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Vol. 72, No. 6, June 1999 |
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Group & Prepaid Legal Service
Plans:
A Way to Build Your Practice
Is It Right for You?
Generally, plans are best suited to small-
to mid-size firms that need to expand their client base; larger
firms usually have other client-generation strategies available
to them. "The main thing, however, is that you are in general
practice," Schwartz says. "These cases are not business
problems; they don't tend to be big cases. These are standard,
everyday legal problems that people need help with. If you enjoy
that kind of practice, then this may be for you."
Another factor to consider is whether legal service plans
match your personal philosophy about law practice. It works best
when you're "philosophically in tune with the idea
that people should have better access to lawyers," Schwartz
says, "and when you're interested in the people who
call you. If you feel you already have a pretty good practice
and steady referrals, and you don't want to talk to a lot
of new people, don't do this."
Any lawyer worried about being inundated and interrupted with
members' calls would best avoid getting involved in plans,
Schwartz advises. "You have to have the attitude that those
calls are not burdens, they're opportunities," he says.
He also recommends that if a lawyer decides to work with
one plan, he or she may as well participate in several, thereby
enhancing chances for client contacts.
People skills are crucial for any lawyer in general practice,
and perhaps all the more so for attorneys involved in legal service
plans. Because plan members have legal advice readily at hand,
they may be inclined to call with trivial complaints, not just
genuine legal issues. Patience and willingness to listen are
vital attributes for plan attorneys.
Also, members - especially those paying the fees themselves
- may have unrealistic expectations. "Every once in
a while," Rodgers notes, "you run into an individual
who believes the attorney ought to be able to move mountains,
without charging any more (than the membership fee to cover basic
services). For a complicated matter, the question comes up, 'Why
am I paying a fee if I have to pay you more money to handle this
matter?' That is one challenge. You have to handle such
situations gingerly."
Lawyers' expectations also must be realistic. Attorneys
signing up with a plan and counting on having their firm's
business double in six months are setting themselves up for disappointment.
Keep in mind that this is a client-development tool, not a magic
bullet. "What I tell lawyers is that if this is a matter
of you just getting on a panel, and you're not otherwise
obligated (to pay a fee, and so on), then this is a no-brainer,"
Schwartz says. "If you're in general practice and you
want some new clients, with low-cost marketing, put your name
on the list. You may get some clients or no clients, but you
have nothing to lose."
A Square Deal All Around?
Legal service plans have raised questions and concerns, however,
for both lawyers and consumers. For attorneys, one worry is ending
up in a financial bind; the reduced rates they agree to work
for may not fairly compensate for time invested in serving plan
members. To avoid that problem, the key is to be as efficient
as possible, say attorneys with plan experience. Success from
a business standpoint hinges on delegating work to paraprofessionals
and smart use of technology - strategies many attorneys,
whether in plans or not, find vital to making it in today's
marketplace.
A Glance at Legal Service
Plans
Operating in Wisconsin
Below are a few statistics gleaned from the
1998 annual reports submitted to the State Bar by legal service
plans operating in Wisconsin. Services covered ranged from phone
consultation only to more comprehensive services.
Number of national plans operating in Wisconsin: 43
Estimated number of plan members in Wisconsin: 1.5 million (not all plans have figures)
Types of sponsors:
labor unions, corporate employers, colleges, credit unions, professional
organizations, small business owners, independent consumer groups
Most prevalent areas of inquiry (descending
order): domestic relations, landlord/tenant,
real estate, wills/estate planning, criminal, city/municipal
ordinances, creditors' rights, contracts, traffic, employment,
bankruptcy (the area accounting for the most users was "other")
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Another pitfall to safeguard against is what Domer calls "intake
burnout." An attorney can get bogged down handling inquiries
and telephone consultations, which may not lead to any substantive
legal work. "That can result in frustration for the intake
attorney," Domer says, "because he or she doesn't
see the cases through to fruition. The calls may be more counselor
as opposed to lawyer questions. So you need to rotate intake
(among the firm's attorneys) and assure there's ample
support staff." For sole practitioners, of course, there's
no one to rotate to. The only remedy is to keep reminding yourself
those calls are opportunities that could eventually lead to substantive
work.
Some critics have questioned whether plan participation could
place an attorney's professional independence at risk. For
instance, plan members might steer toward use of basic legal
services, because those already are covered in the plan, rather
than asking for other legal services they really need, but can't
or don't want to pay for themselves. And what happens if
an attorney spots a conflict of interest? Or realizes he or she
can't possibly do an adequate job on a case for the compensation
offered? Some lawyers foresee potential problems paralleling
those that doctors already face in HMOs.
But Nixon doesn't feel he's sacrificed his professional
autonomy. "I don't have problems in the plans we deal
with," Nixon says. "They do a good job of selecting
the basic services people need. I think the free market will
sort that out to some extent. If the plans aren't providing
what people want, people won't subscribe to them."
Nixon has met good cooperation in gaining approval for additional
fees for additional services, in instances when the plan pays
for those rather than the individual. Also, in good plans the
attorney always has the right to decline cases. The Wisconsin
Supreme Court Rules mandate that plans operating in this state
protect that right. "If I think there's a conflict,"
Nixon says, "or I don't think I can do the job because
I'm not getting paid a fair rate for that particular service,
I have the right to say no. The plan doesn't own you."
As for consumer concerns, critics question whether plans'
discount-rate legal services could result in lesser quality.
This echoes arguments that arise in debates about the merits
of the flat-rate fee versus the billable hour. "That's
an issue whether you're working through a legal services
plan or for an individual client," says Bill Bolger, executive
director of the National Resource Center for Consumers of Legal
Services in Gloucester, Va. "I don't think that issue
is faced in any greater degree in legal services plans."
Good plans also provide consumers formal mechanisms to register
complaints. "What a plan does offer to the consumer is,
if anything, the incentive for the lawyer to do a better job,"
Bolger contends, "because an unhappy client has recourse
through a plan. The plan is a repeat player in a way the individual
consumer is not. A plan has clout, like a major client. So the
incentive is to make sure the plan member is well taken care
of."
Bolger notes that 105 million Americans now are legal service
plan members, according to 1997 figures. He estimates a 1998
increase in membership of about 7 percent, and he expects the
number to keep climbing every year.
That's good news to lawyers like Jay Nixon, who already
have their foot in the door. "More and more consumers are
subscribing to plans, and that's making it more worthwhile
for lawyers to be involved," he says. "We have a head
start in knowing how to work with them. It's a slow wave
right now. But lawyers who represent consumers are going to have
to deal with this eventually."
Dianne Molvig operates Access Information Service, a Madison
research, writing, and editing service. She is a frequent contributor
to area publications.
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