Areas where legal teams can create value
Legal departments that want and need to better serve their clients should look to transform. Corporate legal teams—indeed, the legal profession as a whole—have tended to operate in ways that are distinct from the larger business world. There are many reasons for this (some laudable, and others not), but the result is that businesses now commonly want, and demand, that their attorneys advise them more quickly, more effectively (e.g., through more practical, actionable advice that considers the needs, opportunities, and risk tolerances of the business), and for less cost. Many modern, effective legal departments have transformed to deliver legal services in this way—providing law at the speed of business.
Legal departments that transform are often able to achieve significant improvements in how they serve their business clients, including:
Transformed legal departments often also better serve their internal stakeholders, for instance by:
Legal department transformation thus serves both the client and the legal advisors on whom the client depends.
It also drives progress in the legal profession as a whole. Corporate legal departments, collectively, are among the largest, most sophisticated providers—and buyers—of legal services in the world. What corporate legal departments do, how they act, and what they prioritize reverberates not only among their own legal teams and business clients, but in law firms, governments, law schools, and even in the law itself. When corporate legal departments accelerate—demanding more, different, and better from themselves—law firms will follow (with a series of cascading effects). When corporate legal departments prioritize qualities such as diversity and inclusion, law firms will likely follow (as will the rest of the legal profession). When corporate legal departments modernize and leverage technology, law firms will likely follow (as will the rest). For each of these examples, there are a hundred more. Thus, the cumulative effect of corporate legal department transformation can and will be much larger than a specific efficiency gain here, or cost savings there. Ultimately, legal operations transformation means transforming the very profession of law.
KPMG LLP does not provide legal services.
Six best practices for legal operating models
The pressure to transform legal operating models is reaching new heights.
Brought to you by the KPMG Legal Operational Transformation Services team