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Friday, May 30, 2008

Time to Raise Your Rates!


Over the past several years, I have noted that large firms continue to raise their standard rates while smaller firms have raised rates modestly, if at all. At least part of the reason is that big firms have higher cost structures, but they also have a world view that their legal services are not commodity services. Smaller firms, have lower cost structures, but seem to view their services as commodities and, therefore, more price sensitive.

I have urged smaller firms for some time to raise their rates and do it in light of the value they provide to clients, not in response to perceived economic trends.  However, now comes this post from the Harvard Business Press to raise rates and raise them now. Driven by the rapidly escalating cost of energy and other commodities, all businesses--including law firms will be squeezed. It is best to get ahead of the curve so that if the current economic trends continue your firm will have raised rates and can better withstand cost increases. Those increases will be magnified further when employees begin seek higher pay increases to cope with their own rising household costs.

Raising rates is part art, part science, and must be accomplished with open and direct communication to existing clients, especially those with open-ended engagement agreements. Many firms tend to want to only raise their rates of new clients; however, with new clients, it often takes six months or longer to have any impact on cash flow. Now is not the time to be timid.

Thursday, May 29, 2008

Lawyers Mourn the Death of Earle Hagen


Earle Hagen was, I am sure, a good client for his intellectual property lawyer, but lawyers everywhere are mourning his death earlier this week. Mr. Hagen, unknown to most of us by name, is the composer and whistler of the theme song to The Andy Griffith Show, a comedy icon from the childhood of baby-boom lawyers and beyond.  The simple, happy-go-lucky song takes us back to a time and place in America when the local sheriff was the law and prisoners had spare keys.  Whenever I hear it, it soothes the spirit and evokes images of a lazy summer afternoon. I highly recommend a dose of the song whenever the trials and tribulations of the practice of law get you down. Better yet, take a break and watch an episode to hear the song and watch the comedic talents of Andy Taylor and Barney Fife.  Also good for the soul!

The song, titled The Fishing Hole, according to this article, was written by Hagen in less than an hour. I sure hope he wasn't billing by the hour.

In addition to The Fishing Hole, Hagen also penned the theme songs to I Spy, Gomer Pyle, USMC, and The Dick Van Dyke Show.  Hagen had other notable musical accomplishments, but none, in my eyes, so memorable as these.

Thanks, Mr. Hagen!