Jordan Furlong on Legal Services Selected Slaw Columns from 2006-2019

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Jordan Furlong on Legal Services Selected Slaw Columns from 2006-2019 Jordan Furlong on Legal Services Selected Slaw columns from 2006-2019 2019 CanLIIDocs 3672 Jordan Furlong 2019 About Jordan Furlong Jordan Furlong is a leading analyst of the global legal market and forecaster of its future development. Law firms and legal organizations consult him to better understand why 2019 CanLIIDocs 3672 the legal services environment is undergoing radical change and to advise them on how to build sustainable and competitive legal enterprises. About Slaw Slaw is Canadian, co-operative, and about any and all things legal. Since 2005, Slaw.ca has been Canada’s online legal magazine, written by and for the Canadian law community: lawyers, librarians, technologists, marketers, students, educators and everyone in between. With perspectives from academia, law firms, non-profits, regulatory bodies and beyond, Slaw explores how law is practised, how it’s taught, how the industry is changing, and what the future might hold. Slaw is considered essential daily reading by many in Canadian legal circles. With more than 2 million visits per year, our readers make up a loyal, curious, and engaged community. Law School Gets This Right. Law Practice Gets It Wrong. Originally published on December 11th 2019 Earlier this month, I was kindly invited by Jason Morris to speak (via Skype) to his “Coding The Law” class at the University of Alberta Faculty of Law. We had a great chat on a range of topics, but one in particular stood out for me and I wanted to share it with a wider audience. We were talking about the transition from law school into the legal profession, and yes, 2019 CanLIIDocs 3672 we did spend quite some time talking about all the ways in which law school does a poor job of preparing students for practice. But I pointed out one way in which law school does a terrific job in developing lawyers, and that lawyers then completely forget. Law school, I told them, is a social enterprise. You are surrounded by other law students almost all the time. You sit with dozens of them in class, pass by hundreds of them in halls and stairwells, go out and socialize with the ones you like best, for three whole years. You can’t escape them even if you want to (and sometimes you really want to). And when you’re together, you talk about the law, because the one thing every law student and lawyer has in common is that we like this stuff. We enjoy talking about law and lawyers and judges — and what’s more, we like having other people around who share this enjoyment. Law school is a community of interest, and it’s that community — that sense of place and belonging and shared identity — that characterizes the law school experience as much as anything else. And then we graduate and go out into the legal workforce, and we forget this one great lesson law school taught us. We go into isolation. Law practice isolates us from our sense of professional community. As law students, we looked up and around and across at each other; as lawyers, we look down at our keyboards and screens and documents and timesheets. Other lawyers are strangers, adversaries, or competitors (even, or especially, within the same firm). The pressure to work and hit targets and meet expectations starts on day one and never goes away. The word that best describes our working life is this: Lawyers burrow. All that looking down, digging down, getting deeper and deeper into whatever task is occupying or consuming us, as the sun goes down and the hours pile up, and we start to build silos all around us, to mark off our dig sites and keep out distractions and filter out more and more people who don’t feel relevant or useful to us anymore. There are so many lonely lawyers out there. I don’t mean in the romantic sense, 2019 CanLIIDocs 3672 although there’s plenty of that. I mean lawyers cut off from community, from support, from the social environment in which they first entered the law. We work in isolation, and you already know the host of ills that emerge from that. So my advice to this group of law students was to do whatever they could to retain and grow the social elements of law school as they enter the legal profession. Ward off isolation, don’t give in to the inclination to burrow. Keep at least some of their law school social networks and create new professional networks to complement them. Here are some specific suggestions: 1. Join the Canadian Bar Association. This is the lowest-hanging fruit available. The last I checked, CBA membership is free for students and costs very little for new lawyers. Choose “Sections” that reflect your own business and personal interests, and show up to their meetings, lunches, CLE sessions and such. The learning will be helpful, but the contacts within your local bar will be invaluable. Every new lawyer who’s done this reports that veteran lawyers are happy to meet them and eager to help out where they can. 2. Join client and industry networks. This could be as simple as expanding your CBA membership to the Canadian Corporate Counsel Association. But if you’re in a BigLaw firm, look up business networks of major commercial clients or 3 industry sectors, and find out when the next trade show takes place. Or if you’re serving small business, the local Chamber of Commerce or CFIB branch. Or if individual clients, community meetings or local city councillors’ events. You’ll meet clients, which is obviously great, but even better is that you’ll also meet other practitioners with the same interests as you. 3. Join the online legal community. You’ll connect with hundreds of bright, insightful, passionate legal professionals from all over the world who care about the same things you do. Start on Twitter — create or ramp up your account, follow some people you know or have heard of in your area, and let Twitter’s algorithms 2019 CanLIIDocs 3672 suggest more. Click on hashtags to virtually follow along with conferences you can’t attend in person. Join and start conversations. So many real-life lawyer connections and friendships now start online. You might not realize it, but when you walked into law school, you found your people, and they found you. This is your community — you belong here, you’re wanted and needed here. Law school teaches this lesson fantastically well — make sure it’s the one lesson, above all, that you take with you into practice and throughout your time in the legal profession. Legal Regulatory Reform in Britain and the US: Will History Repeat? Originally published on October 4th 2019 A reporter called me the other day with a simple question about the potentially enormous changes to legal regulation on the way in California, Utah, and Arizona. Specifically, she noted that England & Wales brought about significant changes to its legal regulatory system eight years ago, yet not much has changed in those jurisdictions. Why do I think that these possible US reforms would yield a different outcome, especially with regard to access to justice and innovation? 4 As other reporters have learned to their chagrin, I’m incapable of giving a nice concise answer to simple questions, and I replied with a lengthy discourse on the subject. After some further discussion, I sent her a much shorter summary that she could actually use in her story. But she also graciously agreed that I could inflict the longer response on you fine people here at Slaw. With some edits and modifications, here it is. It’s wise to be skeptical that these regulatory reforms would automatically trigger a wave of change to legal regulation in the United States. After all, the introduction of the Legal 2019 CanLIIDocs 3672 Services Act 2007 was hailed by many people, myself included, as a watershed moment in the history of the legal profession, a trigger for what would surely be cascading reform and liberalization of legal systems everywhere. Well, of course, the sky did not fall, Pandora’s Box did not spring open, and an access- to-justice paradise did not unfold in England & Wales following the authorization of alternative business structures. So the question is whether what happened in Britain can be relied upon as a blueprint for what likely will happen in these three American states this year and next. To my mind, anyway, there are enough differences to suggest that events might follow a different path in the US. Let’s start by noting that the reforms introduced by the Legal Services Act 2007 were mostly focused on restructuring the sclerotic regulatory framework for legal services there. But reform efforts were also premised on this objective: To “promote competition, innovation and the public and consumer interest in an efficient, effective and independent legal sector.” It was felt at the time that lawyers were insufficiently incentivized to be fully responsive to their clients — basically, that they were complacent and often indifferent to client service. 5 The resulting ABS reform — allowing law firms to bring in non-lawyers as equity owners or sell shares in the firm on the stock exchange — was aimed at encouraging competition for and innovation among lawyers and law firms. Looking back now, that might seem like an odd way to go about it. But keep in mind that this all took place in the mid-2000s, at the height of the financial services bubble that was, among other things, transforming London into a global financial colossus.
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