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Vol. 72, No. 11, November
1999 |
The Economics of Practicing Law
A 1998 Snapshot
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By Dianne Molvig
hile
striving to stay abreast of case law and other developments in
the legal field, attorneys somehow also must find time to monitor
the business end of law practice. Usually the latter gets limited
attention. Lawyers would, after all, much rather spend their
time being lawyers than business managers. But every attorney
knows that without proper business management, a practice soon
flounders.
The State Bar's 1998 Economics of Practice Survey is a tool
attorneys can use to evaluate the economic side of law practice.
You can use the results to assess how you compare to your peers
in several key areas: billing methods, hourly rates, overhead
costs, personal income, and more.
In
mid-1999 the Bar sent a four-page questionnaire to 3,175 active
Bar members residing in Wisconsin, representing a stratified
random sampling based on geographic regions. Questionnaires went
out to private practitioners only, unlike in previous years'
surveys, to better focus on economic issues specific to private
law practice. Attorneys sent in 955 completed questionnaires,
for a response rate of 30 percent. Of those, 932 were usable
for analysis.
Respondents tended to be more experienced attorneys. Eighty
percent were age 40 or older (68 percent in the Bar's total membership
are age 40 or older), and respondents' average tenure in practice
was 20 years. Law firm partner/shareholder described 59 percent
of respondents, while 30 percent were sole practitioners, and
the remaining 11 percent were associates.
As for other demographics, 32 percent said they practiced
in communities with populations of less than 25,000, while 31
percent were in communities of 25,000 to 99,999 residents, and
37 percent practiced in communities of 100,000-plus. Men made
up 83 percent of those responding, compared to an 80 percent
proportion of male private practitioners in Wisconsin.
The rest of this article looks at key survey findings. When
possible, these are compared to findings from the last survey
done six years ago. In many instances, however, the surveys asked
different questions, or answers were in forms not directly comparable
to those of the previous survey.
Billing Practices
Almost all surveyed attorneys (96 percent) said they bill
some of their work by the hour. The average total billable hours
for 1998 was 1,435 per attorney, with a median of 1,500 hours.
The map in Figure 1 shows a breakdown
of billable hours by six geographic regions. Looking at types
of practice, sole practitioners tended to bill fewer hours, with
an average of 1,194 hours for the year, compared to averages
of 1,496 for law firm associates and 1,535 for partners.
This finding surprises Cedarburg attorney John Stevens, a
sole practitioner and chair of the State Bar's Law Practice Section.
"The sole practitioners I know by and large spend a lot
of time working," he notes. But, he points to one explanation
why solos may have a harder time tallying as many billable hours.
"I probably work on average 50 hours a week," he says.
"If I bill out 25 of those, I'm happy, because I have to
wear a management hat, and I'm active in my community and in
the Bar. A lot of solos tend to be active in those areas. By
the time I take on those responsibilities, I'm lucky to get half
of my day billed out."
Three-fourths of surveyed lawyers said their firms have
no minimum billable hours requirement. Of those who do work under
such a requirement, 21 percent said the minimum had increased
during the past two years. The average annual billable hours
among this group is up to 1,686 (median 1,800).
The vast majority of respondents (88 percent) said their firms
give no credit on an hour-for-hour basis for pro bono activities.
Less than 1 percent credit pro bono on a prorated basis.
While the billable hour is the predominant billing practice,
other billing methods also have gained acceptance. (See
Figure 2.) Seventy-two percent of surveyed
attorneys said they bill some of their work by flat fee. Sole
practitioners are the most likely to use flat fees (82 percent,
compared to 63 percent for law firm associates and 69 percent
for law firm partners). The tendency to bill by flat fee drops
as size of firm climbs. It also drops as size of town increases.
Figure 3 shows a breakdown for flat-fee
usage by type of legal service provided.
As Baldwin attorney and State Bar Law Practice Section member
Tom Schumacher sees it, the migration to the flat fee largely
has been driven by technology. "Many of our processes are
now streamlined from start to finish," Schumacher says.
"What took me five or six hours when I started practicing
back in the early 1980s now takes me half an hour. If I billed
for that on an hourly basis, I'd go broke fast."
The flat fee allows an attorney to factor in not only his
or her time and expertise but also investments in technology
and other overhead. Also, with flat fees, clients know what to
expect up front, Schumacher says. "If they're coming to
a lawyer and they think they're going to spend a lot of money,"
he notes, "you can tell them what you're going to do and
that it will cost 'x' dollars. Clients are a lot more receptive
to that."
Money In, Money Out
When they do use an hourly rate, respondents reported an average
rate of $139 and a median of $130. Bear in mind that the average
respondent had been in practice for 20 years, which may have
skewed these numbers upward. The map in Figure
1 shows a breakdown of average hourly rates by region. Figure 4 shows average hourly rates by practice
area.
Statewide, respondents reported a wide range in average hourly
rates - from $45 to $315. Sole practitioners had a lower average
rate ($117 per hour) than law firm partners ($151) and associates
($127). As law firm size increased, so did hourly rates. Rates
climbed as attorneys had more experience as well. Women attorneys
charged less ($122) than men ($142), which may be a reflection
of the fact that, overall, women respondents had fewer years
of practice experience. The average years in private practice
for male respondents was 21, while it was 12 years for female
respondents.
In the 1992 survey (published in the October 1993 Wisconsin
Lawyer), the average hourly rate was $116 (median $105),
translating into a 19.8 percent increase in the average from
1992 to 1998. Much of this increase could be due to rising overhead
costs, Schumacher suggests. "Employee costs drive this somewhat,"
he says. "We've found it's better to pay our support staff
well and keep them, as opposed to losing them and having to retrain
somebody else from scratch."
Office overhead costs for 1998 averaged $129,888, with a median
of $77,698. Nearly half (47 percent) of respondents said their
office overhead was below $75,000, while 28 percent stated it
was in the $75,000-to-$124,999 range, and 26 percent reported
it was $125,000 or higher. Overhead figures cannot be compared
for 1998 and 1992, as the 1992 survey asked attorneys to express
their overhead costs as a percentage of their hourly rate. That
was difficult for most of those respondents to do, as more than
half said they had only "moderate" or "little"
confidence in their answers. This year's survey attempted to
avoid that problem by requesting a dollar figure, asking, "What
were your 1998 overhead costs?"
Expenses Billed to Clients
The questionnaire asked respondents how often they billed
clients for various expenses, on a scale of "always"
to "never." Figure 5 shows the
results. Some law practice observers are perplexed about why
more often than not, attorneys refrain from billing for paralegal/legal
assistant time. "In this day and age, with so much pressure
on lawyers to keep their fees down on behalf of clients, it's
incredible to me that they aren't billing more of their paralegals'
time," says James Wilber of the Midwest office of Altman
Weil Inc. in Milwaukee, a management consultant firm for attorneys.
In today's practice climate, firms need to do all they can
to leverage their paralegals' time, Wilber emphasizes. "Leverage
in a law firm is usually nonowner professional time that's billed
to clients," he explains. "Whatever those professionals
bring in over and above the cost of having them there goes to
the profits of the law firm. Having associates is one way you
do that; you make a profit off them. That's the name of the economic
game in law."
Paralegals should play the same role in firm economics, Wilber
says. "In many firms today," he notes, "use of
paralegals - and clearly that means recording their billable
time and billing for it - is at an all-time high. It's been growing
every year for several years. It's amazing to me that the survey's
number shows what it does. It runs counter to the trend we see."
Driving that trend is client preference, he adds. Clients
would rather pay the much lower paralegal rate whenever possible.
What's more, paralegal time is one expense clients are happy
to pay. "They don't like being billed for copying - or at
least for more than the actual cost of it - or for postage,"
Wilber says. "They think that's kind of nickel-and-diming
them. But studies show that clients clearly recognize paralegal
services as valuable, over and above the services they're getting
from the lawyer. That makes the survey's finding all the more
astounding to me. And all the more reason why firms [that are]
not billing paralegal time should be meeting to find out if they
want to change that."
Another factor could be entering into the survey's finding.
Although the questionnaire had separate lines to denote billing
for paralegal time and secretarial time, some lawyers still may
have included secretarial time in the line about paralegals.
That would skew the result because, as Figure 5 shows, lawyers
rarely bill clients for secretarial time.
Why would respondents focus on secretarial services in answering
the paralegal question?
"I think that's where the lawyer's ego comes into play
a little bit," Stevens points out. "I think there are
lots of lawyers who want to say, 'Oh yes, I have a legal assistant.'
But as you talk with them, you find out what the (legal assistant)
is doing is a skilled legal secretary's job, rather than meeting
with clients and assembling facts," which are more in line
with typical paralegal duties.
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