Monday, July 31, 2006

New Business Strategy Podcast Episode: "Practice What You Preach"

This week's podcast episode, entitled Practice What You Preach, explores just what it is that the most successful businesses do to achieve doubled margins and doubled growth rates -- appoint managers who know how to excite, enthuse and energise their people.

The podcast includes a discussion of statistical findings which yield:

  • 9 Characteristics where Successful Businesses most outperform others
  • 9 Most Important Factors for predicting financial performance

You can listen to this week's seminar with the player shown just above this paragraph or download this episode. You can also subscribe to the podcast through my new Business Masterclass podcast page, or with iTunes, Yahoo! Podcasts or Podcast Alley.

In the podcast I present the results of a study of the factors that drive financial success. Surveying 139 offices of 29 firms in 15 countries in many different lines of business, I asked a simple question: are employee attitudes correlated with financial success? The answer, as the podcast shows, is an unequivocal "yes!"

The podcast also draws from ideas I discuss in these 3 articles:

  • Could Happy Workers Double Your Profits?
  • Culture Drives Performance: Now There's Proof
  • Forget Money, Think Passion

and these 3 previous conversations on my blog:

I’d really love to get some reactions to the podcast episode. Did you like it? Did the findings of my study match your experience?

Monday, July 24, 2006

Strategy Podcast Series

Today I've added to my podcast page the second episode (Strategy and the Fat Smoker) of my new series on strategy.

That episode is based on the 2005 article of the same name, while the first episode in the series (How to Create a Strategy) dates back to a 2000 article I wrote. For me, part of the challenge and the fun of putting my podcast series together has been the chance to reorganise material from my five books and other articles into what I hope is an internally consistent sequence of thoughts and advice.

So, in addition to serving those who like to listen rather than read, the new podacst series also creates a new way, not previously available, of obtaining all my ideas on a related subject all in one package.

You can listen to this week's seminar with the player shown just below this paragraph or you can download this episode or subscribe to the podcast through my new Business Masterclass podcast page. You can also subscribe with iTunes or Podcast Alley.

Unlike the two previous podcast series (on Marketing and Managing) which were designed to help individuals in their individual role, this latest series is about the challenges of guiding an organisation. Over the course of the series, I'll talk about values, collaboration, geographical expansion, diversification, mergers and adaptability (not necessarily in that order, though).

Many people have been kind enough to suggest that my ideas apply beyond the boundaries of the professional sectors on which I previously focused, so in this series I have tried to modify my language to be as inclusive as possible.

For those of you who have already experienced my podcasts, you'll notice that I have made some changes to my podcast page to try and enhance the experience. For each episode in the seminar series, there are now "notes for the episode" in which I'll try and include things like lists I go through, so that you won't have to take notes furiously. There are also links to other materials on my site (articles, blogs, videos) that are related to each specific episode.

For the series as a whole, there is a 39-page set of handouts downloadable here. (Actually, you don't need to sign up for the podcast series to download the seminar handouts. And, if you go to that same link, you'll see free downloadable seminar handouts on Managing, Client Relations and Careers as well!)

I have also redesigned the podcast page to allow you to provide feeback by writing reviews on iTunes, Yahoo, and vote for the podcast on Podcast Alley. I appreciate your support and help in spreading the word about what you think might be helpful to others (if you think that.)

Finally, I hope I can beg your forbearance and indulgence (I didn't go to college for nothing!) if any glitches occur in implementing all these changes.

Saturday, July 1, 2006

An Innovative Law Firm

At the time of writing (April 2006), Christopher Marston is 29 years old, and is the CEO of Exemplar Law Partners, L.L.C., the three-month-old, 9-person law firm he founded straight out of law school.

Marston is an entrepreneur, and always has been.  He had his first song published at the age of 12, started a music services company (performing and DJ-ing) at the age of 14, and became an options trader at the age of 18.  After prep school, he obtained his Bachelor's degree from Northeastern University in Finance and Entrepreneurship.

He was a CFO for a technology company, and competed nationally in ballroom-dancing competitions.  He attended Suffolk Law and Business School in Boston, graduating in 2004 with a law degree and a Master's degree in Finance.

Straight out of law school, he spent six months developing a business plan for a new kind of law firm.  As he tells it:  ''What began as intellectual curiosity became in-depth research, which turned into a business plan.''

Like most of his classmates, Marston was not encouraged by what he had heard about the life of a typical lawyer in a typical law firm, and even though he had won many awards at law school, he wasn't tempted to join a traditional firm.

''Lawyers are slaves to the billable hour,'' he notes.  ''By measuring and rewarding billable hours, internally and externally, lawyers are actually punished for innovation -- greater efficiency just reduces the bill to the client.''

Accordingly, using every penny of savings he had accumulated from his previous activities, Marston launched Exemplar Law Partners, opening the doors to clients in January 2006.

Among the innovative practices (at least for law firms) he has adopted are:

  • Billing only on the basis of fixed prices.  Fees are determined for each project by a pricing committee.
  • Exemplar offers its clients a satisfaction guarantee.
  • Exemplar will only hire lawyers with business degrees or with extensive industry experience.
  • Exemplar has been ultra-selective in its hiring, interviewing over 300 people to get the nine people it has.  Among the criteria new hires must have are social graces, an interest and confidence that they can develop business, a team-orientation, and the willingness to risk their own compensation from day one by accepting no guarantee of starting salary in exchange for profit sharing participation.
  • An ''over-investment'' in an experienced management team from non-lawyer backgrounds -- the COO has 34 years' experience in banking, and the Chief Marketing Officer has 15 years' experience in various industries, most recently direct sales.  (''I sought out varied backgrounds for a new, fresh approach,'' Marston says.)
  • A ''No Grinch'' teamwork approach.  Marston says on his blog:  ''You cannot buy a position at our firm with your book of business.  In fact, we have turned several of them away.  We want everyone to work together to achieve success.''

A few of these policies deserve further comment.

When it comes time to work with a client, Exemplar has a five-person value pricing committee (Marston, the COO, the CMO, and two other attorneys) who discuss the parameters and scope of the client problem, resulting in a fixed fee proposal to the client.  No client or job is pursued or accepted unless it uses this approach.

Initially, the firm practices in the areas of Transactional Corporate work, Intellectual property, Real Estate and Entertainment Law.  Exemplar plans to work with outside lawyers in other practice areas until attorneys are hired.

All attorneys, senior and junior, are required to practice law, be involved in business development, and assist with the internal activities of the firm.  Each piece of client work is given to one person who manages the costing, delegation of tasks, meeting of deadlines, and quality of the legal work and service.

On guarantees, this is what the firm's website has to say:  ''We are so confident we will deliver unmatched value in the services we provide that we encourage you to determine what the value of the service was worth to you based on your experience.  If it was less than the price you paid, call us, articulate the shortcomings, and we will negotiate a fair price with you.  What we ask in return is for you to define the unmet expectation, or explain how we could have better served you.  In essence, you will be helping us make adjustments and improve our service.''

The firm has been active in marketing itself from its inception, with strategic media and speaking opportunities discussing the viability of the fixed price business model.  The firm has actively worked at leveraging buzz in the ''blawgosphere'' (i.e., the community of legal blogs), working with attorneys and bloggers who are following the company's progress.

The firm's Chief Marketing Officer says that ''Our personality and approach is more like that of an ad agency than a law firm.  It's progressive, fresh, and not afraid to tell it like it is.''

The firm is targeting small to mid-size clients:  young, growing companies, entrepreneurs, start ups, and fast-track companies.  It also aims at women-owned businesses, and real estate/ mortgage brokers.

On the non-negotiable requirement for lawyers that they must have prior business experience or training, Marston points out, ''It shouldn't matter whether the solution to a client's problem is 70% legal and 30% business, or the other way around.  The key is to be in the business of solving clients' business problems.''

On his selectivity in hiring, he points out that ''I really screen for entrepreneurial attitudes.  I asked people during the recruiting interviews if they were prepared to work for six months without pay in exchange for a piece of the action.  I wanted to see the look in their eyes when I posed that question.''

On his blog, Marston writes:  ''Over the past year and a half we have received more than 600 applicants.  About half of them were just looking for jobs.  We ended up speaking with about 300 of them, half of which were risk tolerant enough to meet for in-person interviews.  Only half of those had social skills and only half of those had ambition.  About half of that group had business sense and of the rest only half were humble enough to roll up their sleeves and build a firm.''

At the time of writing, after only three months in business, Marston is the sole shareholder in Exemplar, but he says that will change shortly.  There is, in his words, ''no class system'' at Exemplar.  Everyone, from someone straight out of law school to the most experienced person, is a part of the same reward scheme:  a salary with profit sharing and/ or equity participation.

He said, ''Unlike a typical partnership, we have severed the relationship between ownership, power, and profits in our firm.  In a typical firm, those with an equity stake have authority and a proportional share of the profits.  In order to have a more corporate-like model, shareholders will not have decision-making authority by virtue of ownership, and profit distribution will bear no relationship to equity ownership.''

''We have two major components to profit sharing:  First is the performance-based sharing.  Our new (non-lawyer) Human Capital Leader will be creating the formula for that distribution.  The second component of reward will be risk-based compensation based on when you joined, function and experience.

Loren Demino, who joined the firm upon graduation from Boston University law school said, ''I joined because there was clearly an opportunity for leadership, a chance to reshape the practice of law.  My family are entrepreneurs, so I found it very appealing.  I'm treated like a full member of the team.  I sit in on the firm's planning meetings and I am expected to do my share of networking in the community.

''Yes, I'm taking a big risk and couldn't do it without support from my parents.  No-one here has yet taken home a dime -- we're all betting that, together, we can make this work and benefit from the profit sharing scheme.''

On his blog, Marston wrote:  ''Most attorneys I know are not happy.  The opportunity to build a firm that can be a win for the attorneys by creating a great work environment and at the same time be a win for clients who are endlessly disappointed with law firm service and billable hours is what drives me to get up every day and do what I do.  People who think Exemplar is about a pricing model have missed the point.  Exemplar is about changing lives … one by one … until we're all done!''  He plans to have 24 people in the firm by year's end.

Marston believes that he is creating a new kind of law firm that will have great appeal to clients, ''because a revolution inside the organization creates the revolution from the customer's side.  Look at Southwest Airlines.  Herb Kelleher states that he hires for character and that organization actively seeks out ''happy'' people.  There is a high correlation between happy people and happy customers and miserable people cannot provide excellence in customer service (professional satisfaction in law is at an all-time low).  Therefore, the key to great client service is to get great people and treat them well.''

One client, who found Exemplar through the Boston legal referral service, put it this way:  ''They were wonderful to work with and really helped me set up and incorporate my jewelry business.  They understood that I'm an artist and didn't really understand all the business issues.

''They also showed concern for me as an individual, frequently asking me whether I was sure I understood and was ready to do what it takes to launch my own business.  Even though the work I hired them for is over, they still call me up to touch base and find out how things are going.''

The president of a jazz record label associated with a music school commented:  ''On a pro-bono basis they helped us with everything we needed to know to get our label going.  They were invaluable and incredibly smart, anticipating lots of issues I needed to think about.''


So, that's a brief introduction to Exemplar.

It's way too soon to tell if the firm is a success.  Marston freely admits that he hasn't yet made a penny from this venture, and, in typical entrepreneurial fashion, has invested his life savings in it.  ''We don't want to make money fast,'' he says, ''We want to make money right.''

It's important to note that virtually nothing Marston is doing is unknown in other professions and industries.  Other professions routinely price on fixed-price estimates, and many entrepreneurial start-up companies have made successful use of profit-sharing and stock-participation schemes even for their most junior people.  Many businesses bring in veterans from other industries to run their marketing and financial operations.

What's remarkable about Marston's initiative (and it is remarkable) is not his creativity, but his courage.  He has taken numerous topics that have been extensively discussed for decades in his profession (the weaknesses of billing by the hour, for example) and he's doing more than dabbling -- he has committed himself and his firm to living the new vision.  He's betting not only his life savings, but his career on this vision, and seems to have persuaded an increasing number of people to do the same.

In Built to Last James Collins and Jerry Porras pointed out that ''Walt Disney's greatest creation wasn't Mickey Mouse, but the Walt Disney Company.''  In other words, the greatest accomplishment in innovation may not be any one thing that a company tries, but the fact that it can create a culture that is capable of innovating, again and again.

If Marston succeeds his start-up phase, he may be well on the way to doing just that.

As one observer commented:  ''Marston is not making the usual (repetitive) law firm claims that he has the best lawyers around, or that his clients will always win.  He's saying 'What makes us different, even unique, is that you, the client, are our entire focus, and everything we do is tailored for your service, satisfaction and convenience.'  He's gambling that there are paying clients with interesting work for whom service is without doubt the primary consideration.  And he's gambling that there are good lawyers who want to join a firm to do just that.''

So, here are the questions for all of us to contemplate:

  • If you were a client, would you hire this firm?
  • If you were a young law school graduate, would you join this firm?
  • If you were an experienced partner, would you join this firm?
  • If you could buy a piece of equity in this firm, would you do so?
  • If you competed against this firm, what would you worry about?
  • If you wanted Marston to succeed, what's the one piece of advice you would give him?
  • Exemplar is currently targeting small and midsize clients.  Do you think that, if it gets established, it will be able to compete for work currently being done by the large corporate law firms?  Should they be worrying now?
  • Finally, where do you think this firm is going to be in 5 years time?

Some Good Advice

by Andrew Heathcote 2006

From Business Review Weekly, 2006.

Times are buoyant for Australia's accountants, but there is room for improvement in defining their roles, marketing and building relationships with their clients.

As the country's leading consultant to professional-services firms, Richard Wood is well placed to comment on the state of Australian accounting firms. He does not pull his punches. Wood is a doyen to many local firms and practice management consultants and his advice does not come cheap. Reports suggest he charges up to $2,000 a day to run his eye over a firm.

Below is an edited transcript of a BRW interview with Wood, who was born in Chinchilla but lives in Toowoomba. He discusses the evolution of Australian firms, the dangers of running multi-disciplinary practices, common mistakes in marketing and why many firms are not as confident about their own businesses as they want their clients to believe.


What is your take on Australian professional-services firms?

RW: The honest truth is that I see as much diversity in Australia as I do in other countries. In other words the best is as good as the best anywhere and the dumb stuff is as dumb as it is anywhere else.


Have Australian firms improved the way they do business?

RW: When I first started consulting 10 years ago, there was more mateship around than, say, in the US, which tended to be less tolerant [of poor performers]. It wasn't that Australian firms didn't know better, it was just that they waited to tackle issues until they really had to. But I have seen that change. There is now less willingness to run their businesses like a family.


How similar are the operations of multi-national firms in Australia to their offices in other countries?

RW: They are not really very similar at all. The only firm that really had a very strong "fit in or leave" culture was Arthur Andersen. All the other firms are built on what I call the hunter model. This model says that it is everyone's job to go out and chase them buffalo. And if buffalo die out, chase deer. And if, in our country, a flock of geese go flying by, you don't have to check with anybody because there is no worldwide strategy that dominates your opportunities. Most of these big firms, particularly since the demise of Arthur Andersen, are very entrepreneurial in their approach. They share things such as tools and processes, but fundamentally they are very decentralised operations.


Many professional-services firms try to set themselves up as multi-disciplinary practices. What are the dangers of this strategy?

RW: If you really want to be known for something in the market-place you can't do a little bit of a lot of things. If someone walks into McDonald's and says, "I would like a curry please", you are not going to get McDonald's saying "Let's close down the grill and make this chap a curry". Theoretically they are capable of doing it, but it would be an unwise strategy to say we will make anything for anybody who will pay. It will just result in being very unfocused and not having a particular reputation for any one thing.

But you can see where the temptation lies. If you are running the McDonald's store in Woolloomooloo the temptation is to sell the next customer anything he wants. It actually takes courage to stick to your strategy. I am not trying to say that the firms that do it are stupid. It is a natural business temptation but it will lead to you being unfocused and not special. It takes courage to stay special.


The market for professional-services firms is quite healthy. Many firms make comments like, "If you can't make money at the moment you never will". Do partners think about their own businesses enough when the market is strong?

RW: It is an old trade-off. It is kind of like asking: "Would you ever go to university if you can get a job tomorrow?" If you only judge your success on how well you are doing this year then no one would ever go to university. So, of course, when there is lots of business around the temptation to sit back is huge.

But a good career or business strategy doesn't just depend on this year. It needs to position you well for the future. Am I setting myself up to be able to ride out the bumps?


You mention in the articles on your web site about how firms should avoid one-sided conversations in their marketing. Can you explain this?

RW: Everybody talks about how they want business relationships with clients. But when you look at what they are doing they are not going after romance at all. What they are going after is a one-night stand.

What I have tried to point out is that if you are trying to build a long-term relationship with someone, a mutually beneficial relationship, then the tactics you use are 180 degrees different to what you use if you want a one-night stand. You can succeed at either but you better not get confused about which you are trying to do.

If you truly do believe in the business benefits of having relationships then what you need to stop doing is these quick-hit marketing activities that are all about saying how wonderful you are.


What are the most common mistakes professional service firms make with their marketing?

RW: Let me give you a little catch-phrase. People believe what you demonstrate, not what you claim. If I want you to believe something about me, then I can't stand there and say that if you pay me, everything I do for you will be fabulous. It is just not very persuasive. What you need to do if you want to improve at marketing is to actually do something for the other person. Demonstrate your ability to help by actually helping.

When I go into firms to evaluate their marketing materials, what I look for is whether they are actually offering the prospective client an idea or a suggestion or a piece of analysis that they have never seen before. What is really surprising is how often it is not there. Prostitute marketing, or "once you start paying I'll show you something", is really ineffective. What a lot of firms have to learn is that the best way to market themselves is by doing and not by telling.


Many firms like to talk about how their culture is unique. But how is this possible? What does culture really mean in a professional-services firm setting?

RW: More firms claim to have a culture than actually have one. It is an easy word to throw around. To me, a strong culture is where there are rules about what you must do to stay a member of a society. "If you don't fit this kind of behaviour then we reject you because we operate this way." It is a club with rules.

That can be very powerful in attracting new employees and for operating internationally or across borders within Australia. As a client I want to know that every one in the club will follow the same set of rules so I can trust people in other offices and other parts of the business.

But in order to develop this kind of trust you have to have the courage to throw people out who don't follow the rules. I would report to you that there are very few professional businesses that have that kind of courage. In most professional businesses you are allowed to break all kinds of rules -- if you bring in large amounts of cash.

I am not saying that is immoral. I am just saying that there is a price to be paid for it if you don't have rules that everybody follows. If everybody knows that the rules are optional then the internal trust and collaboration goes away. Strong cultures are very powerful but it takes real effort to create them. It takes courage.


What are the trends in how successful firms are charging clients? Are there more instances of fixed fees?

RW: It depends on the profession. Lawyers keep talking about it but the truth in law firms is that most of it is still done on an hourly basis. I would say there is movement but I wouldn't say it is a revolution. People have been talking about it for decades.


Are you supportive of it?

RW: One of the things that I do, that I always advocate despite few people taking me up on it, is giving clients an unconditional satisfaction guarantee. Every bill I send out says that if you are anything less than completely satisfied pay me only what you think I was worth. My point is that everyone talks a good game but what we really need to be doing is value billing. The trouble with many firms is that they are trying to have it both ways. They don't have the courage or the self-confidence to give a guarantee but want to figure out ways to get paid more. You can charge very high fees if you are prepared to stand behind the quality of your work and guarantee satisfaction. This is very powerful but very few firms have copied me. These firms are a lot less self-confident than they would give you the impression.