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“But it’s not my job…”
Norman Clark Norman Clark

“But it’s not my job…”

...or is it?

The inability to answer this question can be costing your law firm significant losses in terms of efficiency, operating expenses, morale, and lost opportunities.

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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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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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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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“More Law” not “Big Law”
Norman Clark Norman Clark

“More Law” not “Big Law”

Service delivery capability, not size, is what will determine the profitability — and perhaps the survival — of most traditional law firms between now and 2030.

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