Legal Teams: Why You Need to Get Your Hands Dirty with Process – Part 1
In our recent No Bull Workshop, some key themes emerged from our room full of Legal Operations enthusiasts, that challenge accepted conventions.
The first was the hidden innovation opportunity that’s locked up in the content that in-house lawyers generate every day (check out our last blog for a recap on that discussion.)
The second big theme was process: the need for legal teams to get involved with business processes.
That’s right, legal process improvement actually means business process improvement.
We repeatedly hear that businesses complain that in-house lawyers overcomplicate things with too much process. But legal teams struggle to work with and rein in chaotic business practices. So, is there too little process or too much?
Really, it’s the lack of process where it’s most needed. Especially where business and legal processes interface. This is what causes legal teams to get overwhelmed, and to fail to keep up with the demands of the business.
In this first part of our #NoBullSeries two-part blog, we’ll dig into why Legal Process Improvement is so crucial for legal teams, what it really means, and how to spot the problem areas.
Good at procedure, bad at process
Lawyers have not traditionally done “process”. A big part of a legal team’s job is sticking to procedures — whether it’s handling transactions, managing compliance, or handling disputes.
But here’s the thing: the procedures legal teams are good at managing tend to focus on the legal work, not the overall business transaction.
Lawyers are also “keepers of risk” so will introduce processes to manage legal risk. But that can easily lead to over-regulation and bottlenecks.
What lawyers are not trained to do is to optimise, and to think about process strategically, in a way that aligns Legal Operations with the business’s goals. Yet it’s an essential skill that lawyers must learn and apply, because no legal process exists in isolation from the business context.
Trying to do it in isolation will always result in misalignments where it matters most: where that legal process interfaces with a business process (or business realpolitik) that it hasn’t accounted for.
To paraphrase Mike Tyson, you don’t want your legal process to get punched in the face.
The Biggest Gap in Process Management for Legal Teams
The biggest gap in legal process management can be summed up in one word: misalignment.
There are lots of kinds of misalignments: in expectations, in how risk is managed, in understanding who’s responsible for what, and just poor communication. These gaps often show up as mixed signals between legal and business teams about what success looks like, different takes on risk versus reward, and confusion over who’s supposed to be doing what.
These misalignments don’t just slow things down. They can create real risks for the business.
- If in-house legal and business teams aren’t on the same page about how much risk they’re willing to take on in a particular type of deal, it can lead to drawn-out negotiations and internal back-and-forths that delay signature and lengthen time-to-revenue.
- Lack of internal alignment often results in mixed signals to the other side and therefore reduced trust.
- And if there is no clear process for arriving at a final risk decision, that can lead to signing bad deals.
When there’s no clear understanding of who’s handling which tasks, or what the default legal positions are, or what the approval process is, and which decisions require approval, that’s when you get delays, bad decisions, missed opportunities and finger-pointing.
But here’s the crux of it: these misalignments aren’t just process problems. They are cross-functional. And that means they’re people problems.
When the foundation isn’t solid, when people aren’t aligned, introducing new processes is like building on sand. This is where legal teams hit roadblocks or implement processes that collapse at first contact with the real world.
Why Legal Teams Struggle with Process and the Broader Impact on Legal Operations
Even when legal teams (re)design processes, we frequently hear the complaint that the business isn’t following them, or that there are too many. So, why do legal teams struggle with embedding new or improved processes?
One big reason is that lawyers aren’t typically process optimisation experts. Legal training does not include the skills needed to design and implement processes that go beyond the legal work and into the broader business operations. Yet there is no legal process that isn’t part of a bigger business process.
There’s also a common misconception that technology is the best way to solve process problems. But while technology can help, it’s not a magic fix. In fact, legal technology projects often have a high failure rate (70 – 80%), because they’re often rolled out without first fixing the underlying process issues. Technology speeds up and scales process. If the process isn’t good, even the most advanced tech won’t get you the results you’re after.
Another challenge is that legal process issues often start with a more fundamental upstream problem: lack of clarity. Lack of clarity emerges from poorly drafted documents that are tough to understand, or big-picture misalignments at leadership level. Often teams will rush to design a legal process and present it to the business as a done deal only to find that the business isn’t on the same page and doesn’t like it. These are the elephants in the room that get ignored while people tinker with granular adjustments to the downstream processes.
Tackling these issues requires an honest diagnosis of the problem, having some tough conversations upfront and driving meaningful change at the root, rather than just slapping on a quick fix.
Why Do Legal Departments need to get involved with Process?
Poor process management results in the wrong rules, in the wrong places. That might mean the legal team itself lacking the clear, repeatable processes required to make their work fast and efficient. Or it could be overly rigid processes that favour risk reduction over outcomes. Or processes that are just unclear, badly defined and poorly communicated. Or the absence of a process at the interface between legal and business where clarity is needed. Or even a poorly articulated process that isn’t owned by legal, but which legal touches and could help fix.
Either way, the impact on the business can be serious:
- Without a clear process for handling routine business-as-usual (BAU) sales contracts, the business will be highly dependent on the legal team for getting contracts out, and legal will be inundated with repeat queries, resulting in a slower sales process.
- Without a clear policy on fall-back positions, escalation and approval, negotiations can drag on for months, wasting resources and affecting sales figures.
- If legal teams expect business teams to take on tasks that were traditionally handled by legal without giving them the proper training and tools, it can lead to frustration, poor adoption and mistakes. A common example is when in-house legal teams expect the business to self-serve on routine documents using automation but doesn’t think through the change management process.
- A sales team might close a deal and expect it to be wrapped up in days, only to discover that the legal process is just getting started leading to months of back-and-forth. A mismatch between legal process timelines and what the business expects.
These kinds of misalignment not only delay deals, but also strain the relationship between legal teams and business teams. Legal teams get bogged down with routine requests, leaving no time for more strategic, forward-thinking work. Eventually the business gets blindsided by unexpected changes in the compliance landscape, or unbudgeted external legal costs because of a lack of legal resource for strategic projects. And of course, it negatively impacts the lawyers’ wellbeing – a huge topic in its own right that we’ll come back to again and again.
How Can Legal Teams Identify Where Processes Are Needed?
So, how do you know where Legal Process Improvement is needed?
Here’s a simple three-step framework to spot the red flags:
- Business dissatisfaction: If business teams are unhappy with the speed and turnaround of legal services, that means the legal team lacks a repeatable systematic way of providing that service. If there is frequent confusion about how things get done, that means either the business or legal processes are unclear (or both), or the way in which the legal process interfaces with the business process is misaligned.
- Legal team pressure: When team members feel like they’re constantly under pressure and can’t do their best work because they’re always putting out fires and dealing with urgent, routine tasks, that suggests that the routine work needs to be optimised.
- Relying on external law firms for routine work. If legal teams are outsourcing routine work to law firms, it’s time to look at why those processes aren’t being handled in-house. External legal advice is expensive and is best used for highly technical or high-risk work. Routine work should be done in-house, automated or outsourced to low-cost service providers, all of which needs a good process to make it work.
Legal teams must introduce processes where repeatability and clarity are needed. And simplify processes where they are creating too many frictions. They must get their hands dirty not only with their own processes (their Legal Operations), but with the business processes they interact with, too. Lawyers can bring a unique perspective to business processes and are often well placed to act as a glue between business functions – precisely because they interact directly with so many of them.
Legal teams must be proactive in this. It’s better to influence or even lead and be seen as a value-add, than to have fingers pointed at you when things go wrong.
Conclusion: Wrapping Up Part 1 of Legal Process Improvement
We’ve kicked off this two-part series by challenging the myth (among lawyers) that they’re not meant to be business process experts. And the myth among business teams that lawyers just like to overcomplicate things. The reality? A lack of process where it’s most needed, and too much process where simpler light-touch regulation and trust-based systems could do a better job.
Misalignments in expectations, risk management and responsibilities aren’t just process problems — they’re people problems. That means people (including lawyers) need to get stuck in to solve them. Without that, even the latest most sophisticated technology won’t help.
In part two of this blog series, we’ll dive into the “how” of it all — how to implement and integrate these processes so they work.
Ready to take action? If your legal team needs help with Legal Process Design, reach out to the team at LexSolutions.
18 Sep
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