On many occasions I am asked, "Who is your target
audience?"My simple quip is,
"The reluctant entrepreneurial lawyer."The response will generate a follow up
question that allows me to share the quote from Michael Gerber: "Most
small businesses in America are not started by entrepreneurs, but technicians
that have an entrepreneurial seizure."
Downsizing will thrust
many into starting their own firm.Other
inspirations for start-ups include disillusionment, out-sourcing and my
favorite is the professionally trained technician that can only master their
craft by starting a practice. The primary concern for these reluctant lawyers
is capturing their first customer or client and making a living.Many, if not most, have not had any formal
business training and often view profit in the same light as greed. Today I
want to look at the importance of factoring profitability into your practice
and even considering it as an ethical imperative.
Could Greed Be Ethical?
Oliver Stone gave us the
iconic figure of Gordon Gekko in the film Wall
Street.One of the most oft-quoted
lines from the film is "Greed is good."Gekko completes the thought with
"...greed is right, greed works!"The character, masterfully played by Michael Douglas, takes one of the
seven deadly vices and turns it into a virtue.At first glance there is wisdom to be gleaned by the ambitious and money
hungry success of "Gekko the great."
A reluctant
entrepreneurial lawyer whose only ambition is to eek out a living from their practice
is prone to mismanage their enterprise.They will overpay, under manage, make wasteful expenditures, and at
times take the path of least resistance. When a practice is poorly managed it
will under serve its clients, lower standards of professionalism and never
create new value.Vision is a powerful
force in any law firm, and one that is too small has tragic consequences.
The most common tragedy
stemming from a limited vision of long-term profitability that I witness is what
I call "the slow coast to the finish line."If the reluctant entrepreneurial lawyer is
pre-occupied with revenue generation over profitability they will time the life
expectancy of the firm with their own leadership life-cycle.The lawyer concludes, "When I go away,
the practice will go away."As the
lawyer is coasting to the finish line they fail to take into account changes in
the marketplace, new client service opportunities and ways to create lasting
profits.Economic upheaval can strike,
traffic patterns can move, new marketing practices are established and the
timing of the coast is greatly miscalculated.Far too many formerly successful firms die a pre-mature death because
the vision was not big enough.Could
greed be good?
Why Greed is Not Ethical
The Gordon Gekko of
baseball is George Steinbrenner, owner of the New York Yankees.If you are a Yankee fan you love him, and if
you are a fan of any other team you worry about George destroying the game of
baseball.His greed for World Series
titles prompts him to outspend all of his competition so that he can claim the
best player in baseball for every position.Baseball does not employ the same measures as other sports that keep
small market teams competitive with big market teams.The risk here is that the Yankees may spend
so much, become so much better, and win so often that sooner or later, nobody
will care about the game and the paying customer will go away.Unabated greed will eventually turn on itself
and cause you to lose the very thing you are greedy about.
Herbert Hoover was a
successful entrepreneur, the former Secretary of Commerce; the Presidency was
the only elected position he ever held.One of his more interesting quotes before the stock market crash of 1929
and the beginning of the great depression was "the biggest threat to capitalism
is the capitalist." Hoover knew at some point the logic of Gordon Gekko
that "greed works" fails to be true.
It is sad to
drive around my upper middle class suburb and see so many vacant store fronts
and partially erected homes.We have a
brand new street where an exciting development was envisioned but is now barren
because the economy receded. An arguably simplistic answer for the cause of
this poor economy could be that greed did not work.We experienced a growing economy without any
real value creation.Recently, Thomas
Friedman - the man who fired the imagination of world business with his book The World is Flat -- wrote in his New York Times column: "We don't just need a
financial bailout; we need an ethical bailout. We need to re-establish the core
balance between our markets, ethics."
Ethics Lead To Profits
Thus far I have
attempted to make a complex argument that profitability is necessary for a law
practice to be healthy.Lawyers cannot
simply try to generate revenue.They
must design a firm that yields a healthy profit.However, profitability without ethical
restraint will eventually turn on itself and destroy the business.We must stop the shallow thinking that creating
an ethical practice is an expense and profit killer and understand that ethics
leads to long term profitability.
In the November 2006
issues of the Journal of Business and
Economic Research, Robert McMurrian,
a professor at the University of Tampa, cites that organizations that invest in
the ethical soul of a business produce customer trust.McMurrian states, "In fact, a reputation for ethical business
activities can be a major source of competitive advantage. High standards of
organizational ethics can contribute to profitability by reducing the cost of
business transactions, building a foundation of trust with stakeholders,
contributing to an internal environment of successful teamwork, and maintaining
social capital that is part of an organization's market-place image."
Other researchers highlight that long-term profitability is linked
to the correlation of three factors: (1) customer loyalty and profit; (2) employee
loyalty and customer loyalty; and (3) employee satisfaction and customer
satisfaction.All three of these factors
are connected to the ethical behavior of creating value, sustaining profits, treating
people fairly and providing a culture that invites people to stay.
A Call to Ethical
Entrepreneurial Leadership
Our clients know we have a passion for the art of leadership and
the impact it has in a firm.This year
we have a slightly larger vision.We
want contribute to the advancement of ethical leadership.This is not a departure from our core; we
have always been devoted to helping our clients increase their profitability
through effective leadership.This year
we would love to play a part in helping lawyers understand that personal ethics
improves leadership, leadership improves the ethical behavior of the firm, and
the ethics of the firm leads to long-term profits, ultimately resulting in
wealth creation.
The 2009 National Business Ethics Survey reveals that we may have made
some progress in the past year.There
was marked improvement in a variety of areas of ethical behavior.However, such improvement is consistent with
previous turns in the economy.How
ironic that we become more ethical when our economy is floundering.Just like the "tech bubble" and the
"real estate bubble" we may be experiencing an "ethical
bubble."If that bubble bursts, it
will kill your profits.