About Me

  • I am a small business attorney in New York City. You can contact me at newyorksmallbusinesslaw at gmail dot com.

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Don't be a Victim of your Law Firm's "No Small Business" Policy

Httpwwwflickrcomphotosfotomele64219608Via MyShingle I learned about this telling article by a leading law firm consulting company.   According to the article, small businesses are bad news for big law firms.  Short of telling the client to hit the road, they recommend these ways to get rid of small business clients:

  • Eliminate discounts. Most businesses provide price discounts based on volume. But in law firms, often the lowest rates are charged to the smallest clients. With the next bill simply charge the client at full rates. Explain that the firm has large clients who expect to enjoy most favored nation rates, which forces the firm to bring the small client's rate up to standard. Either the client will pay the higher rates or they will seek other counsel--both good results.
  • Push work down. Hand off small client relationships to a junior associate. The associate will charge lower rates and gain experience in client relations and billing management. A year later if the firm still wants to fire the client, it can do so with less political flack.
  • Refer it out. Refer the client to a smaller law firm. Set up a referral relationship and explain to the client that they will be charged less and get better service from the smaller firm.
  • Cut out small clients at the source. Change client acceptance procedures to eliminate small matters. Prohibit acceptance of work that particularly attracts individuals and small clients. If the firm must accept some individual work, establish a fixed fee minimum for individual services such as will preparation or residential real estate closings (and make it pretty high).

Emphasis (in red) added by me.   Need I say more?

Picture courtesy of Fotomele protected under CreativeCommons Attribution-NoDerivs 2.0 License.

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Disclaimer

  • I publish this small business law blog to educate small businesses and their owners about relevant New York law. I am not conveying any legal, accounting, tax, or other professional advice and your use of this small business law blog does not create an attorney-client relationship between you and me. THE CONTENT OF THIS BLOG SHOULD NOT BE RELIED UPON OR USED AS A SUBSTITUTE FOR PERSONAL CONSULTATION WITH A LICENSED SMALL BUSINESS ATTORNEY. THIS MAY BE ATTORNEY ADVERTISING.