Benchmarking law department operations

ACC benchmarking report provides a comprehensive self-assessment tool, writes Richard Stock

Richard Stock

Law departments seldom have access to comprehensive and valuable benchmarking material at no cost. I have had a chance to review the report released by the Association of Corporate Counsel (ACC) in partnership with Wolters Kluwer Legal & Regulatory in March 2020. There were 316 participants, spread across 24 industries and 29 countries. This article should be regarded as an abstract intended to encourage all law departments to study and act on the full ACC report.

The ACC’s maturity model is designed for law department leadership and management to “place themselves in three stages of maturity by benchmarking against companies of different sizes and industry sectors.” The model surveys 15 functions and 92 sub-functions. The 15 functions are

  • Change Management
  • Compliance
  • Contract Management
  • eDiscovery and Litigation Management
  • External Resources Management
  • Financial Management
  • Information Governance (Records Management)
  • Innovation Management
  • Intellectual Property Management
  • Internal Resources Management
  • Knowledge Management
  • Metrics and Analysis
  • Process & Project Management
  • Strategic Planning
  • Technology Management

Five key findings of the report provide important context when considering the statistical results.

  • departments that employ legal ops professionals are more advanced across the 15 functions
  • there is significant variation in maturity across functions with Compliance and Financial Management most advanced and eDiscovery and Litigation Management and Innovation Management the least advanced
  • larger departments tend to report higher maturity levels
  • budget limitations, leadership scepticism about the value of legal operations , and resistance to change are barriers to improving operations maturity
  • only 8 (2.5 %) law departments are in an advanced stage of maturity across 10 or more functions

The benchmark report evaluates each function on a 6-point scale. The average score for the Compliance function is 3.46 - Intermediate Stage One. Financial Management scores an average of 3.34, also Intermediate Stage One. The remaining 13 functions each score below 3.0, demonstrating that most companies can do much more to improve their legal operations.

External Resources Management
I have elected to look at one function – external resources management – to illustrate the report’s treatment of the sub-functions. This function had the fifth highest score at 2.85, yet only 11 per cent of the law departments reported that they were in the advanced stage. The report relies on 13 sub-functions to determine operational maturity for external resources management. These follow with the total percentage of participants stating that the elements are “not yet in place” and “planning to be in place”. Otherwise said, these departments are at best in the early stage.

Sub-Functions

% not in place

a) Sourcing decisions are ongoing considerations and legal service providers (LSP) are integrated in the legal services delivery model

47.1 %

b) Use of legal services is driven by value provided at the phase/task level

28.0 %

c) Law firm/LSPs are considered value producing business partners, continually improving performance and relationship

27.9 %

d) Outside counsel and vendor management are centralized function(s) within legal operations; involvement in RFPs; engagements, pricing and performance review

42.8 %

e) AFAs are considered on all matters and are heavily used

65.0 %

f) Systems smoothly incorporate/support AFAs in billing and metrics/ dashboards

 69.2 %

g) Procedures exist to assess value and reconcile pricing to cost variances

62.3 %

h) Frequent review of budgets and performance (at least quarterly)

40.4 %

i) Standardized supplier quality/performance metrics

75.3 %

j) Regular, structured and mutual feedback

59.4 %

k) Vendor management metrics integrated with GC dashboard

77.2 %

l) Systematic use of value adds (e.g., training, secondments) and value-enabling capabilities such as firm/LSP-provided project management and technology

64.9 %

m) Win rates (outcomes) are considered in vendor selection

63.3 %

Observations
With few exceptions, almost all of the sub-functions for managing external resources should be embedded in a law department’s annual business plan. However, 50% to 75% of the 316 participants have nothing in place for 7 of the 13 sub-functions. The report revealed that about 255 of the participants plan to “standardize quality/performance metrics” and to “secure regular, structured and mature feedback” from their external resources. This suggests that a significant majority of law departments are only in the early stages of thinking about how best to manage themselves and the resources that they use. Law department leadership and management should set aside incremental adjustments to operating practices and resource management in favor of comprehensive business plans that will advance their performance across all 15 functions. The ACC benchmarking report provides a good self-assessment tool and a solid foundation for change across 24 months.

Recent articles & video

Exclusion of casino managers from Quebec’s labour regime constitutional: SCC

Yukon Supreme Court orders release of student contact information in class action lawsuit

Ontario Superior Court rejects worker's psychological impairment claim from a workplace injury

BC Supreme Court clarifies when spousal and child support obligations should end

Federal Court of Appeal rejects employee's complaint of union's failure to fairly represent him

Alberta Court of King's Bench rejects Calderbank offer in medical negligence case

Most Read Articles

BC Supreme Court upholds mother’s will against son's claims for greater inheritance

2024 Canadian Law Awards Excellence Awardees revealed

Jennifer King at Gowling WLG on ESG and being recognized as a Top 25 Most Influential Lawyer

BC undermining lawyer independence with Legal Professions Act: LSBC, CBA BC Branch