I wrote a blog piece in January 2011 on why a Partnership may not be the best model for a law Firm, and I touched on an issue know as Pluralistic Ignorance.

The gist of that article is that some partnerships are inefficient because when it comes to driving a law firm forward or doing “non-lawyer” work, such as marketing, or being innovative, no one wants to take any action because they think that someone else will do it, so nothing gets done.  Nothing useful anyway.


(Yes, there are a number of firms that have partnership models and do grow, but they tend to have a nominated leader or quasi-dictator; but in general, in these recessionary times, a partnership model is not the way to go)

I had thought, in researching that article, that pluralistic ignorance in itself prevented law firm growth, but there was always that niggling suspicion that something else was at play and it wasn’t until I read some of Edward Banfield’s book, The Moral Basis of a backward Society, that I realised what it was.

Banfield’s book describes a fictitious town in Italy called Montegrano, where the people share a great deal of trust with their own family members but they are highly suspicious of anyone outside of the family network and so they were unable to build businesses that were bigger than an extended family unit. 

Because of this inability to grow, they became stuck. They had placed a ceiling on what they could earn as a community and it was entirely self-generated.

Banfield established that Montegrano's predicament was entrenched in the ”distrust, envy and suspicion displayed by its inhabitants' relations with each other”. Fellow citizens would refuse to help one another, except where their own personal material gain was at stake. 

Many attempted to hinder their neighbours from attaining success, believing that the others' good fortune would inevitably harm their own interests. Montegrano's citizens viewed their village life as little more than a battleground. Subsequently, what transpired was social isolation and ultimately poverty.  An inability to work together to solve common social problems, or even to pool common resources and talents meant that they were stuck in a progress-resistant culture.

But to take this in context, I could see that within law firms - even quite large firms - that lack of trust in something bigger than a family unit survives and inhibits growth.

I’m sure you’ve heard or read the phrase “operating within silos” as it relates to legal firms.

Quite a lot of firms operate as large entities but in reality they are nothing more than a collective of small firms or silos with a partner as the “head of the family” and they tend not to trust other silos or “families” even within the same organisation.

That lack of trust is what really inhibits growth.

When it comes down to it, partners in (some) law firms don’t really trust their fellow partners. They may say that they do, but their actions betray otherwise.

Partners meeting are often fractious affairs where individuals hold on to their people and fight to make sure that any work they or “their people” have done is correctly billed to their department. This sort of attitude does not bode well for customer service and also inhibits cross-referrals within the firm.

Yet Trust is the glue that binds commerce. Business relationships are forged in trust and when people working together communicate effectively and co-operate with each other, they build up trust.

Trust creates the perfect environment for growth to take place and the lack of has the opposite effect. 

As a culture, the law is and lawyers are, naturally suspicious.

Anything that is said, suggested or especially written needs to be corroborated. Every action they undertake as lawyers needs to be exact, certain, precise. 

To be otherwise is to invite criticism, a complaint or even a lawsuit, so this manufactured tendency will naturally permeate through all aspects of a lawyer’s life; and dealing with fellow partners is no different.

There therefore tends to be suspicion seen in every action no matter how small and this in combination with pluralistic ignorance is the real reason that many law firms fail to grow or even fail to get themselves to a position where they are even ready to be taught to grow.

The firms that can encourage a truly trusting culture will be the firms that go on to dominate the legal marketplace.

I wrote another article stating that if you were to start a law firm from scratch, now, today, there is no way you would want to follow the partnership model; but if you did, and you decided to use the traditional methods, you would at least have a name for it…and here it is…I give you… Montegrano & Co.

 
 
"It's not enough that we do our best; sometimes we have to do what's required." Winston Churchill

I like Churchill quotes.

There are so many situations where they are suitable and they have stood the test of time.

I chose this one for this blog because I was chatting with a lawyer from a well-known firm that is clearly struggling in the present climate and he said that he couldn’t understand it because they (the partners) were all “…doing their best to generate new business…”

I dug a little deeper.

By “..doing their best…” he went on to explain that “…they had increased their advertising spend and were doing a lot more marketing…”

He said that they had done all the traditional advertising in magazines, newspapers and corporate sponsorships but that it had been a waste of time and money.

Traditional advertising is one of the least effective ways to advertise a law firm. Unfortunately, most lawyers think that marketing and advertising are the same thing. The result is that you end up wasting money and have no new prospective customers to show for all the effort.

Here are three major reasons why advertising in the traditional sense does not work.

1. It does not move people along in the sales cycle. It's only effective in the first stage when the potential customer is getting to know you.

2. Frequent advertising is too costly for most budgets. Lots of advertising research has shown that you need to reach your prospects multiple times – usually from 5 to 7 times -  to make enough of an impression so they will remember you when they need you. 

3. Most adverts are often poorly designed or written, even to the point of being boring instead of influencing your target market. Often they are created by lawyers themselves and tend to drone on about how great at law the firm is and how long it’s been going.

The other problem with their approach is that “their best” was the advertising industry’s worst.

Imagine if an ad agency had decided to create their own contracts, do the legal work on their own property lease or handle their own employment law issues and you start to get the picture.

If they had been a little bit wiser and not so smart, they could have measured the results and gone on to target their future ad spends in the right areas.

That was what was required.