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Putting a new Partner Profit Sharing System in place

Very few firms are entirely happy with their partner profit sharing systems. For any firm which is considering making any changes, a good starting point is to understand the extent to which the current system is failing to meet the needs of partners or the firm and the extent to which changes may be needed. Lawyers constantly seek perfection, and yet there is no such thing as a perfect way of allocating and distributing a law firm’s profits amongst its partners. All that can be hoped for is to attain a ‘best practice’ solution and in doing so to avoid discarding worthwhile principles and processes just because some partners can – often mistakenly – blame the existing system rather than inefficient implementation of it.

Lack of inter-partner trust linked with wide-spread feelings of unfairness can help to make any system untenable. The big initial question to decide, therefore, is whether the firm needs fundamentally to overhaul the system or to perseveres with the current system, despite its apparent shortcomings. It should be made clear to partners (if they are not already aware of it) that there is no such thing as the perfect compensation system and firms should resist the temptation to discard a system just for the sake of change. Additionally, many firms have found that fundamental changes to the way partners are rewarded and compensated are little short of impossible to achieve in the real world. Not only can internal politics get in the way, but the management time and effort involved in the introduction of a new system is hugely time-consuming and disruptive.

Nevertheless, whilst there is no such thing as a perfect system it seems that many partner remuneration and compensation schemes are flawed and in need of either a complete overhaul or some substantial remodelling.

Points to watch out for when changing a Profit Sharing or Compensation System

As a firm grows in size, the need for formal structures increases so that partners can understand the way things are done. In many small to medium sized firms, changes to profit-sharing mechanism can be made somewhat informally, with all partners involved in the discussions. Once a firm gets above a certain size (around 20 to 30 partners), changes need to be made in a more structured way. Whatever, the size of the firm, however, any effort to change a firm’s profit sharing or compensation system and the allied performance Management System give rise to a number of points:

  • For any initiative to succeed, there must be a widespread and deep-rooted sense of dissatisfaction with the status quo, or at the very least a strong feeling in the firm that change is needed.
  • The system should be firmly rooted in and linked to the firm’s strategy and objectives. The firm’s leadership should therefore have a clear vision for what the desired end state or conclusion might be, and should be careful to ensure that partners share this vision.
  • Such initiatives must neither become one man’s crusade, nor left to one person to have sole responsibility for design and implementation. Whilst there may be partners who will oppose, reject or even subvert any attempt to change the system, success will depend not just on the acquiescence and sympathy of the majority of partners, but on there being a group of partners who are prepared to put in time and energy to support and share the objectives.
  • Unless the current system is fatally flawed, it is often easier to move to a system which is seen to be sequential and a natural flow from the previous system. To move, for instance, from an extreme Eat-What-You-Kill system straight to a pure lockstep system would be extremely difficult to achieve.
  • It is difficult to introduce a new system piecemeal, but some degree of incremental change can be conducted as part of a staged process. The establishment of new partnership criteria and expected partner behaviours can often precede the introduction a new compensation setting system
  • Whatever profit-sharing or compensation system the firm has in mind, initiatives need to be in place to encourage a sharing team-based culture, which emphasises the gains and benefits to be had from diversifying opportunities and spreading risk amongst a group of Partners, and refuses to value aggressive internal competition or anything which promotes individual selfishness and work hogging.
  • The system for developing partner skills and competencies – and ultimately for rewarding the development of such skills – should settle only for the pursuit of excellence, recognising that to be content only with the pursuit of competence will lead to inevitable decline.
  • Communication, before, during and after the project is critical. The project should ensure that partners understand the whole performance Management Process. Those managing the project should manage expectations, avoiding, if they can, any system that requires over-frequent and repetitive subjective assessments with all the anxiety, loss of time and raised temperatures which are inevitably involved.
  • Once introduced, the design of the system should be amended as infrequently as possible, and as much effort as possible put into fair and consistent implementation and in ensuring that the new system becomes an essential part of the fabric of the firm.

Incremental Change

It is clear that there are a great many spokes to the compensation and profit sharing wheel, and few firms will want to embark on an ambitious project to transform all parts of it. Most firms are attempting to find a system which will reward and compensate partners on the basis of their overall contribution to the firm’s strategic goals based on factors and criteria some of which will be essentially subjective or qualitative. As a summary, and in addition to the choice of the compensation model, firms will need to consider some or all of the following:

  • Decide and clarify their vision of what the desired end state might be.
  • Define what the firm expects of its partners in terms of the roles, responsibilities and behaviours which will help to drive the firm’s performance.
  • Establish the criteria for the critical areas of performance or the balanced scorecard.
  • Introduce a clear system for managing partner performance.
  • Establish a methodology for partner development and promotion, including tiers of partnership.
  • Work on a system for judging, scoring and assessing partners particularly in subjective areas of performance.
  • Consider a framework for 360 degree feedback.
  • Draft a whole series of constitutional documents and papers to deal with all the issues including a new suite of Appraisal Documents and changes to the Partnership Deed or Members Agreement.

These projects can be dealt with iteratively and incrementally, provided that they are part of an overall plan. I have seen many firms working hard on elements of many of the above quite separately from any project to change the compensation structure itself. What is quite dangerous is to try to make a shift towards a subjectively assessed system without having first introduced a balanced scorecard or agreed on the firm’s critical areas of performance and bedded those changes in. Where the firm has already decided on its critical areas of performance, those areas will often need to be revisited to make the criteria as clear and measurable as possible. I strongly suggest, therefore, that the profit sharing system itself is the final change to be made as it needs to be built on the firm foundations of all the other areas listed above. It should also be clear that the new system as such cannot be introduced incrementally, in that you can have some partners on the old system and some on the new. It is however possible to consider a shadow scheme where the old system is used and the new system is piloted in parallel to see how partners might have been affected by the new regime. Some firms – particularly those who are moving from a predominantly lockstep model to a modified lockstep – have chosen to introduce a relatively small amount of performance related elements – say 5% or 10% of the whole compensation package, so that the effect of the change can be monitored and scaled up over time. One worry about this is that some firms have found that a small amount of performance related compensation can lead to relatively small differences between partners which can lead to both resentment and envy.

Before Starting

Before starting the project, there are some key questions which the firm’s leaders need to address. The first of these is to decide whether the partners agree or are likely to agree that the overall issue of compensation – or indeed any of the issues listed in the last paragraph – forms a major concern which needs to be sorted out. It is important to see that partners fully and deeply understand all the implications of what the firm is trying to achieve. It is also critical to identify the possible obstacles along the way and what other side-issues might pop up which could derail the project. It is also worth establishing from the start who are likely to support the project and who will object to it. Every firm has a group of opinion formers and if the firm leaders cannot convince them to support and identify with your objectives, your chances of victory will be substantially diminished. Finally, and perhaps most importantly, the firm needs to decide early on whether it is likely to have the time, resources and energy to see the project through in order to avoid embarking on a project which is incapable of being satisfactorily concluded.

How firms set about this project will vary enormously from firm to firm. In smaller firms, a greater degree of informality in the process can apply than in larger one. One possible approach is to break the project down into six phases:-

Possible Project Phases

Phase One

The managers seek agreement from the partners to launch an initiative. It should be clear by now that any change to a rewards or compensation system will require partners to change behaviour in some way and therefore that partners must agree that in principle there is a need for some change. As mentioned above, there is no point in proposing a major change if partners do not perceive it to be a major issue. Equally, the partners’ reactions to proposals in due course may well be neutral or unsupportive if they do not have a reasonable level of understanding about the issues and their implications

Phase Two

The leaders then crystallize their thinking in a green paper which spells out the issues and challenges and clarifies what those issues mean in terms of partner performance and behaviours in the future. The green paper should propose a timetable and some desired objectives and should clearly identify the various options available for the firm. At this stage, the paper should provide sufficient detail to engage the attention of partners and to move them from a superficial understanding of the issues to a deeper and more cognitive level.

The leaders should then meet the partners as a whole or in small groups and go through the green paper. These meetings should be fairly informal and should give an opportunity for dialogue. There should however be something of an agenda with particular focus on:

  • What performance is needed from the partners for the firm to attain its strategy.
  • What the objectives of the project are.
  • What the options for change are and what each means in terms of partner performance and behaviour.
  • Whether the firm needs to build or improve its ‘balanced scorecard’ or critical areas of performance and how the leaders see this will be achieved.
  • How in broad terms partner performance will be managed and assessed.
  • What is the transition from the current system to the new or revamped model.

Phase Three

The next stage would be for the leaders to get approval to appoint a project group to take the green paper forward and to come up with detailed recommendations in the form of a white paper. The white paper should aim to spell out

  • All the options which have been considered and why any rejected options have been discarded.
  • The details of what will be required of partners under the new regime, including, if appropriate details of any new or revised performance management system.
  • What this means in behaviour terms.
  • What this means in terms of competence and skills – the detailed drafting of a balanced scorecard is an important element here.
  • What the various processes and systems will be like when it is complete.
  • How the new proposals address the flaws in the old.
  • In any form of seniority system what a partner can do to move up on the new system.
  • A sheet showing the position of each partner on the old and new model (with assumptions).

Phase Four

Following this, the White Paper can be converted into a suite of documents and voted on or ratified. At the same time, changes can be effected if necessary to the Partnership Deed or Members Agreement.

Phase Five

There then comes the tricky phase of implementation. Unlike some projects, the introduction of a new system to allocate compensation or remuneration cannot be phased – you cannot have some on the new system and some not. But some issues can be phased – the introduction of a Balanced Scorecard and a Partner Performance Management system, for example. It is also advisable to get any new performance assessment processes in place and agreed ahead of anything else – a pilot scheme can help here.

Suggestions for Project Teams and Partner Workshops

The Project Team

The introduction of all or any of the systems and processes needed to change a compensation system forms a large and time-consuming project. Clearly the management of many stages of the initiative, plus its implementation is crucial. A project team can be most useful in assisting in this. Many such project teams in law firms have a curious habit of emerging without any particular selection process but – however chosen – need clear accountabilities and commitment. Team members can be selected to provide a balance.

A project team needs members who above all know about and understand the problem being tackled, and who both care enough and will make sufficient time to do something about it. It also needs partners with a high degree of power and authority to achieve results. It also helps to have one or two sceptics in the team to keep the group honest and to act as the grit in the oyster.

The project must be clearly scoped and have a timetable and a budget. There must be a clear step by step plan with milestones and regular reporting.

The choice of a project team leader for any initiative is critical. This person needs to know that he or she has teeth – in other words the power to enforce. He or she must be well respected in the partnership and have demonstrable leadership skills. He or she also must have credibility in the firm and the clear support of the leadership group. The project leader also needs to be able to grasp the necessary sensitivities and emotions which can be raised amongst partners during the process, and the wisdom to understand the checks and balances which need to be incorporated into any changed mechanisms. It seems obvious to suggest that the leader must have the capacity to devote the necessary time and the authority to obtain the necessary resources, but it is quite surprising how many internal projects in law firms run out of steam because the project leader keeps getting sucked into unavoidable client work. It also helps greatly if the project leader gets on well with the Managing Partner and the leadership group and has an open line to them and to Departments and their heads for team members. Finally, it is vital that the leader has good organisational capabilities (or, at the least, the active support of a capable administrator) together with sufficient operational experience to know how to get things done. The true test of a project leader is the extent to which he or she is easily able to manage and organise an internal project and to sell the results internally

Partner Workshops or Face-to-Face Interviews

Partners do not always say what they think and agreement in a partners’ meeting does not always imply commitment. I have found that face-to-face interviews with partners by someone wholly objective and detached can help to reveal some of the deeper-seated issues and fears which partners may have as well as being able to identify areas of consensus. In addition, Partner Workshops can help both with Partner engagement and commitment as well as with feedback on some of the thought processes. The process of developing a balanced scorecard or critical areas of performance is one of the core elements of the whole approach to changing compensation or profit sharing mechanisms towards one which has assessable or subjective elements. Most partners should be involved to some extent in this work and the workshops are a good place to involve them. Whilst the degree of participation may vary, there are major benefits in including as many partners as possible in the discussion about the skills and competences to be defined in the creation of the balanced scorecard. Some of this can take place by a facilitator or members of the project team interviewing relevant partners and other stakeholders. Other discussions can develop in a workshop situation. It is however vital to ensure that any partner workshops are tightly managed and directed – drafting proposals by committee is not to be recommended and there is a fine line between the obtaining of valuable feedback on the one hand, and the undesirable watering down of proposals on the other.

In general, workshops should be limited to 12 to 15 people to ensure active participation. There should be a core group (possibly the members of the project team itself) which carries out all workshops, but supported by others. The firm should endeavour to mix people up by practice area, office etc. Small firms may be able to conduct workshops as part of a partners meeting or to split into two or three workshops – it is vital to try to have the groups not too small or too big.

Part of the agenda for such workshops is to discuss, describe and define the skills and competencies needed by partners for the firm to succeed in reaching its strategic objectives. The discussion can then move on to the sort of behaviours to be expected of partners. The first step is to create a compact set of definitions of the current set of competencies which the firm currently deploys, as well as any new competencies or skills which must be worked on in order to participate in the opportunities of the future.

This step does not however go nearly far enough. A descriptive competence can be bland, meaningless and immeasurable, unless accompanied by ‘behavioural indicators’ which show in greater detail what the competence looks like in practice, and what partners have to demonstrate to show evidence that they have mastered the described skill.

The discussions in partner workshops are usually extremely valuable to a project team when it comes to developing a competency framework and a balanced scorecard.

Conclusion

The issues touched on here – partner accountability and performance, the wider role of a law firm owner, partner development and progression, and how firms reward, compensate and reward their partners – go to the very heart of the partnership ethos. In many larger firms, partners have become disillusioned and cynical about the nature of their relationships with their firms. I have heard many partners complain about no longer being ‘true partners’ but merely paid employees on fixed term contracts. Partners can also come from a tradition of independence evidenced by membership of a loose franchise of soloist autonomous individuals. Such partners also find it hard to adjust to the increasing need for a more cohesive organisation. At the same time, partners in firms with a history of pure lockstep are finding it equally hard to accept the increased scrutiny of their performance which merit based remuneration systems require. The brutal truth is that any radical changes to a firm’s partner remuneration systems require a great deal of time and planning and will involve the firm in considering a whole range of other issues.

Nick Jarrett-Kerr
Author

LL.B is a specialist adviser to law firms and professional services firms worldwide on issues of strategy, governance and leadership development as well as all-important business issues facing firms as they compete in difficult market conditions. In the last twelve years, he has established himself as one of the leading UK and international advisers to law firms. He has been involved full-time in professional service firm management for over twenty years.