Poor governance is one of the most common — and most underestimated — causes of law firm underperformance. When decision-making is unclear, accountability is diffuse, or management authority is undermined by partner politics, the entire firm pays the price: in lost opportunities, in partner friction, and ultimately in profitability.
Profits for Partners conducts comprehensive governance reviews that examine how your firm makes decisions, who is accountable for what, and whether the structures you have in place are fit for the size and complexity of your practice today. We then help you redesign those structures in a way that partners will accept and support.
Firm Governance Review
A thorough, objective assessment of your firm's current governance model — including management structure, partner roles and accountabilities, decision-making processes, and the informal dynamics that often matter as much as the formal ones.
- Review of management structure and partner roles
- Assessment of decision-making authority and escalation paths
- Partner and staff interviews to understand how governance actually works in practice
- Identification of gaps, overlaps, and sources of friction
- Benchmarking against governance models at comparable firms
- Recommendations for structural redesign with partner buy-in strategies
Why Governance Matters
Law firms are partnerships, which means governance is inherently complex. Partners are simultaneously owners, managers, and producers — and those roles create competing interests that governance structures must resolve. Without clear rules of the road, even high-performing firms find themselves mired in internal politics rather than focused on clients and growth.
Well-designed governance gives managing partners the authority they need to lead effectively, gives partners confidence that decisions are being made fairly, and creates the accountability structures that allow the firm to hold itself to its own standards.
Implementation Support
Governance recommendations are only valuable if they get implemented. Colin works with firm leadership to develop a communication and change management approach that brings partners along — explaining the rationale, addressing concerns, and building the consensus needed to make new structures stick.
- Change management planning for governance transitions
- Partner communication strategies
- Phased implementation planning where needed
- Ongoing advisory support during the transition period