In-house counsel's biggest headache
- Written by Gary Watkins
- Published in articles101-200

In-house counsel's biggest headache
Used with permission of the author:
Author: Jay Shepherd
jay@shepherdlawgroup.com
CEO — Attorney
Shepherd Law Group
Boston, Massachusetts, USA
www.shepherdlawgroup.com
20 November 2007
The following article originally appeared in "Gruntled Employees" at www.gruntledemployees.com on 22 October 2007.
We spend a fair amount of time whaling on other law firms for things like hourly billing. But when a firm turns out a product that's valuable and useful, we want to make sure the firm gets its due. Ginormous (which should be a word) international law firm Fulbright & Jaworski released its Fourth Annual Litigation Trends Survey Findings last week, containing 52 pages of illuminating and actionable information generated by in-house counsel. Fulbright had an independent research firm survey 253 US corporate counsel and 50 UK in-house lawyers on everything from litigation costs and billing trends to regulatory matters and class actions. And what did in-house counsel report to be their leading legal headache?
(Wait for it ...)
Labor and employment cases.
Surprised? We're not. Oh, sure: securities litigation and patent litigation and class actions get more airtime. But every company has employees. (In a word: duh.) And if you have employees, you have employment issues.
According to the survey, 51% of respondents listed labor and employment matters as one of their greatest litigation concerns. Contracts was next at 41% (and some of those no doubt include things like noncompetes and nondisclosures). Regulatory matters (24%), securities litigation (22%), and intellectual property (also 22%) rounded out the top five of 16 categories (including "other").
Similarly, when asked about pending litigation matters, 43% cited labor and employment cases as among the three most common types. Contracts (34%) was the only other category to crack the litigation Mendoza line
(20%).
At a time when many large law firms are scaling back their labor and employment departments, this area continues to keep corporate counsel awake at night. Hmmmm ...
There's a ton more data in the survey, which will likely lead to a few more posts on this site. In the meantime, you can get the survey findings free directly from Fulbright by clicking here
. (You have to give up some contact information, but I think it's a fair trade.) You can then check out the detailed data here
. Fulbright has a detailed press release and summary here
.
Other blogs have also written about the survey. Check out Manpower's Mark Toth's entry here
, Carolyn Elefant's post on Legal Blog Watch here
, and Holden Oliver's piece in What About Clients? here
.
As always, the moral is that lawyers should listen to their clients.
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Gary Watkins
Gary Watkins
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BA LLB
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