Thinking about relevant and effective law departments

Friday, May 14, 2021

The Tortoise for a Lawyer

 

I recently was talking with one prospective client.  “One of my board members who has worked with lots of lawyers advised that I be careful.  If you consider hiring a former in-house lawyer, make sure she will be responsive to your needs.”  Too often, that Board member’s experience has been that former attorneys are slow.  He had a tortoise for a lawyer. That experience is not uncommon, unfortunately.

When I became the leader of a part of an in-house team, the first thing I did was to travel to meet with many of the subgroups of the business that our group’s internal customers (not clients, because the business as a whole was our only client).  During those meetings, a theme emerged that some of our legal team’s responses were not very timely.  The responses were simply taking too long.

Once I heard from a new in-house lawyer that he had received some advice from a more senior colleague about reviewing contracts for a business unit.  It went something like this.  “Send them back a bunch of questions by email.”  What would that achieve?  Sure, there are legitimate questions lawyers have to ask to refine a contract.  But this  senior lawyer was teaching the junior lawyer how to push something off, and that behavior was reflected in the feedback from our internal customers. 

What are the risks of being the tortoise?  First, it slows the business down and contributes to the feeling that the lawyer is the reason the deal can’t get done.  Second, if the delay is long enough, the business may be lost.  Third, it does not create the feeling that the lawyers are partners with the business, which may deter the businesspeople from seeking legal counsel when they should.

It is not enough to provide quality legal advice.  That advice must be timely.