How The Legal Profession Can Improve Employment Prospects For Law Graduates…

Once again the debate is re-ignited about the future employment prospects of law graduates. The Report described below canvasses previous research, and it is extensive but often incomplete. Many recommendations have been made over the years, including restricting the flow of new graduates!

The Working Group established by the Law Society of New South Wales in June 2014 carried out considerable work and provided a 29-page “Future Prospects Of Law Graduates” Report to Council in late April 2015.

The eminent Working Group drew on a wide range of available data, but concluded that a lot more useful data is needed, and indeed four of its nine Recommendations related to a perceived need to improve data.

There seems to be a marked mismatch between the perception of, “…anxiety within the Legal Profession and law schools about a lack of employment opportunities for law graduates”, a key finding of the Report, and one conclusion of the Report that, “…it appears that NSW law graduates are not (my emphasis) exceeding new entrants to the NSW Profession”.

A recent survey of law students drawn upon in the Report indicated that at least 50% of students report feeling stressed most or all of the time about finding a relevant job after they have graduated.

Whether or not there is a real problem with employment prospects for law graduates in NSW or the wider Australian market, my concern is that an obvious area of opportunity to widen potential jobs for graduates has not been dealt with meaningfully in the Report.

The problem has not in any real depth been addressed from the perspective of increasing substantially the potential private practice positions available to graduates.

There is a Recommendation to develop strategies to increase participation by firms, and other potential employers, in Law Society Graduate Employment and Summer Clerkship programs, but it does not in my view go nearly far enough.

At present, involvement in these programs is quite modest, and mainly by the larger firms, and the Working Group acknowledges this. A very quick scan of the list of firms participating in 2015 reveals almost no small firms.

At any event the particular program is of relatively narrow scope. It can be improved no doubt, but frankly small firms would be better to spend all or part of the Annual Participation Fee of $770 on highly relevant training they can apply year in year out.

What is not addressed is that the vast bulk of private law firms in NSW (the main potential employers) is made up of small firms, with 4 principals or less, and around 75% of firms have just one Principal. There are many thousands of these firms and great potential to employ more graduates.

If the creation of increased job opportunities for graduates is a desired outcome, I would have thought that a dramatic improvement in targeted training for small firms across the State (and country) in how to effectively use graduates would need to be the order of the day.

With the median starting salary for NSW graduates at $55,000, there is an obvious perceived barrier for smaller firms if they do not understand exactly how to manage the dynamics and economics of employing graduates.

They need specific training to show them what to do, so they have the confidence to take the plunge and employ graduates.

For most small firms, employing a graduate cannot be altruistic. The application of the graduate’s abilities, alongside others in the firm, to a client’s challenge, has to provide a reasonable return. In addition to the short-term benefit, there will be a longer-term strategic benefit from those graduates who remain with the firm. More experienced lawyers who have proven themselves and understand the firm’s culture are gems indeed.

When the Principals of these firms read in the Report, and in comments in legal media, that, “…lawyers – from recent graduates through to senior partners – have to play a new game in which the rules for forging a successful career are still being established”, it does not give them increased confidence to become the employer of a graduate.

What they do need is relevant practical examples of how small firms just like them are already successfully employing graduates, and making them important parts of their teams, dealing both with today’s economics and building legal talent for the future.

They do not need to hear yet again that, “… pricing pressures, globalisation, new technologies and shifting demographics have altered the legal services market”.

We all know that the Profession continues to change rapidly, but many of the major trends in the Legal Profession are for the time being impacting firms outside the small firm group.

Of course some are vigorously using technology, and lower-cost offshore resources, and many feel pressure on pricing, but for the vast majority of smaller law firms these are frankly not presently barriers to employing graduates.

Anecdotally, many of the small firm Principals perceive that the “better” graduates get employed by the larger firms, and that the candidates left for them to pick from are somehow less than ideal, perhaps needing more scarce resources applied to them to make them “useful”. This is simply not the case. The quality of candidates available to small firms is quite exceptional.

The main issue in my experience is confidence, and we need to create programs to create or restore a healthy level of confidence in as many potential small firm employers as possible.

The target audience needs programs that teach:

Sensible pricing approaches…where the “billable hour” is much less relevant…

Sound marketing approaches, to increase enquiry for services and reduce pressure to get new instructions at almost any cost…

Practical people management skills…

Modern budgeting…

Accurately tracking “performance”…

Supervision and training skills…

How to provide appropriate feedback and maintain motivation in employees…it’s way more than the simplistic (and almost always ineffective) bonuses!

Most, if not all, these areas are ones in which many Principals in small law firms can do with training in any event.

There are many challenges to small law firm profitability, and most of the answers lie in the management skills of the Principals. My observation from the 1330-plus firms I’ve been involved with is that where the Principals have the right ambition, and are willing to improve their skills, they reap the rewards in improved Professional satisfaction and in profitability.

Ongoing strong profitability is important because it greatly assists with the financial health of firms, helps reduce stress, and allows firms that wish to take more sensible commercial risks to do so.

Certainly the more profitable smaller firms these days almost always have much greater than average leverage between Principals and employees, and successfully managing that dynamic requires improved management skills.

Smaller firms tend to find it more difficult to employ managers with the right skills, and often operate with a delicate balance between Principals’ skills and greater experience brought to the table by proven consultants, across the necessary range of disciplines.

It should be noted that the Working Group did try to draw on wide contributions, including seeking contributions from Regional Law Societies, but its references to consultation in the Report do not make reference to Management Consultants working with the Profession, in firms large or small.

Many of the small law firms I’m involved with employ graduates very successfully, but I’m very aware why many say they do not.

Improved, cost-effective, training may well be a big part of the answer to creating greater employer participation, increasing opportunities for graduates and over time reducing stress levels.

The right sort of training will also be very relevant to small law firms getting proper returns from employment of Law Clerks, Paralegals, Conveyancers, and even the more experienced lawyers.

It will be interesting to see if targeted training of the required type is developed.

Rob Knowsley LL.B MIMC

Principal Consultant, Knowsley Management Services 11.08.2015.