Legal Business

Financials 2015/16: Disputes drive Fieldfisher’s 7% revenue growth

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Fieldfisher, which recently released new a strategy homing on in three sectors, has posted a 7% increase in firmwide revenues for 2015/16, up to £121.5m from £113.3m. The result comes after the firm posted an 8% rise in revenue at the half-year point in November.

The firm also reported an increased in profit per equity partner (PEP) of 9% to £550k this year, up from £506k the year before. This is the firm’s highest PEP figure since 2009/10, although still some way off the £722,000 achieved in 2007/08.

On a five-year track, revenues for the firm have grown 29% from £94m. As a result of the positive figures the firm has dished out a £1,000 bonus to all staff.

In a statement the firm said its dispute resolution practice had a particularly successful year, alongside financial markets and products, technology outsourcing/privacy and its public and regulatory practice.

Managing partner Michael Chissick said: ‘As a firm we have big plans for growth and these results put us on a strong footing to achieve them. We have continued, and will continue, to invest in the firm’s growth and development.’

As part of its new strategy, the firm has picked three sectors to ‘turbocharge’ as it rolls out its latest three-year business plan, dubbed ‘Our Future Refocused’.

The firm is placing an emphasis on technology, energy and financial services as its three ‘accelerated’ focuses.

Combined, these areas account for almost £50m of the firm’s revenues. Technology is the biggest contributor, bringing in about £20m, while financial services brings £15m while energy brings in slightly less at about £12m.

Among the other firms to report first this season include Osborne Clarke, which posted a 23% rise in global revenues to €236.3m, while TLT in May posted a 15% turnover lift to £71.6m. Forsters also produced a bumper result with an 11% bump in revenue to £46.2m.

victoria.young@legalease.co.uk

 

Legal Business

A new triangle: Fieldfisher targets three key sectors in latest strategy

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Echoing its trademarked ‘virtuous triangle’ strategy of the past, Fieldfisher has picked three sectors to ‘turbocharge’ as it rolls out its latest three-year business plan, dubbed ‘Our Future Refocused’.

The firm is placing an emphasis on technology, energy & natural resources and finance & financial services as its three ‘accelerated’ focuses.

Fieldfisher managing partner Michael Chissick said: ‘We are not stopping all the things we are doing. We are not stopping being a multi-service law firm. We are not stopping doing IP, tax, hotel, dispute resolution and other things – all these are going to continue. However we felt that we had three areas that we at the moment we can grow faster than other areas.’

Chissick (pictured) added: ‘It is difficult in the crowded London market place for people to get to know a firm in more than a few areas.’

Combined these areas make up almost £50m for the firm which last year posted revenues of £113m. Technology is the biggest contributor, bringing in about £20m, while financial services brings £15m while energy brings in slightly less at about £12m.

While Chissick was clear that other sector groups will not be jettisoned, the special focus on three sectors has echoes of the old Field Fisher Waterhouse ‘virtuous triangle’ strategy of 2010, where corporate, IP/IT and regulatory were singled out.

Along with the change in sector focus, Fieldfisher has outlined its international strategy, which is to concentrate on growth in Germany. The firm’s Düsseldorf office, has grown to five partners from scratch since it launched in 2014, while Munich is down to three partners after litigation partner Sibylle Schumacher left last year for Pinsent Masons.

As part of the strategy, Fieldfisher also expects to have outposts in Italy, Netherlands and Spain in the next three years. Outside its UK offices in London and Manchester, the firm currently has eight other offices including Brussels, Paris, Silicon Valley and Shanghai.

The final prong of the strategy is focused on culture, which encompasses the firm’s values, its drive for collaboration and emphasis on high performance. This includes a committment to agile working, innovation, diversity and smarter working.

Fieldfisher, which banked £58.4m in the first six months of the 2015/16 financial year off the back of a buoyant disputes practice and a resurgent UK real estate market, will announce its 2015/16 financials later this month. The firm has already announced it would gift £1,000 bonuses to all staff as a result of its continued success.

The new business plan, follows a strategy which the firm dubbed its ‘strategy on the page’, launched when Chissick became managing partner in 2014.

Chissick added: ‘We achieved that last strategy: we moved, we brought in laterals and there was a sense that it was implemented; we had implemented the IT and rebranded.’

victoria.young@legalease.co.uk

Read more on Fieldfisher’s strategy in: ”We needed to move on’: Why Fieldfisher has turned its back on the dating game’

Legal Business

Fieldfisher senior partner Lohn faces bias allegations over work for British Horseracing Authority

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Matthew Lohn, senior partner at Fieldfisher, has been accused of bias after carrying out advisory work for the British Horseracing Authority (BHA) while serving as chair of its independent disciplinary panel.

As reported by legal site RollOnFriday today (20 May), while Lohn turned down the opportunity to pitch for substantial work involving the redraft of the rules of horseracing, noting conflicts, the Fieldfisher regulatory expert has advised on a range non-disciplinary work for the BHA that he believed to be non-conflicting and trivial. He was initially approached about advisory work for the BHA in October 2013 and offered occasional advice to the body over the next two years.

Horse trainer Jim Best, who was handed a four-year ban earlier this year by a panel chaired by Lohn, is appealing the decision alleging Lohn’s work for the BHA outside of the disciplinary procedural system gives rise to a possible bias.

The panel found Best guilty in March of ordering jockey Paul John to stop two horses from running on their merits at Plumpton and Towcester in 2015. Best was found to be a ‘dishonest individual who corrupted a young man’ and was found guilty of all charges, including acting in a manner prejudicial to the integrity, proper conduct or good reputation of horseracing. West London legal outfit Stewart Moore solicitors is representing Best in the appeal.

Paul Gilligan, an Irish trainer recently banned for six months in a panel chaired by Lohn, is also appealing. Gilligan was banned for six months by the BHA in April for sending a horse to race at Uttoxeter who had previously competed at an unrecognised meeting in Ireland.

Fieldfisher refused to comment. The BHA said in a statement: ‘It is our intention to be fully open and transparent about the wider matters that have arisen during this case and which concern our handling of disciplinary cases and the structure and the composition of our disciplinary panels. We will issue a full statement once the case is closed.’

tom.moore@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Comment: Fieldfisher’s Chissick on why real change on diversity needs leadership in law

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‘Did you see the game at the weekend?’ is the type of question I am often asked at events. I know my answer, ‘no, I don’t really follow sport’ – will kill the conversation dead, and I don’t have the skills or required knowledge to blag my way through the small talk of the weekend’s fixture list.

Of course, plenty of gay men love sport but questions such as this, typically asked of men but not women, are one example of the unconscious bias in much professional banter. Thankfully the abundance of LGBT networking events now means we can avoid the assumption that the men in the room keep one eye on Sky Sports and hammer out business deals at the 19th hole.

In themselves the array of LGBT-specific events, both within the legal sector and for professionals outside it, show how far things have come since the 1980s, when I came out. The rise of HIV/AIDS, a lack of gay role models, and a working environment that meant many were unable to progress in their careers if they were out, made for a very difficult decade.

Things got better through the 1990s and 2000s and now being gay is arguably positive for career development. Ask a recruiter to pick between two equal candidates, one white and privately-educated and the other fitting into any given diversity group, and there will no doubt be genuine consideration given to picking the latter – simply because it would take them one step closer to a firm’s self-imposed diversity targets.

These targets are churned out through the legal press on a seemingly weekly basis, with firms committing to reach, say, 30% of female partners by a certain date. The firm grabs a headline then and they could easily grab another by announcing they’ve reached their goal having simply promoted however many female associates to salaried or junior partner status as their deadline nears.

What is more likely is that firms will continue to see female partnership levels stay at around 20% – a figure that companies across industries struggle to get past – unless they make real moves to proactively manage talent and to champion female role models across the business.

Whether through genuinely flexible working policies, support for those returning to work or female-specific development programmes, initiatives will only be successful if they are more than box-ticking. Senior support is critical, and not just from those within the diversity groups: heterosexuals championing the LGBT group, and senior men going further than trumpeting the cause of the Women’s Development Programme by helping women to climb the career ladder, will help these groups progress to becoming an integral part of the make-up of the firm.

Championing diversity is not just good internally. The business case for celebrating difference is clear, and it is growing. Our clients are increasingly challenging us on our diversity policies throughout the tendering process. But it is more than just meeting client desire for diverse supply chains: diversity breeds success. One of our pitch teams won an instruction recently because the client had grown tired of being presented to by men in suits, and our all-female team brought a different approach that landed us the client. Difference of sex, difference of background – just two factors that lead to differences in approach and thought. Many firms claim to be innovative in their marketing material – is that possible without a diverse team?

It’s not just employees and clients who want diverse firms. We’re already seeing younger generations demand much more than salaries and pensions from their employers. Graduates now expect flexible working policies and opportunities to get involved in social responsibility programmes. Managing and supporting talent from day one is vital to ensuring women stay and grow with a firm in an age where competitors are telling them, through numerous channels, why they should work for them instead.

There’s no quick fix, but firms that set targets will only beat them if they make meaningful, long-term changes from the top down. At the time of writing, we’re finalising plans for our third annual Diversity and Inclusion Week – numerous internal events to celebrate the diversity that does exist within the firm; highlighting that senior figures are on board and creating discussion around the various topics under the diversity umbrella.

For LGBTs the road has been a long and bumpy one but it seems the group is, now, by and large accepted. On the contrary, the cause of women has been stuck in traffic for some time. Announcing targets might put the firm on the front page, but unless the firm’s management is committed to nurturing a diverse group from day one, and embracing difference from the top down, achieving them won’t get any easier.

Michael Chissick (pictured) is managing partner of Fieldfisher.

Legal Business

‘We needed to move on’: Why Fieldfisher has turned its back on the dating game

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Victoria Young speaks to the management duo about the transformed mid-market player

‘We’ll be the first to admit the firm of five years ago wasn’t delivering what the partners wanted,’ says Fieldfisher managing partner Michael Chissick. In 2012, Legal Business took a close look at Field Fisher Waterhouse and at the time the mid-market law firm was desperate for a suitor. Three years, two failed merger talks and several high-profile partner exits later, and Fieldfisher has undergone a reboot far beyond its change of name.

Legal Business

IP litigator Sternfeld departs boutique after 15 years to join Fieldfisher

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Fieldfisher has bolstered its IP group and its life sciences practice with the hire of three partners from IP boutique Rouse, including veteran litigator Diana Sternfeld.

With twenty years of experience across a broad range of patent disputes, Sternfeld leads the team, having established Rouse’s patent practice in 2001.

She will be joined by Nicole Jadeja and Rebecca Baines, who were both made partners in May 2014. Described by the Legal 500 as a ‘very friendly and collaborative team’, Fieldfisher’s newest recruits will join the firm’s five partners focusing on life sciences litigation.

Recent cases Sternfeld has acted on include advising Medeva in one of the leading supplementary protection certificate cases referred to the Court of Justice of the European Union; advising SmithKline Beecham against Connaught in a case in which the Court of Appeal revisited the question of disclosure of documents in open court and acting for GSK in a case against Genentech which went all the way to the Supreme Court.

Sternfield said she was looking forward to joining the team, ‘particularly with its strong presence in Europe at this key time for European patent litigation. We are looking forward to working with the current team.’

Fieldfisher IP and technology litigation group head Nick Rose said with the impending introduction of the unitary patent and the Unified Patent Court, the trio will play a vital role in ensuring the firm has strong litigation team based in London and across Europe.

‘Diane, Nicole and Rebecca are all immersed in the life science industry with significant experience in the UK and across the continent. Coupled with our European network – as well as Diana’s status as one of the best known UK patent litigators and Nicole and Rebecca’s own burgeoning practices – their arrival puts us in an excellent position to better serve our clients’ needs in the new unitary patent era.’

Rouse London managing partner Jeremy Newman said in a statement he understood the trio’s decision to move, as Rouse’s strategic direction made it unlikely that it would open offices in continental Europe.

He added: ‘As an international and specialist IP firm, we continue to provide patent litigation services in the UK, representing a number of high profile clients, with particular focus on technology clients and disputes in the digital environment.’

madeleine.farman@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Twice as nice: Fieldfisher doubles pay to highest earning member, LLP accounts reveal

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The highest-paid LLP member at Fieldfisher took home £1.24m last year, almost twice as much as last year, following back-to-back years of strong revenue growth for the firm.

The biggest earner at Fieldfisher trousered £1.24m in 2014/15, according to the firm’s latest filings at Companies House, a £618,000 rise on the previous year. In 2013/14, the highest earner at Fieldfisher took home £620,000. The figures in the LLP accounts do not necessarily equate to the highest paid equity partner and can relate to ‘golden handshakes’ to retiring members.

Rising pay at the tech-focused firm follows two years of increasing revenue and profitability. Turnover for the year ending 30 April 2015 rose by 12% to £113.9m. Profits rose by 40% to hit £42.6m that year.

The firm witnessed growth on most key indicators and total staff headcount grew as a result, rising 5% to 559 people. Lawyer headcount grew to 286. However, net debt at the end of 2014/15 was up by £1.5m to £11.7m.

Since Michael Chissick took up the managing partner post in February 2013 the firm has improved its income in tech, real estate and international arbitration work.

In November last year Fieldfisher announced it had banked £58.4m for the first six months of the 2015/16 financial year, an 8% rise on the previous year. On track to surpass record revenues generated last year, Chissick said at the time that ‘we’re busy so there is optimism that we will have a decent second half’ but noted that ‘growth only matters if we’re outperforming our competitors’.

tom.moore@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

H1 2015/16: ‘All signs are looking positive’ – Fieldfisher posts first half revenues up 8%

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Fieldfisher has banked £58.4m for the first six months of the 2015/16 financial year, an 8% rise on last year, which saw UK firms stoke optimism of the domestic market.

Fieldfisher’s revenue in the six months to 31 October rose on the back of a buoyant disputes practice and a resurgent UK real estate market. The firm’s half-year revenue of £58.4m is £4.1m more than this time last year, when income for the first six months of 2014/15 stood at £54.3m.

The performance puts Fieldfisher on track to surpass record revenues generated in the last financial year, when the firm posted a 9% rise to take its income to £113m.

Fieldfisher managing partner Michael Chissick told Legal Business: ‘The growth has come from activity levels; not from mergers or laterals. Dispute resolution is flat out, with the arbitration group really driving us forward. It’s been a few years since I’ve been trumpeting our real estate group, but that’s been really strong as well.’

The firm, which reported gains in Düsseldorf and Paris, has had a string of client wins this year and was reappointed to educational company Pearson’s panel earlier this month. 

Chissick concluded: ‘We’re busy so there is optimism that we will have a decent second half but I won’t be complacent. All signs are looking positive. Growth only matters if we’re outperforming out competitors.’

Fladgate was the first UK firm to reveal its half-year results last week when it reported a 12% rise in turnover to £19.1m.

tom.moore@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

Fieldfisher boosts tech nous in Manchester with lateral hires

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Nearly two years after opening in Manchester, Fieldfisher has swelled its partner headcount with two lateral hires from regional firms.

DWF joint head of privacy Rob Sheldon joined the tech focused firm today (2 November), while Sam Jardine, head of commercial and technology at Newcastle firm Watson Burton will join in January.

Recommended by The Legal 500 for IP law, Sheldon had been at DWF since 2007 and specialises in commercial projects, providing IT, outsourcing, data protection, commercial contracts and IP expertise to clients from a wide range of sectors.

Jardine established the technology sector group at Watson Burton and has also worked at Eversheds, Addleshaw Goddard and Baker & McKenzie. He has expertise in non-contentious commercial and technology contracts, including agreements relating to the supply and purchase of goods and services, outsourcing, system supply, systems integration, distribution, resale of goods and software.

Fieldfisher says it is looking to grow to meet demand coming from rapid growth of greater Manchester’s tech cluster, which has seen both BBC and ITV move to Salford’s MediaCity.

The firm’s managing partner Michael Chissick said: ‘The UK’s tech sector is much more than just London – Manchester and the North West are home to numerous successful technology businesses and we are very well placed to support them.’

Fieldfisher’s Manchester office, which opened in February 2014 following the acquisition of local firm Heatons, focuses on regulatory, real estate, employment and technology work.

victoria.young@legalease.co.uk

Legal Business

‘You can’t buy loyalty’ – Fieldfisher’s Lohn on the dos and don’ts of making the lateral hiring game pay off

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For most law firms, growth connotes success. Strategies to deliver the desired growth will usually rely on a steady, sometimes significant, stream of lateral partner hires. These new partners are perceived to be integral to the future success of a business – a supply of fresh talent which can expand different practice areas, enable a firm to enter new jurisdictions and access new clients.

Successful law firms openly entice an assortment of lawyers from other firms to initiate or strengthen their offering. Success or failure of lateral hiring has consequently become important and the art and science of the lateral hire is becoming an increasingly analysed issue. Firms need to understand how a ‘lateral’ becomes an established and successful partner of their new firm – so what is the magic formula for success?

Only a generation ago law firms would pride themselves on not hiring at partner level. This approach routinely produced high-calibre partners, infused with an ingrained culture, which in turn was assimilated into the next generation of associates. Firms were proud of their individuality; their cultural DNA was distinct and neither strengthened nor weakened by external influences.

As big US firms emerged in the 1960s and 1970s, lateral hiring developed apace, provoking an abundance of articles and books advising on how best to go about it. London firms caught up spectacularly from the 1980s onwards. In an intensely competitive lateral market, UK law firms – alongside their US counterparts – now play the game to hire the best laterals they can find.

The requirements for successful lateral hiring are easy to document: find the right people, assist them to perform and keep them when they perform well. In reality, recruitment, performance management and retention will often present challenges in the demanding environment of a modern law firm.

Fieldfisher has an active lateral hiring programme. A number of our key leadership positions are filled by individuals who joined the firm as partners. They are not considered laterals any more – they have been assimilated. Our gene pool of talent has been strengthened and our firm enhanced by the success of our hiring. But we cannot claim always to get it right: we make mistakes. And when we do, we try to admit to them. And we are not alone. Despite the received wisdom about laterals being good for business, their failure rate remains high.

According to research by The American Lawyer/LexisNexis, although 96% of US managing partners state that lateral growth is part of their strategy, only 28% of lateral hires are considered ‘highly effective’. UK research by Motive Legal Consulting showed worse results. Forty four percent of lateral partners hired in London were no longer with the same firm five years later. Some practice areas fare particularly badly: corporate (67%), finance (57%) and litigation (65%). These attrition rates point to widespread mistakes on a significant scale. The art and science of lateral hiring is not yet perfected. And yet the wisdom of the current practice is rarely questioned. There is no lateral rulebook which defines clear metrics to measure success, just the retention statistics which suggest that expectations are manifestly not being met on either side.

From our experience as a mid-sized City firm with a growing international reach, getting the right people through the door is critical. Our infrastructure and expertise enables us to attract big clients, yet we are small enough for partners to know each other. As with others of our size, much of our recent growth since 2005 has been managed through focused lateral hiring. Unlike some other firms, we do not look for a type; regimented corporate lawyers in dark blue suits do not stalk the corridors of our offices. Nor do we try to shape new lawyers into a Fieldfisher mould. If it ever existed, that mould has long since been broken.

Instead, we identify candidates as individuals. Entrepreneurial, enthusiastic and energetic are three adjectives that perhaps best describe what we seek. Diversity is a much-overused word. Yet we find that embracing the potential of new and different makes good business sense as well as providing a more congenial working environment. Fieldfisher is an eclectic amalgam of individuals – far removed from the mono-cultural mix that still prevails in parts of the City.

The elusive trick for those of us running law firms is to get the hiring process right more often. We are all opportunistic: accommodating talent when it presents itself. But adding numbers to just boost revenue does not deliver success in our experience. And problems always occur when laterals over promise and under deliver. The data implies that firms could do much more in agreeing realistic targets, integrating laterals more intelligently and monitoring performance more diligently. Anecdotal evidence suggests that many firms in London still have modest integration processes: planning and mapping are often absent.

Managing expectations on both sides at the outset is key, based on plans that are credible, carefully crafted and agreed. Laterals are invariably expected to bring work with them. Initial support should focus on converting work that was anticipated to follow: facilitating the migration of clients, adding to the firm’s revenue stream, and enabling further work to crystallise. In reality, some clients go with individuals, some stay with firms; usually there is some combination of both.

A critical factor in successful integration is remuneration and how it is structured. Ameliorating the financial risk and making pay too conditional on individual performance may unwittingly prolong an integration process. Real success should be a measure of a lateral’s ability and desire, not only to sell themselves in the marketplace, but also to sell their clients to the wider firm.

A ‘me first’ attitude to billing and client recognition may handicap early integration. Overtly harsh early scrutiny of lateral performance may lead to a reluctance to share clients in case an exit is needed. And, however well a firm remunerates a lateral, you cannot buy loyalty; you gain it by developing trust and respect.

Laterals who fail to migrate their clients quickly risk being labelled as failures or disasters. They have no track record with a firm and may be exposed to harsh judgement – subject to a process of scrutiny that longstanding partners often avoid. Invariably, the laterals are blamed; firms rarely blame themselves. But a lateral who underperforms in year one can excel the following year. Backing them or sacking them is a matter of judgement – it is the art, not science, of hiring that applies here; the ability to judge human character and its propensity to deliver success.

Partners need to see their firm as laterals may see it and to welcome the new ideas that laterals bring with them as much as they welcome their new clients. Lawyers are people, not commodities, and their personality and ideas have the capacity to enhance a partnership. The human capital of a lateral gives further heterogeneity to a firm’s DNA and the potential for a stronger, more vibrant and successful partnership.

We have found that structured integration is an important component in successful hiring. Firms must work to help a new lateral find their voice; allow them to demonstrate that they are worth more than the sum of their billings. The onus is equally shared. Laterals need to be self-motivated in developing internal relationships, formally and informally, while the firm has a duty, collectively and individually, to be engaged. And friendly – a word used too sparingly in the law firm lexicon, save in the context of developing clients or attracting trainees. Collegiality cannot be forced. It takes time. Human relationships develop gradually and cannot be fast-tracked, however smooth and well-managed the initial integration process.

Finally, firms should learn to listen carefully to new partners. Listening, of course, is not the same as agreeing – an important difference for lawyers who are notoriously bad at talking too much and listening too little. It is worth remembering that laterals sometimes left their old firm because they felt no-one was listening to them.

So when does a lateral stop being a ‘lateral’ and is considered a ‘partner’? Two years is commonly cited as an average to become fully embedded and considered a true partner but as in any club, society or team, a new or newish member might be welcomed straight away by some, and treated cautiously for years by others. A more nuanced view would suggest that laterals become more quickly embedded when financially successful and, importantly, are attuned and accepting of the firm’s internal politics, and where they fit within their new office paradigm.

And it is all worthwhile when we get it right: the planning, the targeting, the migration of clients and the cultural enrichment derived from our new partner. We forget the failures. We bask in the reflective success of our new colleague. But to repeat the feat – it is back once more to the art and science of the lateral hiring process.

Matthew Lohn is senior partner of Fieldfisher.