Law Firm Inks $852 Million Outsourcing Deal

Legal process outsourcing (LPO) company Integreon has entered into what it describes in a press release as the largest legal outsourcing deal ever, worth $852 million over 10 years, with British law firm CMS Cameron McKenna.

The work covered by the agreement — nonbillable support tasks such as accounting, human resources, marketing, training and information technology — does not affect lawyers directly.

According to the U.K. publication Legal Week, that means current law firm jobs won’t necessarily be shipped overseas. Instead, CMS employees whose “middle office” duties are covered by the deal will continue with their jobs but will start drawing a paycheck from Integreon rather than from the law firm.

CMS managing partner Duncan Weston told Legal Week, “We are not anticipating any redundancies at the moment. We want this to be seen as something which will be positive for the career development of our business support staff with the opportunities that they will have at Integreon.”

The deal is not the first of its kind for Los Angeles-based Integreon, but it is the largest, according to the company. Integreon, which maintains outsourcing centers in India as well as in the Philippines and South Africa, has previously handled support services for Clifford Chance and DLA Piper.

One notable aspect of Integreon’s agreement with CMS Cameron is the openness about the price tag. Most firms that turn to LPOs for discovery and other legal work ask not to be identified, much less have the value of their contracts disclosed. Thus, while rough estimates of the potential multibillion-dollar market for legal outsourcing have been bandied about for several years, the true scale of the industry has so far been hard to capture. That may be changing.

via Law Firm Inks $852 Million Outsourcing Deal.

Brief for India’s outsourcing lawyers: keep it cheap – Times Online

Nestled amid the bustle of north Mumbai, the headquarters of Pangea3, one of India’s biggest legal outsourcing companies, is enough to give a British corporate lawyer used to the slick environs of the City or Canary Wharf the heebie-jeebies.

On the street outside, manual scavengers pick through the morning garbage while hawkers throng the sidestreets. Inside, the scene is just as alien — more reminiscent of the bridge of the Starship Enterprise than of a traditional London law firm.

Hardly anybody is wearing a suit, there are no private offices and there is not a wood-panelled boardroom in sight.

Instead, an army of young Indian graduates, most of them from the country’s top law and engineering schools, sits before a barrage of computer terminals. Many are working on legal documents digitally accessed from the servers of blue-chip Western clients via transcontinental fibreoptic cables. Others are engaged in research for upcoming litigation to be fought out in American courtrooms, or are analysing patent filings registered by British companies.

Most striking, perhaps, are the collection of giant Perspex tubes that tower above the large open-plan office. Accessible via spiral staircases, they contain raised meeting rooms. Together with the fingerprint scanners that operate the locks on the doors, they lend the premises a sci-fi feel. This may be fitting: if Sanjay Kamlani, the firm’s co-chief executive (and one of the few workers wearing a tie) is right, this is the future of the corporate legal profession.

t is a vision that could radically change Britain’s legal industry.

Much of the work that Pangea3 and similar firms deal with, such as drafting derivatives contracts or conducting due diligence for mergers and acquisitions, was once the preserve of trainees and associates at big City law firms. Some of those firms racked up annual revenues of more than £1 billion during the boom years, in part by billing out teams of junior lawyers for up to £300 an hour for even the most routine tasks.

However, those firms, in a drive to cut costs, are beginning to send that sort of work to cheaper jurisdictions, such as India, South Africa and the Philippines.

Whereas a new recruit at a “magic circle” firm in London can expect a starting salary of about £60,000 — rising to more than £90,000 at the best paid firms — Pangea3 can pay a good Indian law graduate as little as £350,000 rupees (£4,700) a year.

That sort of cost-saving has proved compelling in the wake of the economic downturn and is causing demand for Indian outsourcing providers to soar. Studies suggest that there are as many as 10,000 lawyers in the country working for outsourcing providers, and total revenues in the sector are expected to double this year to $1 billion (£613 million) and rise to $4 billion within five years.

Turnover at Pangea3 doubled in 2009, and Mr Kamlani expects a similar increase this year. The company’s investors include Sequoia, the venture capital group that backed Google. Its clients include several leading Wall Street banks.t is a vision that could radically change Britain’s legal industry.

Much of the work that Pangea3 and similar firms deal with, such as drafting derivatives contracts or conducting due diligence for mergers and acquisitions, was once the preserve of trainees and associates at big City law firms. Some of those firms racked up annual revenues of more than £1 billion during the boom years, in part by billing out teams of junior lawyers for up to £300 an hour for even the most routine tasks.

However, those firms, in a drive to cut costs, are beginning to send that sort of work to cheaper jurisdictions, such as India, South Africa and the Philippines.

Whereas a new recruit at a “magic circle” firm in London can expect a starting salary of about £60,000 — rising to more than £90,000 at the best paid firms — Pangea3 can pay a good Indian law graduate as little as £350,000 rupees (£4,700) a year.

That sort of cost-saving has proved compelling in the wake of the economic downturn and is causing demand for Indian outsourcing providers to soar. Studies suggest that there are as many as 10,000 lawyers in the country working for outsourcing providers, and total revenues in the sector are expected to double this year to $1 billion (£613 million) and rise to $4 billion within five years.

Turnover at Pangea3 doubled in 2009, and Mr Kamlani expects a similar increase this year. The company’s investors include Sequoia, the venture capital group that backed Google. Its clients include several leading Wall Street banks.

via Brief for India’s outsourcing lawyers: keep it cheap – Times Online.

Business and the Way of Democracy – NYTimes.com

Much like transitions to democracy over the past four decades transformed governments from mostly authoritarian to mostly democratic, we are currently witnessing a transformation of global corporations from a more or less opaque shareholder-centric model to a more transparent multi-stakeholder model.

The 1970s witnessed the beginning of a global trend toward the democratization of authoritarian and totalitarian regimes. This first appeared in Greece with a coup that led to democracy, continued in Portugal and culminated in Spain with a paradigmatic transition from Franco to democratic government. To this day all three countries continue to be thriving democracies.

The trend continued into the next three decades. Starting with the Polish Solidarity movement and epitomized by the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, democratization swept through the former Soviet bloc. Likewise, today most of Latin America can claim the democratic mantle. Successful transitions occurred in such diverse places as South Africa, the Philippines, Indonesia, Mongolia and even Iraq.

The yearning for greater political transparency and accountability continues sometimes tragically, as Iran currently exemplifies. The case of China remains a unique experiment in the liberalization of economics but not politics. Despite some business-related legal reforms, China may remain the exception that proves the rule.

As to global companies, increased government pressure and stakeholder demands for accountability (from employees, investors, customers, non-governmental organizations and others) are creating a similarly catalytic turning point that is beginning to yield a more transparent business model.

[continued] Op-Ed Contributor – Business and the Way of Democracy – NYTimes.com.

Justice Department Hosts International Intellectual Property Program on Advanced Computer and Digital Foresncis « USDOJ: Justice Blog

Building upon the successes of earlier efforts by the IP Crimes Enforcement Network IPCEN for Asia, the U.S. Department of Justice today announced a three-day training program on advanced computer and digital forensics for 15 key law enforcement officials from five IPCEN nations. The training seminar is designed to strengthen international cooperation in fighting large-scale intellectual property theft and disrupting the criminal networks that profit from the trade in stolen IP.

Police and prosecutors from the Indonesia, Philippines, Singapore and Thailand are participating in the training, which will enhance cross-border cooperation in the fight against intellectual property theft by increasing the ability of the trainees to use advanced computer forensics techniques to track down, arrest and prosecute IP criminals. Training is taking place over three days at the GIPA facility, and will be lead by Ovie Carroll, Director of the Cybercrime Lab at the Justice Department’s Computer Crime & Intellectual Property Section.

This specific, targeted forensics training is a groundbreaking effort for the IPCEN, which was established in 2007. The IPCEN serves two primary functions: to facilitate the exchange of successful investigation and prosecution strategies in combating domestic piracy and counterfeiting crimes; and to strengthen communication channels to promote coordinated, multinational prosecutions of the most serious offenders. By preparing a group of investigators to conduct sophisticated analysis of computer data, the mission of the IPCEN will be advanced and the opportunity for larger domestic and multi-national cases will increase.

[continued] Justice Department Hosts International Intellectual Property Program on Advanced Computer and Digital Foresncis « USDOJ: Justice Blog.