In-house lawyers can be more productive with these 3 simple steps

In-house lawyers can be more productive with these 3 simple steps

The majority of General Counsels and in-house lawyers are eager to take on a more strategic function within their organisation, as well as develop the in-house expertise of their teams and embrace digital transformation initiatives. But one of the biggest blockers stopping these changes from taking place is the high volume of routine, repetitive work that gets placed on their desks. 

So, how can in-house legal teams save time and increase productivity to move on to more important work?

Director of Strategic Markets at UUֱ, Mark Smith, has a few ideas. Smith, who moved to an international in-house legal team after spending a decade at national and City law firms, says there’s some truth behind these three commonly used buzzwords: people, process and technology.   

People

Investing in people is a really key part of being an effective leader in an organisation, says Smith, who currently leads UUֱ’s engagement efforts with large law firms and in-house teams.

When Smith was working in-house, he was asked by his General Counsel to spend approximately 20% of his time developing his people, and the impact it had on his team and his individual performance was huge – so much so that he has made it his mission to continue the approach in every role he’s had since.

Process

Where do you find the time to invest a fifth of each working day developing others? That’s where process comes in, says Smith.

Smith emphasises the need to step back and find new ways of doing things. “Even if every time it seems like you’re doing something unique, there’s typically a series of steps that need to get done in a certain order,” he says.

Set some time aside with key stakeholders and map out the things you need to do, says Smith. “Very quickly you will see there are often smarter ways of doing things.”

Technology

Technology can easily distract us and divide our attention, says Smith, and giving all our time to a constant stream of emails, instant messages and WhatsApp notifications will do us more harm than good.

“What we need is good quality blocks of time,” says Smith, who suggests turning off your notifications during these periods.

He also suggests tech tools like Calendly, which can save you time scheduling meetings, Doodle, which makes it easy to schedule multiple party meetings, and TechHIt’s Simply File, which enables you to easily file sent emails. Another useful tool is Lexis Create, which helps lawyers easily draft legal documents by searching for and saving clauses without leaving the Microsoft environment. This saves a huge amount of time by eliminating the need to recreate the same or similar documents again and again, and it reduces the risk of distractions.

Alongside his work for UUֱ Mark is a Fellow and Senior Advisor at Judge Business School, Adjunct Faculty at Henley Business School and an Affiliated Lecturer at the University of Cambridge Faculty of Law. Mark holds an MBA and an MSc in behavioural change and is a practising executive coach working with law firm management and senior in-house lawyers.

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About the author:

Louisa leads marketing at Obelisk Support - a legal services provider offering flexible legal support, delivered by highly experienced, typically City-firm trained freelance lawyers and paralegals.

Louisa has a passion for driving and facilitating initiatives which are customer-focused at their heart. Her vision is to support in-house counsel to succeed in their fast-evolving role based on deep insight, data analysis and best practice gathered across the in-house community.