There are very few companies, industries or even countries that remain untouched by the phenomenon deemed 鈥楾he Great Resignation鈥. The term was coined to describe the record numbers of people leaving their jobs as the world emerges from the COVID-19 pandemic: in the US, four million employees quit their jobs in April 2021 alone and we have seen similar patterns in the UK workforce and beyond.
There are a number of factors driving this dramatic shift in the hiring landscape. Firstly, after a challenging two years, more people than ever before are burnt out and shifting their priorities from live-to-work to work-to-live. This is just as true in the legal sector, where the hours are long and the pressure to be 鈥榓lways on鈥 is high.
Secondly, ways of working have fundamentally changed. The average employee is seeking a hybrid work model, hoping to combine remote work with face-to-face interaction. Those businesses looking to mandate in-office working are likely to face an uphill battle.
Finally, in many industries, employees have more options available to them than ever before. This is certainly true in the UK legal sector, where competition for talent is hot and salaries are being driven upwards by US firms looking to hire UK teams.
There were an average of 191 legal jobs advertised per month in London in the first three months of 2022, according to (up from 185 in 2021 and 29 in 2020), and a number of Magic Circle law firms have for newly qualified lawyers.
While the recruitment market will inevitably plateau at some point, in the meantime firms are taking a range of steps to retain their existing talent and attract new blood.
With lawyers in high demand, some firms are shaking up their remuneration models to ensure they can secure talent at every level of the business.
While the traditional 鈥渓ockstep鈥 model of pay is still in place at a number of leading law firms 鈥 Slaughter and May being the most well-known 鈥 this salary model seems likely to soon become the exception, as many firms embrace more competitive commission structures.
In a new 桔子视频 report on organic growth in the legal industry, 44% of large law firms we spoke to said that they have already moved away from the lockstep structure, while 60% of small firms have done the same.
Instead, they have embraced flexible approaches to remuneration, including:
Although professional services industries have, on the whole, stuck more stridently to traditional methods of working, employers are being forced to stay flexible for the sake of employee satisfaction. Magic Circle law firms Freshfields, Clifford Chance and Linklaters have all allowed their lawyers to work away from their desks for up to 50% of the time, while Slaughter and May has allowed its lawyers to work remotely for 40% of the time (20% for juniors).
Some firms, such as Kingsley Napley, were already offering flexible and part-time working before the pandemic. Now, it recommends that people come into the office for 40-60% of their pro rata hours but this policy operates on a trust basis.
Others, like Hill Dickinson, continue to champion in-office working for training, learning by osmosis, firm culture, and many other benefits, but remain flexible for the timebeing.
According to our recent organic growth report, the majority of firms see internal development as central to overall growth. With that in mind, they are working to encourage movement throughout the firm or, where the lockstep structure is still in place, to push people up more quickly.
Kingsley Napley has implemented a full professional training and development programme, giving each team a generous training budget, delivering feedback and developing team members.
Other firms, such as Taylor Wessing and Arc Pensions, have even adapted their path to partnerships in a bid to attract and retain the right people. 鈥淭he fact we can point to promotions to partnership in our short history is a serious draw鈥, says Rosalind Connor, Managing Partner of Arc Pensions.
鈥楥ulture鈥 can be a woolly term but many firms name it as one of the most vital factors in their talent strategy.
Connor says that culture is the most important part of attracting staff. 鈥淲e aim to be a place people want to work, but also to attract people who would want to work here鈥, she says. 鈥淭here is no point attracting people in with a particular gimmick, only to find that they aren鈥檛 actually attracted to the fundamentals of the firm, but were swayed by something transient.鈥
Kingsley Napley, too, names its strong culture as key to its appeal to both existing members of the firm and potential recruits. 鈥淲e were the leading London law firm for the fourth year running in the Best Companies to Work for Survey 2021 and feedback from this process consistently suggests Kingsley Napley's collegiate and people-based culture plays a large part in that success鈥, says Managing Partner Linda Woolley. 鈥滻n addition, Kingsley Napley has an impressive record when it comes to D&I and that is a powerful differentiator in today鈥檚 marketplace.鈥
Ultimately, sky-high financial offers can only take you so far: you have to consider your firm as a complete package, including its culture, location, flexible offering and clients.
Find out more talent management and growth tips here.
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