Battle for Talent Pushes Big Law into Uncharted Territory
Jun 27, 2024 View in Browser

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Each week, the Law.com Barometer newsletter, powered by the ALM Global Newsroom and Legalweek brings you the trends, disruptions, and shifts our reporters and editors are tracking through coverage spanning every beat and region across the ALM Global Newsroom. The micro-topic coverage will not only help you navigate the changing legal landscape but also prepare you to discuss these shifts with thousands of legal leaders at Legalweek 2025, taking place from March 24-27, 2025, in New York City. Registration will be opening soon.

The Disruption: Battle for Talent Pushes Big Law into Uncharted Territory

 

Where will the free-agent system of Big Law take us?

 

Law firms are continuing to adjust their partner compensation systems to attract and retain star performers. Between bonus pools, super points and black boxes, firms are considering and sometimes implementing a variety of options to reward top performers and attract rainmakers. 

 

It doesn’t stop at compensation systems. Firms are also giving laterals practice area leadership titles, while some are luring large groups from rivals. And they are creating multiple partnership tiers to park lawyers with various skill sets.

 

But there are ramifications to all the changes, from unrest in the partnership ranks to challenges in mid and long-term planning, that any firm will need to grapple with along the way.

The Conversation

 

Just in the past year, Law.com has reported on compensation, or consideration of pay changes, at Paul Weiss; Weil Gotshal & Manges, Cravath Swaine & Moore, Davis Polk & Wardwell and Simpson Thacher & Bartlett. Paul Weiss and Cravath, in a big break from their traditional models, are also in the early stages of two-tier partnerships with nonequity ranks.

 

More recently, Law.com reported on Latham & Watkins considering super points pay system, with partners at the firm who can make more than $20 million.

 

What’s driving this? Law firms are intent on recruiting top M&A, private equity and finance partners from their rivals while holding onto their most profitable partners. Several law firms lately have also sought to lift out a whole group of laterals. 

 

Law firm demand hasn’t seen a super strong bounce back, especially in M&A matters, in 2024, so some firms are effectively taking market share from others when recruiting laterals.

 

Besides pay packages, which may include signing bonuses or guaranteed compensation for a period of time, law firms have other tools at their disposal, including giving out practice area leadership titles to laterals. Law.com has reported on new attorney titles given out to laterals at many elite firms lately, including Gibson Dunn & Crutcher; Paul Weiss; Baker McKenzie; and Paul Hastings. For some firms, it may just be marketing. For others, it could be giving lateral seats at the table for leadership decisions. 

The Significance

 

Recent changes in lateral strategy, compensation and multiple partnership tiers mark a complete shift for the legal industry in just a few years—remarkable speed for an industry that usually moves at a slow pace.

 

But not everyone is pleased. For one, some law firms, even elite firms such as Sullivan & Cromwell, say they aren’t going to make wholesale changes to follow the trend. And behind the scenes, other law firm leaders are nodding their heads. 

 

S&C leaders, like others, point out some of the internal disagreements that may arise. “Telling another partner you are going to pay a lateral $20 million a year, there has to be a lot of infighting going on,” noted S&C co-chair Bob Guiffra.

 

He added that the firm sees other law firms moving more toward a corporate model and less toward a partnership model. “If you treat your partners like employees, that is what they are going to be,” Giuffra said. “They will no longer feel like owners of the firm. Employees come and go.”

 

Looking at the changes broadly, it’s often a zero-sum game in compensation adjustments, especially when demand and profits are flat. The more dramatic pay raises law firms make for the most valuable players, the more pay cuts they may need to make for others. 

 

Meanwhile, the swift pace of adjustments makes it more challenging to plan for the long term, including making any plans for methodical shifts in operations, infrastructure, strategy and leadership. How can any firm make five-year strategy plans when it can’t predict the whims of the market tomorrow, including the latest pay packages to offer laterals?

 

The Information

 

Want to know more? Here’s what we’ve discovered in the ALM Global Newsroom:

  • How Attorney Titles in Big Law Can Mean Everything, and Nothing, All at Once
  • Ballooning Nonequity Tiers Will Require Law Firms to Manage Ranks Closely
  • The Goldilocks Solution to Law Firm Growth: Large Group Liftouts Prove ‘Just Right’
  • Paul Weiss, Seeing Record Year in Revenue and Profits, Plans Compensation, Partnership Changes
  • Weil Revises Partner Pay Criteria, as Firm Plots Leadership Succession
  • Cravath Enters Modern Era of Big Law Amid Regular Rate of Partner Exits
  • Once 'Unheard Of,' $20M Partner Pay Becomes Standard to Meet at Davis Polk, Simpson Thacher
  • Top Partner Pay at Simpson Thacher to Breach $20M
  • Latham Mulls 'Super' Points for Partner Pay, as Industry Makes 'Tectonic' Comp Changes
  • Sullivan & Cromwell Resists 'Radical' Partnership, Compensation Changes

 

The Forecast

 

Strategy changes over compensation, laterals and partnership structures are here to stay – and the market will continue to evolve. Most law firms will need to continually adapt, and they will be forced to reconcile with internal disagreements and disruptions in long-term plans.

 

Already, there are fewer and fewer firms like Sullivan & Cromwell that still have only one partnership tier and don’t regularly count on laterals for growth. Those firms resistant to change may be numbered. While S&C has the brand and profits to continue its unique approach, others up and down the Am Law 200 ranks likely don’t. 

 

"You can aspire to the business decisions that firms like S&C, Cravath or even Kirkland & Ellis make," consultant Tim Corcoran told The American Lawyer. "But most firms don't have the raw materials in brand strength, quality and depth of lawyers and size.”

 

The pressure to adapt—or else deal with the fallout of lower profits and later on, partnership exits—will push more law firms to make big changes to their once-traditional approaches in compensation, laterals and partnership structures.

 

Christine Simmons is a senior editor for business of law news. Contact her at [email protected].

 

 

 

 

 
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