Law Department Costs Jump in Largest U.S. CorporationsNew York, NY & Newtown Square, PA - November 14, 2007 - The newly released 2007 Altman Weil Law Department Metrics Benchmarking Survey, published with LexisNexis® Martindale-Hubbell®, reports total expenditures for the largest U.S. corporate law departments up significantly with internal costs led by lawyer compensation outpacing external expenditures.
"The fundamental metric that we look at in our work with corporate law departments is total department expenses as a percentage of annual revenue. This year that number grew significantly for the largest corporations in the U.S.," said Altman Weil principal Dan DiLucchio. "This increase comes at a time when General Counsel continue to strategize over improved cost management of legal fees." Law Department Expenditures The internal costs of operating an in-house law department of a large company with $5 billion or more in revenues grew from $323,697 per lawyer to $346,497 per lawyer, a 7% increase over the previous year. Lawyer compensation and benefits for large companies, the biggest component of internal expenditure, was up 19.2% to $313,747 per lawyer. Outside expenditures for large companies were up 1.4% in fiscal year 2006 to $616,519 per lawyer. Of all companies, the Chemical Manufacturing industry had the highest average outside expenses, $1,063,294/lawyer, more than four times higher than the Insurance industry, which had the lowest expenses at $251,405/lawyer. Outside Counsel The survey reports that the number one selection criteria for outside counsel is firm specialization; number two is responsiveness; and number three is cost. Only 29.9% of law departments formally evaluate law firm performance, but, when they do, the top three evaluation criteria are: results, knowledge/expertise and costs. The three biggest mistakes law firms make with their corporate clients are: lack of responsiveness, over-lawyering and over-billing. Operational Issues The use of e-billing systems that potentially help law departments to improve their cost management of outside counsel continues to increase. In 2007, 22.2% of law departments used e-billing, up from 13% in 2006 and 10.3% in 2005. Of those departments that have an e-billing system, 48.4% require its use to do business with the law department. Law Department Staffing When asked about new lawyer hires, 14.6% of law departments reported adding one new lawyer to their department in 2006. An additional 14.6% hired two new lawyers; 9% hired three lawyers, and 6.3% added four or five lawyers to the legal staff. The top two sources of new lawyer personnel were outside law firms and other law departments. The Survey The Survey includes data from 144 companies, reported by sales revenue, number of corporate employees, industry type and law department size. Data were collected in the spring of 2007 and reflects fiscal year 2006. About LexisNexis® About Altman Weil | |||

