Your Firm Is Profitable. Is It Going Anywhere?

Your firm can be busy and profitable and still have no strategy. The phones ring, revenue grows, everyone works hard, yet nobody can answer the basic question: what are we trying to become? I’ve seen this before in my practice. Activity hides drift, sometimes for years, until pricing pressure or a failed succession exposes it.

The pressures are stacking up. Clients want pricing certainty and are questioning whether routine work needs to be outsourced. AI is changing how legal work is produced, and early signals indicate the biggest changes will first affect associate and paralegal work. Add succession pressure and rising operating costs, and standing still keeps getting more expensive.

Why firms drift

Drift starts in the partnership. Ask five of your partners what the firm should become, and you’ll get five answers. One wants a new market, another wants to protect the firm’s client base and culture, and each sounds reasonable on its own. Funded from the same profit pool, they starve each other.

Without shared direction, the firm tries to accommodate everyone. This leads to many unranked goals and no agreement on what to forego. Hiring and technology become ad hoc, and marketing follows the loudest voice. Does that sound familiar?

A real plan breaks the pattern by focusing actions and decisions on the firm’s chosen direction. The key takeaway: a strategic plan empowers intentional decisions, not just more activity.

Strategy begins with what you will not do

Most plans list aspirations: improve profitability, attract talent, serve clients better, and strengthen culture. Every firm wants these, so they aren’t a strategy.

Strategy starts when partners choose where the firm will compete and, tougher still, what it will stop. Without exclusions, priorities just crowd an already full agenda.

The main takeaway: strategy drives resource allocation. Commitment to a focus, such as an industry, should be visible in how you hire, train, market, and choose clients. If resources and attention do not shift, the strategy is only words.

Put the economics inside the plan

This is where most plans fall apart, and where I spend most of my time with firms. Growth requires capacity, and capacity is expensive: on average, a firm doesn’t break even on a new associate until three to five years of call. New practice areas take years to mature. AI may cut production time while demanding new spending on software and workflow redesign. A plan that ignores these connections can deliver growth without an acceptable return to the partners.

Build a financial model to test ambitions. Link demand to lawyer capacity, pricing, realization, staffing, and capital needs. Focus on profit per partner; revenue growth means little without it. This analysis forces real conversations. Firms are often top-heavy and lack leverage below, limiting growth. Promising new services may lose money under current pricing. Sometimes, partners need to take home less to fund the future. Partnership decisions buried in the plan indicate a problem.

Alignment gets tested when it becomes personal

Partners easily agree on growth and quality. Things change when plans affect compensation, client ownership, autonomy, or resource allocation. A credible process accommodates these issues. Confidential interviews reveal what groups never do, and a well-facilitated retreat helps partners resolve and commit to decisions. An outside facilitator is valuable if the managing partner is also an advocate in the discussion.

Execution is where plans die

To clarify: Every priority must have an owner, milestones, a budget, and sufficient time. At quarterly reviews, leaders must make decisions, such as redistributing resources or stopping failing work. Consequences for missed commitments are essential. Without them, partners assume strategic work is optional under client pressure, and strategic efforts often lose out.

Start with an honest diagnosis

Before booking the retreat, figure out where your firm is weak. Some firms lack clarity about direction. Others know where they want to go but have never connected the ambition to their economics or built the discipline to execute. The process should fit your firm’s condition rather than a generic retreat agenda.

The Profits for Partners Law Firm Strategic Planning Diagnostic is a short assessment covering strategic clarity, market focus, economic alignment, leadership alignment, execution discipline, and future readiness. It shows where to focus first.

TAKE THE LAW FIRM STRATEGIC PLANNING DIAGNOSTIC

A strategic plan’s main purpose is to give partners confidence to choose and commit. Takeaway: If your plan doesn’t guide decisions and screen distractions, it needs improvement. Contact me if you want to discuss where your firm stands.

Author: Colin Cameron

Founder of Profits for Partners, Management Consulting Inc. We provide strategic profit-focused advice to professional service firms based on 35 years of executive management and consulting experience. I am a management consultant, chartered accountant and former COO of a major Vancouver, BC law firm. My specialties are profitability improvement, strategic planning, firm governance, partner compensation, financial management and operations management.

Leave a Reply