With the ever increasing challenge of finding a training contract and a job, today, 25 per cent of solicitors work in-house rather than in private practice.
The transformation of in-house legal practice is contextualised by three key trends:
In the near future, organisations will look to set up teams offshore in countries such as India, increasing efficiency and reducing cost. Those organisations will then look to enter into an arrangement with a global firm who will provide coverage across all of their in-house teams worldwide at a single annual price. This arrangement allows in-house teams to instruct lawyers whenever they need support without the administrative or financial constraint.
There is now a demand for a new breed of legal service provider who will utilise scale, technology, wage arbitrage and up-to-date management capability to provide an outsourced service for certain legal work to be done more effectively outside than in. In-house departments will shrink to comprise only a general counsel and a few internal lawyers who have the core competencies to facilitate the delivery of the service and participate in their internal client management teams.