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Building a Culture of Quality in Your Organization
Norman Clark Norman Clark

Building a Culture of Quality in Your Organization

Introducing a successful quality assurance system usually requires profound changes in how people think about their work, how they interact with each other and clients, and how they prioritize and deliver legal services.

A culture of quality challenges traditional assumptions about how lawyers and staff contribute to the profitability of the firm and how they add value in their respective roles.

It can be challenging, but it is absolutely necessary for sustainable success in a competitive environment that has very little tolerance for poor service quality.

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The Transformation of a Law Firm
Norman Clark Norman Clark

The Transformation of a Law Firm

Slogans and strategic plans do not build a quality culture in a law firm.

Actions do.

Deming's Fourteenth Point, "Take Action to Accomplish the Transformation," is a clarion call to organizations seeking substantial improvement in every aspect of their collective and individual performance.

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Invest in professional development.
Norman Clark Norman Clark

Invest in professional development.

The most productive investment a law firm can make is in the continuing professional education of its people.

W. Edwards Deming’s Thirteenth Point of quality management, "Encourage Education and Self-Improvement for Everyone," holds profound relevance for law firms. In a profession defined by its adherence to precedent and its response to evolving legal landscapes, the emphasis on continuous learning becomes not just an asset, but a necessity.

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Removing Barriers to Pride and Professionalism
Norman Clark Norman Clark

Removing Barriers to Pride and Professionalism

Most law firms talk a lot about their "professional quality."

Most of them also unwittingly obstruct it.

By identifying and dismantling the barriers that prevent legal professionals from taking pride in their work, law firms can unlock a higher level of personal satisfaction and commitment, leading to superior service, client loyalty, and overall firm success.

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Rethinking Performance Metrics
Norman Clark Norman Clark

Rethinking Performance Metrics

Old paradigms about how to measure performance might be preventing, rather than motivating, your law firm's success. 

Law firms thrive on the quality of their legal services and client relationships. In this context, qualitative goals, not just rigid numbers, are more indicative of progress and can have greater diagnostic value in detecting and addressing problems before they become crises.

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Beyond Mere Words
Norman Clark Norman Clark

Beyond Mere Words

Empty slogans, exhortations to work harder, and irrelevant "best practices" are not only ineffective; they often are counterproductive. 

They do not promote clarity. Instead, most people are left to wander in the fog, from data point to data point, without understanding where they are going or why.

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Tear Down the Silos
Norman Clark Norman Clark

Tear Down the Silos

Is your law firm an integrated professional business or a collection of fiefdoms?

This is the tenth in a series of sixteen articles that will explore the relevance and, for some law firms the existential importance, of W. Edwards Deming's Fourteen Points.

Deming’s ninth point in his Fourteen Points of Total Quality Management stresses a vital, yet often overlooked, aspect of organizational effectiveness: "Break down barriers between departments." As the practice of law becomes more complex and competitive, with greater challenges to sustainable profitability, this point is more important than ever before, even among smaller firms who might have “silos” that are so small as not to be noticeable.

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Driving Fear Out of Law Firms
Norman Clark Norman Clark

Driving Fear Out of Law Firms

Law firm leaders must foster environments in which everyone feels secure and valued. 

This is the ninth in a series of sixteen articles that will explore the relevance and, for some law firms the existential importance, of W. Edwards Deming's Fourteen Points, especially for small and midsize law firms.

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Leading the Way to Quality in Legal Services
Norman Clark Norman Clark

Leading the Way to Quality in Legal Services

The legal services industry is awash in advice about leadership. How can Deming's Seventh Point build better leadership in law firms?

Here are five practical actions that Walker Clark clients are taking that are consistent with Deming’s Seventh Point and the outcomes that they are experiencing from each one.

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Training: A Strategic Imperative
Norman Clark Norman Clark

Training: A Strategic Imperative

Training is not just a nice fringe benefit in law firms. It is an essential investment.

Training is not limited to understanding the intricacies of the law or mastering courtroom strategies. It extends to client interactions, administrative tasks, technological adoption, and even skills such as communication and collaboration. Making training an institution in a law firm ensures that everyone, from senior partners to administrative staff, operate at peak efficiency and with consistent standards.

It’s as important as paying the electric bill.

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Continuous Improvement
Norman Clark Norman Clark

Continuous Improvement

To remain competitive and profitable in today's legal services market, law firms need to continuously improve how they work.

The fifth of W. Edwards Deming's Fourteen Points, Improve Constantly and Forever the System of Production and Service, calls for a never-ending commitment to enhancing quality and efficiency within an organization. This principle has profound implications for law firms, impacting not only day-to-day internal operations but also bottom-line profitability.

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End the practice of awarding business based on price.
Norman Clark Norman Clark

End the practice of awarding business based on price.

In an increasingly competitive landscape, law firms, like any business, might feel compelled to make decisions based on price alone.

However, the fourth of W. Edwards Deming's Fourteen Points for better management warned against this practice, arguing that cost should not be the primary consideration in business decisions. Instead, he championed a more holistic approach that weighs quality and long-term value alongside price.

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Cease dependence on inspection.
Norman Clark Norman Clark

Cease dependence on inspection.

"Cease dependence on inspection," W. Edwards Deming's third point for effective management, is perhaps one of the least understood principles in the context of service industries like law firms.

Conventionally, it translates into the notion that quality should not be an afterthought checked through after-the-fact inspections but ingrained in every step of the production process.

For law firms, this means shifting the focus from reactive measures to proactive strategies that enhance the quality of legal services by reducing or eliminating altogether the causes of mistakes and rework.

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Adopt the new philosophy.
Norman Clark Norman Clark

Adopt the new philosophy.

The second challenge in W. Edward Deming's Fourteen Points is Adopt the New Philosophy.  It is particularly relevant in today's legal services industry, especially as many traditional law firms try to build and sustain a collaborative and productive workplace culture.

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Constancy of Purpose
Norman Clark Norman Clark

Constancy of Purpose

This is the second of a series of sixteen articles that will explore the relevance and, for some law firms the existential importance, of W. Edwards Deming's Fourteen Points, especially for small and midsize law firms.

The first of W. Edwards Deming's Fourteen Points for effective management calls for organizations to "Create Constancy of Purpose for Improving Products and Services." How can law firms do this in the face of changing client expectations and market dynamics?

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Why Law Firms Need Deming’s Fourteen Points Now More Than Ever
Norman Clark Norman Clark

Why Law Firms Need Deming’s Fourteen Points Now More Than Ever

Quality service, not price, rankings, or size, is what will differentiate successful law from from those that merely survive the 2020s.

Delivering the best quality legal services is a sincere aspiration of almost every law firm. For most of them, however, the word quality is little more than a slogan on their websites.

This is the first of a series of sixteen articles that will explore the relevance and, for some law firms, the existential importance, of W. Edwards Deming's Fourteen Points.

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Fix the work first...
Norman Clark Norman Clark

Fix the work first...

If you apply technology — even artificial intelligence — to a flawed work process, you will only make mistakes and lose money faster.

Before a law firm applies a technological tool or system to its internal operations, especially at the practice group level, it should first analyze, understand, and implement responses to weaknesses in the internal systems and processes by which it prepares and delivers legal services to clients.

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Artificial Intelligence: A Powerful Tool to Improve Service Quality
Norman Clark Norman Clark

Artificial Intelligence: A Powerful Tool to Improve Service Quality

In today's highly competitive markets for legal service, it is service quality, not technical expertise, that will differentiate your law firm from your equally well-qualified competitors.

Artificial intelligence will never be a substitute for quality management, but it can provide powerful diagnostic tools and methods to build sustainable quality into every aspect of your practice. 

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Quality management could be your law firm’s best investment.
Norman Clark Norman Clark

Quality management could be your law firm’s best investment.

In an increasingly competitive legal market, law firms must constantly adapt and evolve to stay ahead.

While many firms focus on expanding their client base, increasing billable hours, or adopting the latest technology, a crucial factor in determining long-term success lies in the effective quality management of internal work processes. 

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Leadership in a Quality-Driven Law Firm
Norman Clark Norman Clark

Leadership in a Quality-Driven Law Firm

In a quality-driven professional culture, leadership takes on a unique and important role. Quality-driven law firms focus on delivering high-quality products and services to their clients, “the first time and every time," and effective leadership is essential in achieving this goal.

At the heart of quality-driven leadership is the ability to inspire and empower everyone in the firm to strive for excellence in everything they do. Leaders in a quality-driven culture understand that quality is not just a goal, but a way of doing things. They communicate this vision clearly to their teams and and colleagues and set high standards for performance and accountability.

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