var googletag = googletag || {}; googletag.cmd = googletag.cmd || []; googletag.cmd.push(function() { googletag.pubads().disableInitialLoad(); });
device = device.default;
//this function refreshes [adhesion] ad slot every 60 second and makes prebid bid on it every 60 seconds // Set timer to refresh slot every 60 seconds function setIntervalMobile() { if (!device.mobile()) return if (adhesion) setInterval(function(){ googletag.pubads().refresh([adhesion]); }, 60000); } if(device.desktop()) { googletag.cmd.push(function() { leaderboard_top = googletag.defineSlot('/22018898626/LC_Article_detail_page', [728, 90], 'div-gpt-ad-1591620860846-0').setTargeting('pos', ['1']).setTargeting('div_id', ['leaderboard_top']).addService(googletag.pubads()); googletag.pubads().collapseEmptyDivs(); googletag.enableServices(); }); } else if(device.tablet()) { googletag.cmd.push(function() { leaderboard_top = googletag.defineSlot('/22018898626/LC_Article_detail_page', [320, 50], 'div-gpt-ad-1591620860846-0').setTargeting('pos', ['1']).setTargeting('div_id', ['leaderboard_top']).addService(googletag.pubads()); googletag.pubads().collapseEmptyDivs(); googletag.enableServices(); }); } else if(device.mobile()) { googletag.cmd.push(function() { leaderboard_top = googletag.defineSlot('/22018898626/LC_Article_detail_page', [320, 50], 'div-gpt-ad-1591620860846-0').setTargeting('pos', ['1']).setTargeting('div_id', ['leaderboard_top']).addService(googletag.pubads()); googletag.pubads().collapseEmptyDivs(); googletag.enableServices(); }); } googletag.cmd.push(function() { // Enable lazy loading with... googletag.pubads().enableLazyLoad({ // Fetch slots within 5 viewports. // fetchMarginPercent: 500, fetchMarginPercent: 100, // Render slots within 2 viewports. // renderMarginPercent: 200, renderMarginPercent: 100, // Double the above values on mobile, where viewports are smaller // and users tend to scroll faster. mobileScaling: 2.0 }); });

How Attorneys Can Avoid Lay-Offs: A Guide to Timetables and Proactive Strategies

published February 15, 2023

( 102 votes, average: 4.5 out of 5)

What do you think about this article? Rate it using the stars above and let us know what you think in the comments below.
Summary

In today's ever-changing job market, layoffs are becoming more and more common. If you feel like your job may be on the line, you may be asking yourself, "Am I about to be laid off?" Identifying the signs that signal a possible job loss can be difficult, but there are some common signs to look out for.

To start, look at your company's overall performance and your own performance. If your company is struggling financially, or if your performance has been less than stellar, it may increase your risk of being laid off. Additionally, watch out for changes in upper-level management, such as executives leaving or new employees coming in. Significant changes like this could signal a reorganization or restructuring of the company that could include layoffs.

Alongside this, pay attention to any shifts in the workplace culture. If morale is dropping and communication between management and employees is decreasing, it could be a sign that something is amiss. Furthermore, if your company is cutting back on expenses or if you have recently been assigned additional tasks outside of your job's scope of duties, you may want to take extra caution.

Finally, if you're worried that you may be laid off, it may be beneficial to start looking into other job opportunities. This way, you won't miss out on new opportunities if the layoff does occur. Even if you don't find a new job soon, it's important to remain positive and professional, as you don't want to make your current situation worse.

All in all, layoffs are an unfortunate reality in today's job market. If you think you may be at risk of losing your job, be aware of the signs and make sure to take the necessary steps to protect yourself. By being prepared and proactive, you can still come out of a layoff in a better position.

If you're worried about a possible layoff, there are several signs to watch out for. Look for changes in the company's financial performance, shifts in upper-level management, declining morale, and cutbacks in expenses. Additionally, it may be beneficial to start looking into other job opportunities. By being prepared and proactive, you can mitigate the negative impacts of a layoff and come out in a better position.
QUESTIONS ANSWERED IN THIS ARTICLE
 

Recent Economic Troubles

With the economic downturn that has taken place in the past year, layoffs have become more common. With the stock market plummeting, companies are struggling to maintain a profit. This has led to a noticeable increase in layoffs. As a result, it is important to be prepared and understand the situation, in case you find yourself let go from your job.
 

Employment Rights

In the United States, there are certain rights that employers and employees have surrounding layoffs. Employers must provide from notice to employees in the event of a layoff, as well as pay for any unused vacation time and provide severance packages. There are also laws which protect employees from being discriminated against on the basis of certain factors, such as race, gender, or age.
 

Layoff Warning Signs

It is important to be aware of the warning signs that may indicate you are about to be laid off. One of the most common signs is a reduction in your workload. If you notice your job duties diminishing or being taken away, this could indicate that your job is at risk. Other signs can include being excluded from meetings or conversations, being bypassed for a promotion, and receiving less feedback than usual.
 

Best Practices for Employees

If you find yourself in a potential layoff situation, the best course of action is to remain calm and take proactive steps. First, you should review your employment contract and make sure you are aware of all of your rights. Make sure to document any changes in job duties or any other potential warning signs. Also, take the time to network and update your resume so you are prepared for the job market.
 

Preparing for the Worst

In addition to the steps above, it is important to also prepare yourself financially in case of a layoff. Make sure to have an emergency fund that is sufficient to last you at least three to six months. Also, pay off any debts that you may have and look into unemployment insurance if it’s available in your state. With these steps, you can take control of the situation and be prepared for the unexpected.

You need to keep the unpleasant possibility of lay-offs in the back of your mind, for it has become a very relevant possibility whether you are a partner or an associate. In fact, the larger your firm and the more practice areas it offers, the greater the lay-off danger, especially if each practice specialty is considered its own profit center. We'll tell you how to spot the signs of pending lay-offs in a moment, but first, a little legal cultural history is in order, as it will place the specter of law firm lay-offs in context for you.
 
Law as a Gentleman's Club

Still in the memories of lawyers now in their sixties lives a magical era when big law firms did not lay off attorneys. Instead, their bonuses might be discretely cut, their clients shared or gently expropriated (while accompanied by some seemingly plausible explanation), and their salaries secretly frozen. These middle-aged and older lawyers would be silently acknowledged as dead wood 'carried' by other more productive partners and associates until eventually made 'of counsel' or given a dinner and gracefully retired. Unless there was moral turpitude involved, a lawyer, with few exceptions, was almost guaranteed lifetime employment.

Sleepy Giants Transformed

Changes to this gentlemanly environment came in the 1970s and have intensified since. The first shock to what once approximated a 19th-century-men's club-atmosphere began with the start of Yellow Pages legal services advertising in the 1970s, a move fought vigorously but unsuccessfully by the American Bar Association. Next came the scrutiny of law firms by M.B.A. consultants in the early 1980s, followed by the multiple crashes of dot.com firms in the late 1990s and early 21st Century.

Thus, in the final three decades of the 20th Century, the law profession saw itself transformed from an inbred, sleepy, self-regulating subculture into an intensely competitive service business vying both for the highest paying clients and for the best cognitive resources (Law Review and Federal Clerkship graduates of the top law schools). These competitive pressures have driven up associate salaries and opened up competition for clients, even at discrete white-shoe firms.
 
Cultural Change Number One: 'Decultured' by the Yellow Pages

Yellow Pages advertising, other than listings, was (and still is) generally avoided by major American national and international law firms. However, such advertising has become a boon for small law firms who use the Yellow Pages, television and radio to attract small clients in volume, which had previously been next to impossible due to the legal subculture's unwritten prohibitions. Big law firms seldom if ever solicited business off the street but preferred and still prefer stable relationships with large, deep-pocketed clients who are wooed not in a mass retail environment but through discrete professional associations, referrals and private clubs. Part of this abhorrence of advertising can be traced to the influence of the Protestant Ethic, especially in big, old-line firms. In this Ethic, calling attention to one's self in any way was frowned on. The use of the Yellow Pages by lawyers acted as an open challenge to such prevailing Protestant-dominated orthodoxy. Attorneys advertising in the Yellow Pages destroyed whatever façade the law had built over the previous centuries as a discrete, almost priestly profession that disdained mass solicitations. In turn came a change in the public's perception. Lawyers' emergence in the Yellow Pages helped create the impression of law as a service industry like any other.
 
Cultural Change Number Two: The Withering Scrutiny of M.B.A.'s

The use of consultants by law firms can be partly linked to the effect that the Yellow Pages had democratizing the law and changing its public perception. Once you accept that running a law firm is not analogous to managing a men's club and is not demonstrably different than running any other business, hiring business consultants becomes the logical next step.

Business professors and consultants quickly introduced into imbedded law firm cultures a revolutionary new form of disciplined economic and structural analysis. They compared law firms' existing organizational structures and financial management practices with modern business structures and practices. Most law firms were found to be inefficient and operating economically in counter-intuitive ways.

In the July/August 1984 issue of the American Lawyer, David Maister, then of the Harvard Business School, produced a landmark article on law firms. He created terms such as:
 
NIPP (Average partner income) L (Ratio of associates to partners)
BR (Blended hourly rate) U (Client hours recorded)
R (Revenues divided by time recorded) M (Partners' profits divided by revenues)

Maister uncovered much that is today accepted as a truism. For instance, he observed that a practice area produces more 'net' revenue if a partner spends an hour generating three hours of associate work than if (s)he works one hour billed out at $400. Maister produced charts identifying the most economically efficient ratio of partners to associates based on a varying set of general assumptions. He identified high-margin clients and high-margin practice areas. He detailed profit per partner, support-staff and associate turnover rates. He charted partner equity growth rates, the share of fees from high-margin clients. He examined ratios of support staff to associates and partners, all of this in a search for a maximum leverage and mix of resources to produce the highest possible year-end profit. As a result, lawyers, support staff and partners became conceptualized as work units and modules in an economic engine designed and constructed to generate sufficient profit to perpetuate itself. These work units were not in stasis but always in movement either towards greater or lesser firm profit. Such figures did not lie. They isolated and detailed each individual's contribution and made it relative both to a norm and to a proposed target level. It also placed every economic unit within the firm in competition with every other. This scientific and Darwinian business approach has made the lay-off merely one more business tool useful in protecting a law firm's profit margins. The ancient idea of Christian charity and Protestant noblesse oblige that once served to protect even unproductive members of a law firm had vanished.
 
Cultural Change Number Three: The Dot.Com Crash

There are retrograde moments or contra-historical blips that in their contrariness affirm the enduring force of cultural change. One 19th-century example is Napoleon and the brief return of the French monarchy that momentarily interrupted what turned out to be lasting democratic tradition in France.

Another example of a retrograde moment was the late-20th-century Dot.com explosion of business start-ups in the Palo Alto and Silicon Valley areas during the technology boom of that era. Suddenly, law firms threw economic caution to the wind. Lessons taught them by business consultants were forgotten. Firms could not hire enough associates fast enough to get the work done. At many firms, clients had to be turned away. Even second- and third-tier law school graduates found big and prestigious firms begging for them. Then, with dazzling quickness, it all came to an end. This is when law-firm lay-offs recommenced in earnest.
 
So What Are The Signs A Lay-off Is Coming?

You now have some insight into how business consultants dissect the economic functioning of a law firm. Basically, the business consultant drill is to always look for extraneous operations that somehow have grafted themselves on to the operation but are of questionable economically productive value. The business consultant seeks maximum use and efficiency of all available resources. This mindset is on-going, because opportunities to cut, trim and thereby improve are almost always available.

With this background in mind, you might try to pretend you are an outside observer who suddenly has the kind of insight into your firm that you have gained by working there. The problem is, how are you to know which clients produce the highest profits and which generate the lowest? Low-margin clients usually get such a designation because they require a lot of face time, like to haggle, can't make up their mind, etc. Or, the partner causes all of this. Chances are, you will never gain the kind of insight to ascertain such facts. Therefore, you have to make external observations because that is all you have. Scrutinized carefully, such external observations may be sufficient.

The first alert is the loss of a client or a reduction in business by a major client. When this happens, a firm's managing committee almost automatically starts thinking about which partners and which associates might be expendable. If the dip in profits is seen as temporary because, say, a new client is on the horizon, or, a re-organization is about to take place following an anticipated partner retirement, then probably this drop in net profit can be tolerated for the short term and no action will be taken.

The problem is ascertaining a management committee's tolerance for loss. How long is 'short term' for this committee? Three months? Six months? Also, how deep is the drop in net profit? If profitability does not just decline, but plunges into the red, concern for the firm's long-term viability heightens. Lay-offs are triggered when a management committee concludes that it can no longer tolerate a seemingly diminished and possibly terminal financial future.

Your first task is to figure out whether you are among a core of elite partners and associates who are to be saved from lay-off, or whether you are potential prey. If you are not lucky or resourceful enough to have a spy within the management committee, you will have to deduct what's about to happen from what you observe. We enter a subjective area here. One can watch body language and listen carefully for hints from certain key keepers of secrets; but even the managing partner may not know in advance when his or her tolerance for the situation will collapse.

Also, how one deals with a financial crisis can differ from firm to firm. The management committee can decide to forestall lay-offs by cutting year-end bonuses and partner distributions, temporarily eliminating its summer-intern program, freezing salaries, or reducing or eliminating certain perks, such as paying a smaller percentage of health insurance coverage, etc. Much of this is done in the ancient spirit of offering sacrifices to the Profit God. The hope is that by reducing expenses in the short term, something miraculous in the long term will reward such faith -a new client or an old client suddenly generating more work. When and if this doesn't happen, the next step, unfortunately, is human sacrifice(s).

Sudden large-scale efforts at expense containment may not necessarily mean lay-offs are the next step. The firm may be instituting these measures merely to increase already-healthy net profits. On the other hand, let's assume that your firm is healthy yet hires a business consultant anyways. Rest assured that this consultant, to justify his or her fee, will recommend many or all of the above cost-cutting tactics as well as others not mentioned, whether or not the firm is financially strapped. You can also anticipate that this consultant may recommend leaner staffing. This can relate just to partners, just to associates, or just to support staff. Or, the recommendation can include some or all of these categories. So, the hiring of a consultant serves as another red flag.
 
The Importance of Secrets

Key piece of advice: Identify the keepers of secrets in your firm and keep an eye on them. These secrets have to do with deleterious changes in revenues and in the firm's ranked assessments of both partners and associates. These secret keepers may reveal information without thinking.

The Employment Partner's Secrets In law firms, the partner with employment responsibility has personal knowledge of individual medical conditions, substance-abuse problems, marital discord, divorce, and other personal matters which cannot be shared. (S)he will be privy to hiring needs and their lack, potential retirements, plans for re-organization plus whichever aspects of the firm's financial situation others more senior in the know choose to share. Eventually, (s)he gets involved in helping to determine who gets laid off.

The Business Manager's Secrets

The business manager of a big law firm, or the lawyer responsible for this function in a smaller firm, possesses different secrets. These concern the profitability of specific practice areas as well as an overview of the firm's overall financial performance. In smaller firms, there may not be sophisticated on-going financial analysis in place, creating the likelihood that the partners literally wake up one morning to find that they are hemorrhaging money. When such a panic ensues, lay-offs can come quickly and without warning. Still, if a lawyer watches what goes on, there can be clues that potential problems exist.
 
  • Has your work load tailed off and stayed that way?

    Are partners suddenly leaving your firm without plausible explanation?

    Are satellite offices being closed?

    Are partners having a lot of closed-door meetings?

    Have outside consultants suddenly taken up residence in the conference room?

    Are these same partners suddenly walking around looking upset/worried?

    Has the summer associates program been canceled?

    Has the annual Christmas party or some other traditional firm fete been scaled down or eliminated?

    Has employee medical coverage been reduced or eliminated?

    Have practice areas been merged or eliminated?

    Have already-hired associates been told not to report in August but instead in January?

    Are there rumors of partner bonuses being reduced or eliminated?

    Have salaries suddenly been frozen?
Three or more of these signs should place you on notice. Four or more should, at least in your mind, send up a lay-off alert.

There's more…

Ongoing rancorous disputes with clients over bills can predispose this client to bolt to take its business elsewhere. Visits by I.R.S. auditors are generally not a good sign. Finally, how quickly such problems are addressed and dealt with can be a predictor of how expeditiously a firm is likely to deal with threats to a healthy bottom line. If the firm's management has a tendency to look the other way or procrastinate, then you can assume that this tendency probably extends to other matters, such as careful daily monitoring of the firm's financial health.
 
How much time do you have?

Hard to say. There are two timetables to consider -yours and the firm's. As we mentioned earlier, how long a firm takes before sacrificing to the profit god what it sees as its weakest and therefore most expendable employees differs with each firm. Generally, there will be an attempt to approach the problem logically. Here are possible time tables:
 
The Firm's Time Table
 
Problem Detection and Deciding What To do
Once it is determined that a firm has a financial problem, the management committee must decide how to fix the problem. Two to three meetings required.
 
Two to six weeks
Implementation of Preliminary Measures
If the hemorrhaging can be contained by cutting back on non-personnel expenses, you have nothing to worry about. (WARNING: Don't be misled if there are a series of cuts and then a lull. The plan may be designed to take place in steps, with a pause after each step to determine if it is necessary to proceed to the next step, each new step being more severe than the previous one. By the time you and your cohorts figure this out, it may be too late.
 
Two months
Preliminary Measures Don't Work
Panic sets in slowly and then crests.
 
Beginning of Third Month
Emergency Meetings. Lay-offs Approved. 'Need-to-know' Partners notified of plans.
 
Fourth Month
Lay-offs Begin Fifth Month or soon After.
 
Your Time Table

Whatever you do, do not take the above chart literally. It is provided to give you a general idea of how the process works and identify the steps that must be taken before lay-offs commence. Remember there are all sorts of factors which must be considered. Certain procedures must be followed to assure that the lay-off process is conducted equitably. There are age discrimination, sex discrimination and racial discrimination laws to consider and negotiate. There is the matter of how laid-off employees are to be treated in terms of severance and other matters. As a result, big firms in particular proceed slowly and with caution even after their minds are made up. But note: Small firms, especially if there is only one senior partner, can operate more quickly than large firms which must deal with a multiplicity of departments and fiefdoms, each of which must be brought on board and coordinated.

Unless you have a source within the inner sanctum of a firm, you will likely not be aware of a problem until economic measures are suddenly put in place. A general rule is to go into pro-active attack mode the minute you perceive trouble. Start looking for a job so that you can be prepared when the moment finally arrives.

Conclusion

Few lawyers during their working lives are likely to escape either the threat of a lay-off or its actuality. In the end, of course, all careers end and all of us, in effect, eventually get laid off. The job of every lawyer is to guard his livelihood and future for as long as possible. Avoiding lay-offs is one part of this job - keep an eye out.
( 102 votes, average: 4.5 out of 5)
What do you think about this article? Rate it using the stars above and let us know what you think in the comments below.