free services from government web sites, HSE, ACAS etc the resulting statistic that only 23% [9]of users of external advice use paid for services is meaningless. The fact is clients use several overlapping free services and it is not a zero sum game. People use free stuff when it doesn't matter; when push comes to shove they use 'proper' services and bin the freebies.

* Industry competition: When a ‘paid for’ service is used, it replaces the need for external (often free) advice – probably because that’s what ‘outsourcing’ means. Overall it is seen as ‘better’ than other paid for alternatives. In particular, 40% saw it as directly replacing solicitors, 34% banks, 15% ACAS and 9% HSE[10]. Research stating that regulatory consultancies are seen by 40% of the market as better than or negating the need for resorting to other legal sources such as Solicitors is important. Substitutability rankings such as these on multiple options rarely get over 20-25%, so the solicitors sector is actually taking a pounding here. Regulatory consultancies are equally favoured over bank services and once lost to a regulatory consultancy the bank will lose the two most productive hooks into SME risk reduction and legal services on-selling. To be clear, banks usually do not offer employment advice, but they will be the only source of covering a perceived £3-7k unforeseen risk - so a service transmuting this to £175 per month from now is very welcome. It is notable that whereas RBS Mentor has built a top 3 market position with a full service, few of the other increasingly innovative advisory and referral services have proved sustainable. Banks may be happy to see others manage their client risk and simultaneously lose the benefits of a £2-3k pa service, but it is puzzling why only one has decided to break the eggs in this market.

* Assurance, not insurance. Attitudes to insurance within the industry vary increasingly. Some view the insurance of the advice as a guarantee of quality, some see it as an incentive to actually act against the client's best interests. Significant players offer guarantees and other variants on a self insuring theme, while more and more players are extending from profit shares into captive insurance partnerships. The BIS research suggests that 29% do not see insurance as justifying a premium (which is not why it’s there in the first place, anyway) and 24% didn’t see the need for advice to be insured at all. To what extent these are the same constituencies is not clear, but arguably between a quarter and a half do not see insurance as a major positive or negative.

So what?

Simply put – there was no market failure. More to the point, the winners in this market have shown a degree of innovation, client empathy, commercial risk management and perseverance that simply could not have been predicted. It certainly could not have been designed by government as it stumped the brightest and the best from the legal and insurance industries as well. Lawyers should have won here – they haven’t. Accountants, banks and insurers should have claimed this territory as core to their risk profiling – they’re well behind the pace. Publishers and other SME brands should have diversified – they are generally doing too little and far too late.

Safety and employment law compliance is now an established market with its own internal complexities and mores. The high water mark of the last Administration’s pride revealed one of the legal services industries best run markets – probably just where they least expected it. It should be noted, however, that it was not because the FPB and Peninsula co-operated with the pilots that the project foundered. It was a credible threat of a class action from the RSI and one aggrieved firm in particular that made the Administration choose the road it should always have been on anyway. Technical breaches of EU subsidy and competition rules leading to high profile High Court litigation would ultimately have had to be resolved at Cabinet Office and wasted considerably more than the £1m already sunk here. Normal hostilities have been resumed.

The lesson for incumbents and newcomers alike are clear:

  1. Offering free stuff – however erudite - simply will not work here; plenty sell it, clients discount it. There’s a glut of free advice, much of it duplicated and increasingly devalued – few dare say it, but the quality of free and quango advice is not high and usually needs double checking.
  2. Of Time, Cost and Quality – Timing is key: when SMEs need help – they really Need it. Until then, you are more likely to annoy than help if you persist in teaching people what they don’t want to know.
  3. Being a brilliant lawyer specialising in employment law or safety guarantees nothing and may actually be a hindrance. Professional brands have negatives as well as positives – this market thrives on ‘not’ being lawyers, regulators or insurers.
  4. For banks the issue is not giving free advice on some web gizmo like the Halifax's latest pitch, or free shrink wrap software that's never used from Barclays, it is missing out on thousands of small loan opportunities for SMEs while simultaneously actively reducing the client's risk profile.
  5. It’s not about cost – it’s about agreeing a fixed price to cover a lumpy risk. Insurance helps here, but it’s not essential or much of a selling point even.
  6. Quality is defined by the customers’ expectations, not some legal qualifications checklist – regulatory consultancies are consistently meeting or exceeding the expectations that matter.
Competition is not about getting 'mad' or getting 'even' - it's about getting better. This latest attempt by some vested interests to hobble these legal services upstarts failed - there may well be more. For those who want to play it straight, this is a high growth, recession resistant B2B legal services market well worth the effort.

The advice and insurance components of the regulatory consultancy service are only the tip of a complex iceberg, however. You need to be able to offer on-site installations, bespoke documentation, compliance event diary management, employee administration and safety software, dispute resolution, case management and advice from experienced professionals from industry (not just law graduate 'speaking books'). You need to be able to get people in front of troubled SMEs nationwide to explain the solution at the rate of dozens a week if possible. Insurance may help you get a fixed fee for the package, but either way take the outsourcing long contract approach of 3 years as a minimum. Match that and then find how to better it in a way busy small businesses will thanks you for and it is game on.

[1] Employment Relations Research Series No 120: Insured Advice Pilots: Evaluation: July 2011 http://www.bis.gov.uk/assets/biscore/employment-matters/docs/I/11-1080-insured-advice-pilots-evaluation

[3] Table 3.12 and page 37. It should be noted that the take up was with either the Forum of Private business (a white labelled service) or Peninsula – two firms which do not truly represent the range of service levels in this industry, but significant players.

[4] Freedom of Information release 21/06/10: Insured Advice Pilots

[5] Table3.11 No Wrong Door Pilot registrees by reason for not taking out a policy.

[6] Page 22: ‘Quality’

[7] Page 22

[8] Page 25

[9] Page 30 Use of External Advice

[10] Page 31 2.3; Page 32 Summary

Friday, May 13, 2011

Legal Services - Going off the Reservation?

At the core of the debate is the concept of “reserved activities”, or activities which only a properly trained, qualified, and regulated person can be permitted to do. Only lawyers can be trusted to “do” certain things. In any other industry or process this would be seen quite simply as a restrictive trade practice, but where it is essential to the administration of justice, it is seen as a tolerable lesser of two evils.

Few would contest that a judicial system needs a process whereby the quality of advocates, the process of case management and the veracity of the testimony and documentation is kept as high as possible. The concept of being an “officer of the court” in the UK is an important one in terms of the independence of the legal system. Historically barristers were the advocate specialists and solicitors the conduct of litigation specialists, regulated by the Bar Council and Law Society respectively.

Reserved activities were extended, however, to include the conveyancing of property and the administration of probate, and on these two pillars rest much of the history and growth of the legal professions.

Conveyancing and Probate are two areas where individuals are most likely to face contentious disputes. There is, however, no commensurate need for a regulated person to be involved in buying a billion dollar warplane or buying a multi-billion pound company. Section 14 of the Stamp Act 1804 was a rather ungentlemanly compromise giving solicitors a conveyancing monopoly which is now routinely conflated with attacks on access to justice.

While defending the maintenance of historically anachronistic anomalies, the legal profession is currently uniquely slow to consider even modest extensions of legal professional privilege. The Prudential case in the Court of Appeal was an opportunity to extend officer of the court status to some types of accountant in some circumstances, but no, parliament must decide. The elision of “justice” with protectionist measures is mendacious and all too common and frankly unhelpful.

Clementi did not propose a change to the reserved activities. He could have extended them or curtailed them – he did neither. Arguably the Clementi terms of reference put the burden of proof firmly on the restrictive provision to prove its value. By the time the Legal Services Act arrived, however, it included provisions which enabled the industry regulator (LSC) to oversee insurance claims management and immigration.

The core issue is clearly closer to the one that drove Pitt in Napoleonic times – trade and taxes. Immigration is currently (erroneously) seen as one of the most volatile claims on the Legal Aid budget, and claims management is a pivotal process whereby vast calls on the public purse are in effect outsourced to the insurance industry.

The legal regulators may well see the maintenance of some reservations as an essential platform from which to ensure a viable profession. That, frankly is not their call. Any issues necessary to ensure the proper conduct of litigation - are, but they are currently insisting that only parliament can deal with these. By this logic, any extensions of protectionist reservations would require the same rigor. It is hard, however, to see how and why a £25bn industry needs protection. Perhaps it is time to remember that it was the OFT reviews in 2001 that started the whole ball rolling.

If the new regulatory regime empowers law firms to compete head to head with legal services firms from other regulatory regimes - all well and good. If they simply ramp up protectionist measures - this is predictable, but it is also highly likely to be self delusional and self defeating in the medium and long term.

(See RBP's White Paper for a fuller exploration of these issues with references at www.rbponline.co.uk)