This post shares some insights from our beatoncompass CX in Professional Services reports. These are now available for Accounting, Built Environment and Consulting Engineering and Legal services.
One of the many insights in these reports for all professions is evidence that ‘increasing excellent CX and avoiding poor CX unequivocally support profitable growth‘. This post asks what it takes for a law firm to ensure every senior manager in their client feels first-class CX?
Important Finding for Law Firms
This chart summarises an important finding for law firms: Once a matter progresses beyond the Onboarding and scoping phase, C-suite CX deteriorates compared to those in the Legal department.
Bluntly put, this suggests, ‘Now we’ve started on the matter, all we need to do is work with the in-house lawyers’.
This is the reason the sidebar on the chart asks, ‘Who loses?’ when those in the C-suite are neglected relative to those in the Legal department. Our answer is this: Both the members of the C-suite and the law firm are the losers.
Given their necessary interest and the roles they play in major transactions, C-suite members need to be engaged and feel involved in the progress of matters – in ways that suit them. The lower CX scores these managers’ report indicates they feel this is not sufficiently the case. Evidence from our studies of individual law firms in the beatonbenchmarks surveys corroborates the truth of this statement.
And, self-evidently, law firms are losers because they are not maximising their opportunities for future work and referrals if they lose focus on the CX of the C-suite during and following a significant transaction.
Both lose.
This raises a critical question; how does a law firm best maintain relationships with members of the C-suite separately from a specific matter? We observe law firm leadership more often than not pursue the usual mix of digital updates, seminar invitations, social events and so on, COVID-19 restrictions aside.
The key is for individual partners to engage with their C-Suite relationships with the express purpose of determining how they can be of most value to the CEO, CFO, COO, CRO, etc when there is no particular transaction afoot. Partners need to demonstrate a genuine curiosity and empathy, be prepared to invest their time, and customise the activities of their firm to align with the specific needs of their C-suite relationships.
Invest in developing relationships with the C-suite by having valuable conversations with clients and prospects.
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