Legal Teams: Why You Need to Get Your Hands Dirty with Process – Part 2
In Part One of this blog series, we debunked the binary way in which lawyers — and the business users they serve – view process. Spoiler alert: the real issue isn’t too much or too little process, it’s a lack of process where it’s needed most. And that’s often the result of misalignments in expectations, responsibilities, and attitudes to risk, which leaves legal teams juggling routine tasks instead of tackling high-value work.
Now, in Part Two, we’re rolling up our sleeves and getting into the nitty-gritty: how to get the right processes in the right places and overcome the inevitable challenges along the way.
Understanding the purpose of processes
Or find your “why” to find your way
It’s tempting to jump headfirst into fixing a process: understanding the problem and listing out requirements. But what about the most important question of all: why?
Without a clear purpose, how do you know what you are aiming for? You need to know the purpose of your voyage before you pick a destination or plot your course.
Otherwise, you are just going to add complexity without streamlining.
Here is what we suggest doing first:
- Understand the purpose: What are you trying to achieve? Your goal might be to speed up contracting, but to what end? Is it to meet a growing sales pipeline? Or to reduce cost? Or to impress new customers? Or to free up lawyer time to prevent attrition and burnout? It is critical for the success of your project to articulate this from the outset.
- Understand users: Who will use this process? What are their needs? Processes need to work not just for the legal team but for everyone involved — sales, procurement, prospective customers, auditors, and external stakeholders — who scrutinise the business. If your process doesn’t work for your users, it will fail.
- Diagnose the problem: Spend time mapping out the current process and documents and diagnosing where things are going wrong. Where are the delays? Where does friction occur? What do your users think? Without a brutally honest diagnosis, you won’t be able to get to the root of the issue.
Let’s say your legal team handles contract reviews, and getting a clear report out to the business is taking too long. You might be tempted to investigate an AI review tool or throw more resources at the problem. But let’s imagine you’ve done the process groundwork:
- articulated a purpose: to be more strategic and to empower the business
- understood that your key users include Finance and the account lead on the other side
- mapped the process, and realised that legal turn-around is fast, but approval of high-risk fall-backs bounce between the business and finance in a never-ending loop.
This might lead you to new insights. Like, what if you allow the business to progress the lower-risk topics with the account lead straight away? Instead of all that chasing, what if the lawyers invested their energy into agreeing a simple decision matrix with finance?
The right foundational work will reveal solutions that are otherwise hidden from view.
Balancing the need for new processes — without becoming overly bureaucratic
Or more grease, less fat.
Legal teams walk a fine line. More process could reduce risk and increase efficiency, but the additional workload might not be worth the upside. Or, even worse, it could just create more red tape – reducing efficiency and giving people an excuse to work around the system!
The key to avoiding this trap is prioritisation and user-centricity.
- Prioritise, prioritise, prioritise. Not every problem needs to be solved right away. Based on your foundational discovery work, grab the low-hanging fruit that will have the biggest impact, and tackle the bigger juicier problems in a more cadenced manner.
- Be user centric. Processes must work for all users, not just the legal team. If a process frustrates your business counterparts, then it’s broken, no matter how well it works for legal.
- Involve stakeholders early. One of the most common mistakes in process design is leaving key stakeholders out. Don’t drop a new process on your users (or their boss!) and expect them to embrace it when you try to sell it to them. Bring them along for the ride from day one and they will sell the solution for you.
- Balance risk with outcomes. Some legal processes can be too rigid, trying to account for every possible risk. But here’s the thing. Processes that are overly fool proof are more likely to break the first time something unexpected happens. Legal teams need to create flexible processes that allow for some wiggle room without becoming bottlenecks themselves.
Let’s look at sales contracts again (we love sales contracts!) Imagine a legal team that’s bogged down reviewing every single sales contract, no matter how standard or low value the deal might be, presumably because they don’t trust the business. If they’re forced to prioritise, they might introduce a tiered review process: high-value or complex contracts still go through a full legal review, while lower-risk, standard contracts are fast-tracked with less scrutiny. Well, that speeds things up but leaves the team a bit nervous. Now, if the team also puts their users first, they might recognise that the sales team are a smart bunch who want to be empowered. So, they might start trusting the business to handle some contracts with a predefined set of approved fall-backs. So, the team can deliver a faster process with an acceptable level of risk – because they’ve been prioritised and empathised with.
Aligning legal processes with broader business operations
Or — fourth leg, not fifth!
Legal teams must never work in a vacuum. When legal and business processes are disconnected, you get bottlenecks and misalignments. But when legal is a strategic partner that’s well integrated into the wider business, legal processes don’t just manage risk, they help the company move faster and achieve its goals.
Two critical things need to happen for this to occur:
(a) the legal team must really understand the business process (and the users who operate or are impacted by it, and what drives them) before trying to fix the legal process.
(b) the legal team must involve the business throughout, not invent and build in isolation.
LexSolutions’ blueprint for aligning legal processes
Here’s a practical cheat sheet for implementing better processes:
- Spend the right amount of time on discovery. Articulate your purpose. Always know why you’re implementing a process.
- Understand what your users need and have conversations at the leadership level to set expectations.
- Don’t try to fix everything at once. Conduct a discovery process and focus on the biggest-impact issues first.
- Begin with what you already know. If you’re redesigning a contract process, start by simplifying the contract itself. Focus on making it more user-centric and outcome-focused. Once that’s nailed down, you can turn your attention to aligning processes and only then think about adding technology.
- Don’t jump to tech too soon. The temptation to throw technology at a problem is strong. But, if you’re automating a bad process, all you’ll get is a faster and more embedded bad process. Get the documents and processes right first.
- Upskill the team in legal design. Legal design is a mindset and methodology for making documents, processes, and workflows clear, simple, and functional. It will help your team to solve problems in a more creative user-centric way. It’s a critical skill set for legal teams looking to align with business needs.
Key trends and technologies impacting process management
Or wood and trees
Several trends are starting to reshape how legal teams look at process.
- AI as an accelerator of self-serve: AI chatbots and agents will help business users to handle routine tasks, like contract generation and legal queries, without waiting on legal. This will free up legal teams to focus on more complex, high-value work.
- Smart legal services: Legal teams will increasingly use automation and data to identify the high-risk areas they need to prioritise, while empowering business teams to manage routine matters autonomously.
- Legal Design: The success of technology will depend not only on good, structured data, but also on whether the underlying processes and documents are user centric. For the smartest legal teams, legal design will be an increasingly important part of the toolkit for making sense of — and staying relevant — in an increasingly complex world.
Starting your legal team’s process improvement journey
Make it roll, make it stick
If you’re just starting out on your process improvement journey, here’s some extra secret sauce from LexSolutions.
- Talk to people who’ve done it before. Learn from those who’ve gone through the process already. Their insights can help you avoid common mistakes.
- Create a prioritised roadmap that laser focusses on low hanging fruit. But keep it flexible. Your needs might change, and complex systems are a hard nut to crack. Don’t over-commit to complex solutions and big projects until you know what you’re doing.
- Treat process improvement as an incremental journey, not a series of projects. So, experiment, iterate frequently and then scale. Small, steady changes will have a bigger impact over time.
- Make the process improvement journey exciting. Engage the team, find champions, and use legal design to make the entire effort more user-centric, outcome-focused – and who knows, maybe even fun.
It goes without saying that our team of process improvement experts are on hand to help your legal team wherever you are on your journey.
Ready to get your hands dirty with process improvement? Or need to unstick a stuck project? Contact LexSolutions to learn how we can help your legal team implement smarter processes and align them with your business goals.
9 Oct
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