RJon Robins

Thoughts on Staffing a Successful Law Firm

Thoughts on Staffing a Successful Law Firm

There are several different business models for building a successful law firm.  Most of them require some level of legal staff be hired, trained, managed motivated and measured for productivity & profitability.

To say “well I just won’t have staff” is like saying you’re going to lock yourself in a jail cell and then throw the key through the bars to where you cannot reach it.  Even if you change your mind.

Having great staff can be a blessing.

Having less-than-great staff can be a torture.

Because dealing with staff brings-up all kinds of emotions.  And of course it doesn’t help, the fact that as lawyers, we have precious little formal training when it comes to how to make a profit on staff.

We recently had to terminate a member of our staff. 

It was all my fault that we hired her in the first place! 

We hired fast and we were slow to fire her.  We hired her for all the wrong reasons and we fired her only after the right reasons became so obvious I could no longer avoid the facts.

We kept her around for at least 6 weeks too-long for all of the wrong reasons.  Most of those reasons can be boiled-down to how we FELT about the situation; Rather than what we KNEW about the situation.

Fortunately, in the end, she made that last part a bit easier for us but I’ll write more about that another time.

BUT YOU KNOW ME!

Whenever I make a mistake I like to analyze it.  So that I can learn from it.  Because it’s impossible to grow a sucessful law firm without making mistakes, and you better get used to making alot of them too if you want your law firm to be extraordinary!

Good news is most mistakes won’t kill you.

Everyone who has ever build a successful law firm has made a ton of mistakes along the way.

And you can grow your law firm much faster and make much more profit while you grow it, if you will learn from your mistakes.

Better yet, learn how to learn from the mistakes of others who have come before you!

So here’s a note I wrote to myself, to remind myself about what I learned when I analyzed why this person was the WRONG person to hire in the first place:

1- Lack of Urgency: She doesn’t really plan her time. She might plan her time for a day, but she doesn’t think in time of the week, month or project. So she doesn’t have an appropiate sense or urgency for what must get accomplished in a day.  Because she doesn’t “get it” that there is a ton more that has to get accomplished the next day.

In other words if you have a month to get three things done, then you can let them slide from one day to the next and it’s not a big deal -vs- you have three things that you are currently aware of that need to get done.

But you are also aware that along the way you are going to discover three hundred more things. Because that’s the way everything in life works. There are always more things that will have to get done that will become clear tomorrow.

That’s why you have to attack those three things that you see today and clear your decks so that when things get busy tomorrow you don’t have those three things still hanging around.

2- Lack of Clarity: She doesn’t get specific information from people. Without specific information everything is loosy goosy and you can’t make a plan. For example “this afternoon”.  You can’t act with urgency, and you can’t hold other responsible for acting responsible for acting with urgency if don’t have specific information to hold them accountable by. “this afternoon” vs. 3pm EST this afternoon.

3- Lack of Focus: It’s difficult to recognize when the other person is or is not acting with urgency and with the benefit of a clear focus when you yourself are not focused. Problems require intense focus. Without intense focused you leave a problem unsolved.  And at the end of the day you still have the same problem. So you can spend your whole day working and working and working but if you don’t pull out the weed by its roots then the minute you turn-around the problem starts growing back. Because the problem really never went away, never got fixed, never got solved.

4- Lack of “Face Time”: The principal purpose of having someone on staff is to leverage your own time, talents & abilities.  That means every member of your staff must be able to get things done for you.  Not because you don’t know how to, but because you must be focused instead on other things.

It’s difficult for staff to infect other people with your enthusiasm, sense of urgency, clarity and focus by reading their website, exchanging emails with them and sometimes even the telephone isn’t enough.

Sometimes the only way to help someone help you is by seeing them in person (a vendor, a client, opposing counsel, even a J.A., etc.)  Second is by speaking to them by telephone.  And your last choice if you want your staff to be very productive for you is to let them settle for doing everything by email.

5- Living Too Much at the Surface of Things. The solution is never at the surface.

It takes work to get beneath the surface to where the real problem and the real solution always lay. Unfortunately too many people with an employee mentality, a nine to five mentality, a time clock mentality are mostly concerned about what do they “have to do”. In other words I rather do less unless you obligate me to have to do more.

Also unfortunately, this mentality has become endemic in part of the institutional knowledge of many organizations with older more experienced employees passing down their complancency techniques to new employees.

For example: employees who’s first reaction has been trained into them “no”, why not, why we can’t,  why is not our job and why it cannot be done.   These are too often the surface of so-called “customer service”.

Your urgency, clarity and focus is what propels you to go beyond the surface instead of accepting these kinds of explanations as an excuse to stop digging for the root of the problem.  And consequently the root of the solution too.  It’s uncommon to find anything really worthwhile at the surface of anything.

So at the end of the day, it’s MY business.  And it exists to serve MY life.  So it has to be MY fault when I hire the wrong person.

It’s too easy a cop-out to say “oh well, she is just terrible”.  Because the truth of the matter is that she’d probably not be so terrible in a job that is a better fit for her talents, skills, experience and interests.

Lesson: Hire even slower.  Fire even faster.  Be on the look-out more carefully for the above criteria.

Have a happy Sunday!

RJON

 

p.s. On December 16th we’re going to have a live teleseminar.

There is absolutely no charge to participate.  But I am going to limit attendance to 100 participants to ensure you get plenty of time to ask any and all of your questions.

The topic of the teleseminar will be to talk about whether or not it may make sense for YOU to submit an application to enroll in one of our coaching programs for 2012.

I’m going to be on the call and I’ve invited several lawyers who are in our coaching programs to join me to answer all of your questions, concerns, hopes, dreams, ambitions etc.

Keep an eye-out on December 9th for the invitations to r.s.v.p.

 

www.HowToMANAGEaSmallLawFirm.com/Testimonials

The power of your big intentions

Tomorrow you're going to wake-up, get dressed, eat some breakfast and walk into your law firm full of big intentions

I know you have big intentions because you're reading this email right now.  Why else would you have subscribed to my ezine if you didn't have big intentions for your law firm, for your career and for your life, right?


But then something is going to happen:  You're going to encounter people without big intentions.  In fact two things are going to happen.  The other is that they're going to encounter you.

How you choose to respond or react or ignore or try to learn something from the way those people without big intentions…that's all up to you.

How they respond, react or ignite upon encountering you is pretty much out of your control.  But if you're not prepared for their reactions you could get distracted.

Case in point.  I was rececently treated in a way that I would describe as “unfair”.  The details really aren't important. 

What IS important for purposes of our conversation is that at first I had an emotional reaction.  But then I remembered my own goals and my own big intentions.  And by comparison, what the other person said about me is really of no significance…unless I let it throw me off my game. 

That's why I am so emphatic about setting realistic goals for your law firm. 

Because when you attack each week armed with goals and plans and it's all fueled by your big intentions, when people without big intentions in their lives, when they get defensive and when they react because they feel threatened by your plans and by what you are doing in your life, it won't distract you as much.  I'm still working on “not at all”

Here's a five minute video on on how to set goals that will protect you from the small intentions of others.

Watch this video right now, do the exercise and then tell me if you don't have a more productive day tomorrow, and the next day and the next day and the day after that too!

 

~ RJON

p.s. IN case you know anyone who can benefit from this, we're opening a new “How To START A Successful Law Firm” coaching group pretty soon.  9 of the 24 spots are already taken.  I'm going to organize a Q & A conference call so keep your eye-out for that announcement coming soon.

p.p.s.  Watch that video & do the exercise!

Over-paying for information

I don't like paying for information.  Information isn't all that valuable.  Information isn't even very hard to get.  Message to lawyers and staff everywhere:  Stop Trying To Make A Profit On Information.

I'm ok paying for explanations.  Explanations save me time.   Explanations enable me to get more done in less time.  Message to lawyers and staff everywhere: Analyze the information for me and deliver it to me in the context of an explanation.  I'll pay you more for it and more cheerfully too.

What I really like to buy and pay for are solutions.  Solutions are worth alot of money to those of us who value our time and have productive ways to put it to use in our lives and in our businesses.  The value of a solution can be disproportionately-higher than the amount of information and analysis required to arrive at the solution.  I always prefer to pay for a solution and I don't mind one bit paying a premium for a conveniently-delivered solution.  Message to lawyers and staff:  If you want to get me excited about giving you alot of money and repeat business and referrals too, please don't bother me until you've explained the information to yourself and can come back to me with a proposal for a solution!

Last chance to fire someone this year…

Lee Rosen is NOT a member of my coaching program but we’ve spoken and I can tell you he’s a happy lawyer who owns a very successful 9 lawyer firm in North Carolina.  In his spare time Lee also shares a ton of useful information about the business or running a sucessful law firm.

Lee’s website is https://divorcediscourse.com

This is straight from Lee.  I think he says it so perfectly there’s no need to add anything…

————–

If you’ve got someone on your team who needs to go, then do it this week.

We’ll be into November next week, and Thanksgiving (in the United States) will be here before you know it. Then we’re fully into the holidays in December.

You’ll look like the Grinch if you fire someone in November and December. Your whole team will talk about what a jerk you are.

This is your last chance to let the person go without it looking like you took the turkey right off the victim’s holiday table.

Hopefully, you’ve already done what needs to be done to prepare yourself and the employee for termination. You’ve been counseling the person, documenting your actions, etc. Of course, every state has different requirements. Thankfully, my state, an at-will state, has minimal steps for us to take. We can fire pretty much willy-nilly. Make sure you do what you’ve got to do to comply with the law in your jurisdiction.

It’s unfortunate, but some employees just don’t work out. Both of you will be better off when the relationship is over. I’ve fired people who have found a better fit and done very well for themselves. I was only holding them back by keeping them in a job that really wasn’t right for them.

It’s easy to procrastinate about letting go of an unsatisfactory employee. It’s easy to keep reexamining the situation and finding something positive that allows you to drag it out for another week.

However, these situations rarely get better. They get progressively worse. Once you’ve started thinking about when the end will come, it’s time.

This is your week. Take action. If you don’t, you’re going to be buying that employee a holiday gift a month from now, and then you’re really going to hate yourself.

———————

Don’t you feel better just knowing there are other lawyers who own succcessful businesses and we think about the same sort of things YOU do?

Now go and do what you know must be done.

~ RJON

 

p.s. While it should only cost about $2,300 to hire the right $50,000 employee, it can easily cost more than $100,000 to keep the wrong $50,000 employee hanging-around.

www.HowToMANAGEaSmallLawFirm.com

“Happy Lawyers Make More Money”

The 2nd time you see someone drop dead…

Note: I originally sent this yesterday.  If you opened it in a preview window or on certain mobile devices my system can’t tell. So I hope you don’t mind too much that you’re getting it again. 

I’m resending to everyone who appears NOT to have opened it.  Because I think this is an important message that transcends “just” how to make your law firm better…

——-

October 12, 2011 @ 11:10am EST
Miami Airport Gate D
I’ve installed myself at the Admiral’s Club…

The email I was PLANNING to share with you was going to be all about “is this how you feel?” and in it I was going to share some of the feelings I used to struggle with that were holding me back from stepping-into my potential.

Don’t get me wrong, I still struggle.  That’s why I’m at the airport on my way to see one of my own business coaches.

It should give you some comfort to know I practice what I preach.

And I know from personal experience how much better life can be when we take steps to get un-stuck.

It’s not just about all the extra money we make.  It’s about not feeling un-alive.

Because fun isn’t the same thing as excitement.  Fun is healthy & sustainable.  The kind of excitement that comes from “saving the day” isn’t.

But all my plans to write THAT email went by the wayside the second time I saw someone drop-dead right in front of my eyes at an airport.

That just happened literally 10 minutes ago. 

The first time was in 1997 in Puerto Rico during my vacation after I took The Bar Exam.  I was too young and inexperienced then to fully-appreciate what it meant to live your life as big as you can because it could be over tomorrow. 

Thankfully I fully appreciate what that means these days.

I am happy and excited (in a healthy way) to report that we have a record number of our Members flying-in from around the Country to attend our quarterly Members-Only Meeting this weekend.

I’m also happy and excited to report that we have sold-out yet another Mastermind Weekend, even though this one is actually Sunday-Tuesday because of scheduling & logistical reasons.

But I’m seriously upset and disappointed that more of my fellow lawyers are not able to bring themselves to take the action they know they must take to live the life they know they want to live. 

Or even if they’re not exactly clear about the life they want to live, at least to move-out and begin to stop living the life they know they DON’T want to live.

To stop is also a verb.

If you already know you have a great law firm, then you already know it can be so much better.

You may not have anyone else in your life you feel safe telling this to.  Because to everyone else, your life might appear to be perfect.  Enviable even.  But if you’re a lion or a lioness you can’t be satisfied living in captivity.  And that’s what it feels like sometimes doesn’t it?  Like you’re living in captivity.  No thrill.  No real challenges.  Nothing to stretch you.  Like you’re just waiting.

But waiting for what?

If this is you I want you to know that there are other lawyers who know how you feel.

You’re not alone.

We meet in-person every quarter.  We meet by phone every month.  We support and encourage one-another all the time.  We’re never far-away and we would be very pleased if you join our tribe.

–> I will show you how to justify your membership in our tribe by showing you how to make alot more money.

–> And I will show you how to justify your membership in our tribe by showing you how to make your staff more profitable, and how to make your law firm more efficient.

–> And along the way I’ll show you how to grow your business with more and better clients and how to eliminate a/r and eventually how to even sell your business at a profit.

But the truth of the matter is, most of that is really just our cover story.

Because our friends, our family, our staff and sadly, most of the lawyers around us, they don’t have a clue how it feels to be the king or the queen of the jungle.  And you’re stuck in a zoo when you long to be out-here and be in the wild with others of your kind.

This may be the first time you’ve ever heard or read anyone talk like this.  Do you like it?  Can you taste it?  Can you smell your freedom?  Can you practically feel it in the grip of your hand?

I don’t care if this email scares-away the zebra – too afraid to decide which way to go, what to do or who to be.

I just saw a man drop dead in front of my eyes and I cannot hold this in any longer.

If you’re one of us then this message has touched something deep inside of you that’s been waiting to be taken seriously.  Not pushed down, shoved-aside and made excuses for.

I am on a mission to recruit an army of winners like us!  Let the rest make their excuses.

If you’re one of us I invite you to study the programs at www.HowToMANAGEaSmalllawFirm.com.

Pick the one that best fits your current situation. 

And then at the end of that desciption you will find a handy scheduling tool you can use to arrange for a telephone appointment with me to discuss your future.

From the bottom of my heart, have a happy, healthy and a fun day!

~ RJON

p.s. Next Mastermind is in February in Salt Lake City.  Two of the 10 seats are already taken.  If you are ready to sit with us at that table send an email to Alex@HowToMANAGEaSmallLawFirm.com with “Salt Lake City Mastermind” in the subject line.

What it means to be “stuck”

Over this past weekend a lawyer explained to me why she’s not planning to come to a Mastermind with me.  I asked her, so that I could gain some insight in hopes that it could help other lawyers like you.

Here’s what she told me:

“…I actually don’t feel like I am “stuck.”  I have had my practice open since 2006 and I have been doing significantly better every year!”

This helped me realize I have not been doing a good-enough-job explaining what it means to be “stuck”.  I hope you will take the time to read what I’ve written below.  I put alot of thought into it for your benefit.

What It means To Be “Stuck”:

1.) Being “stuck” doesn’t necessarily have to do with the money.  I spoke with a long-time member on Friday who finally decided to attend a mastermind because he feels stuck at $800,000.

He keeps bumping-up against it but something is keeping him from going past this number.  So he feels “stuck”.  Would his lifestyle materially change grossing $1mm vs. “only” $800,000?  No.  Does it still bug him that he can’t seem to break-past that number?  Absolutely.

The money is just how we keep score for him.
 

Billy Joel sung about this in his song My Life: “…sooner or later you sleep in your own space/ Either way it’s okay to wake up with yourself.”  In other words, you have to run your own race.  Revenue is just an easy way to keep score.

2.) Being “stuck” doesn’t necessarily have to do with the profit. I spoke with another long-term member a few weeks ago.

Four years ago he was grossing $600,000.  Today he’s on track to gross $3mm.  And he’s not necessarily working harder to do it.  In many ways his work is much easier today because now he can pay people to do things for him that he does not like to do and which he is not necessarily very good at either.

But even though he makes more and his work is much easier, he doesn’t feel he can leave town for an extended time so he’s stuck.

The amount of time away from the office is just how we keep score for him.
 

Turn of the Century The British Author James Allen said: “A man sooner or later discovers that he is the master-gardener of his soul, the director of his life”.

 

3.) Being “stuck” doesn’t necessarily have to do with the free-time, either.

I spoke with a new Member of our program.  During that admission-interview it became clear that she really doesn’t need to make any more money.

She already has more than enough profits from her single-shareholder law firm.  And she can take-off for extended periods of time.  So she’s not chained to the office either.

But she’s bored.   So she’s “stuck”.

Because she doesn’t know what to do next to challenge herself.  Admittedly “fun” is a subjective measurement.

How much “fun” she’s having is how she keeps score for herself.
 

Earl Nightingale once said “Success is the progressive realization of a worthy goal or ideal.”  He also said “The big thing is that you know what you want.”  

People who know me well, know that I’m REALLY un-impressed with money.

I’m only impressed with what money “well-used”, can do for a person.  And chief amongst the things that money can do for a lawyer who owns a law firm, is to serve as your ultimate objective arbiter: How much, How consistent and How rapid is the success of your law firm?

Because, as Dan Kennedy says “You can have excuses or you can have profits.  Not both“.

And the fact of the matter is that without profits, no law firm can last for long-enough to deliver much value to anyone.

Ayn Rand (one of my favorite philosophers) taught us that “We can evade reality but we cannot evade the consequences of evading reality”.

She also teaches us that “Money demands that you sell, not your weakness to men’s stupidity but your talent to their reason.”

4.) I spoke with a lawyer last week who took great pains to tell me about how much value her law firm has delivered to its clients in the past 3 years.

But still she was broke!

I asked her how much money she earned and she told me “more than half-a-million dollars”.

I asked her how much money she had collected.  Only $75,000.

The remaining $425,000 was all wrapped-up with excuses.

Assuming her law firm really did deliver that much value to those many clients who had stiffed-her for that much money, how much longer do you expect her business can continue to be of any value to anyone?  Except for the inevitable fees the bankruptcy trustee will earn upon her liquidation.

That lawyer is “stuck” with a dangerous mindset about her relationship with her law firm.

“Caution: Blind Spot.  If you can’t see my mirrors, I can’t see you.” – a sign pasted on the back of a big truck I saw on the highway.

We all have blind spots in our life.  And in our businesses.  

Warren Buffet, one of the most successful business persons of our time said  “Chains of habit are too light to be felt until they are too heavy to be broken”.

Masterminds break the chains that hold-you-back from achieving your best. 

Even if everyone around you thinks, from the outside looking-in, that you’re doing great (according to their standards)

Buffet also says “Pick out associates whose behavior is better than yours and you’ll drift in that direction” and “Someone is sitting in the shade today because someone planted a tree a long time ago.”

How are your ACTIONS today (not just thoughts or good intentions) going to affect your life tomorrow?

My favorite American Statesman, Benjamin Franklin said “How few there are who have the courage enough to own their faults, or resolution enough to mend them.”

He also said ” Being ignorant is not so much a shame, as being unwilling to learn.” 

And lest we lawyers forget Franklin reminds us “The U.S. Constitution doesn’t guarantee happiness, only the pursuit of it.  You have to catch up with it yourself.”

5.) A lawyer I spoke with not long ago – actually I have virtually this same conversation on a fairly regular basis – was in materially the following situation:

  • Invested nearly one hundred thousand dollar on his legal education without taking a single course on how to run a successful law firm.
  • Working too-many hours, for not-enough profit, doing too much administrative work he’s ill-equipped for and bringing home too much stress and anxiety to his family.
  • Consciously-aware of the inevitable consequences of his current trajectory but too-afraid to change.

I keep a quote on my office wall by Bruce Lee “To know and not to do is not to know”.  Think about that for a minute and see if it doesn’t really stir-up something deep inside of you.

We’re all smart people.  Stupid people do not become lawyers.  But fear makes smart people – even smart lawyers – do stupid things.  Like holding-on to an inevitably-losing hand.

But to paraphrase Napoleon Hill: An unsuccessful law firm needs no plan and no advice or counsel, because failure is bold and ruthless to the lawyer who earns it.  Success in the business of running a law firm is shy and timid.  It has to be learned, practiced and cared-for.

Still I travel the Country asking rooms full of smart lawyers “Who wants to have an ‘un-successful’ law firm?” and understandably no hands go up.

I ask “Who amongst us who wants to have a ‘successful’ law firm  can define it for the rest of us?”  and no hands go up.

How can this be?

How can there be so many smart lawyers who want to have a successful law firm and so few who can even define what it means for them to have a successful law firm; much less how they will know when they’ve got one on their hands!

So I define it for them.

I say that to be successful a law firm, I think, must generate sufficient profits to afford its owner the lifestyle he or she wants to live.

Not to drive a particular car or live in a particular home or to vacation in a particular manner.

Only to live the way the owner true-to-him or herself truly wants to live.

I say that regardless of how much profit a firm generates I don’t consider it to be successful in the long-term if those financial rewards come at the price of the lawyer’s personal life.

So in order to be successful, I think, the law firm must also serve the owner’s personal needs.

Not to work a particular number of hours or to vacation a particular number of weeks.  But to have the flexibility and the freedom to be away from the business enough to attend to all the things in life that are truly more important than the work of a law firm.

If you’ve never sat by the bedside of your spouse for weeks-at-a-time you may not yet fully-appreciate the importance of having a business that works for you.

Even when you’re not there to work for the business.

And even though we may not ye have met in person, I hope you never do.

But by the time the car starts to skid, it’s too late to fasten your seatbelt, so better to start making your law firm successful on this account now.  Don’t you agree?

And who cares how much money the firm generates in the short-term and how many or how few hours it takes from the rest of your life to achieve this level of performance if the work itself is unsatisfying, if the business of managing the firm is unpredictable and stressful and/or if the clients or staff are unpleasant to work with!

In other words, if it’s no FUN!

That sort of situation never works-out in the long-run.

And rarely even in the short-run.

Because clients reflect back to you what you have going on inside of you.

That’s one of the big “secrets” of turning a law firm around.  It all happens from the inside-out.

  • So if your law firm isn’t yet producing enough profit, you’re probably stuck.
  •  If your law firm isn’t enabling you to live the life you want to live, you’re probably stuck.
  • If your law firm isn’t fun, and enjoyably-challenging and taking you somewhere you’r excited to be be going  you’re either already stuck or you probably know you will be soon.

If you are ready to plant a tree today so that you can sit in the shade tomorrow, then a Mastermind is something you should give serious consideration to.

Why Do You Suppose so many lawyers are in all these videos I keep sharing and why do you suppose they’re all saying it’s been such an invaluable experience for them when they decided to plant a tree today so they can enjoy a life in the shade not a life being stuck? (Rhetorical question, obviously)

Why not check-out the link above right now so that you can make a more informed decision about how you choose to live your life?