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    Home » Legal sector’s adaptability proves the key to success
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    Legal sector’s adaptability proves the key to success

    Arabian Media staffBy Arabian Media staffJune 25, 2025No Comments8 Mins Read
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    Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free

    Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.

    The writer is executive director, RSGI

    At an FT managing partners roundtable in New York in 2012, when the legal sector was starting to grasp the importance of big technological developments, one guest remained sanguine. Lawyers are clever people, he said, and would adapt to every eventuality.

    In 2012, his confidence seemed misplaced. The legal sector was known to be slow at adopting even basic document-management systems and seemed wedded to billing by the hour for its hard-won expertise.

    Roll on to 2023 and the arrival of generative AI. The sector has jumped to attention, and adoption rates have been surprisingly fast. Firms such as Ashurst say 60 per cent of their workforce are using AI every day in some form.

    Steve Immelt, former chief executive of Hogan Lovells, says: “AI is transformative, but so were previous digitisation phases. Like any Darwinian process, people adapt.”

    However, the change in mindset among legal leaders in the past two years is remarkable. Instead of their usual “wait-and-see” approach, many law firms and in-house legal teams actively wanted to get in front of generative AI. “We came at it saying, why not be at the epicentre of what is happening,” says Frank Ryan, Americas chair and global co-chair of DLA Piper.

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    Likewise, the in-house legal team at Unilever has become a role model in the consumer goods group for the use of AI. Support from the company, pilots and focusing on AI as an augmentation tool “helped us get our legal team on board”, says Maria Varsellona, chief legal officer.

    In many ways, there has been more appetite for innovation and change in the sector in the past two years than at any other time since the FT’s Innovative Lawyers series began in 2006. And in the background, norms such as the stubbornly persistent billing by the hour or partners owning all the equity have been looking much less certain.

    Dan Troy as general counsel at pharma group GSK led an in-house team of more than 600 for a decade until 2018, during which time it moved further towards a fixed-fee arrangement when appointing external law firms. Jim Delkousis, a former DLA Piper partner, turned legal tech entrepreneur in 2016 by founding Persuit, which enables companies to buy legal services at a transparent, competitive price.

    As generative AI accelerates the trend for law firms to commoditise elements of practice areas and turn them into products, firms are willing to try new pricing models.

    20 years of outstanding individuals

    Read about the 100 individuals across five categories who collectively epitomise how the legal sector has changed since the Innovative Lawyers series began

    Law firm leaders

    Practitioners

    Intrapreneurs

    Market shapers

    General counsel

    Rajesh Sreenivasan, technology partner at Rajah & Tann in Singapore, says: “We are accepting that low-hanging fruit [in our legal practice areas] will be commoditised and we are making those data sets available to clients on a subscription basis . . . a lot of work is going into pricing it.”

    When it comes to ownership, the potential for change is hardly better exemplified than by recent news from two former managing partners of a firm known for innovation — Allen & Overy, now A&O Shearman. David Morley and Wim Dejonghe have set up an eponymous consultancy that aims to enable private equity investment into the sector.

    Some content could not load. Check your internet connection or browser settings.

    “The partnership model has been declared dead more times than we count, yet it keeps adapting,” says Morley. Yet he foresees the model potentially giving way to hybrids where “scale and recurring revenue are more valuable than individual star partner power.”

    A few law firms have experimented with the listed law firm model, but have had limited success. DWF, based outside London, went public before going private again in 2023, while RBG Holdings, another pioneer of law firms listing, closed this year.

    Yet, with £534mn invested by private equity into the UK law firms and related businesses in 2024, according to Acquira, a merger and acquisition broker for law firms, Morley sees smaller and mid-tier firms being able to challenge the status quo.

    Some content could not load. Check your internet connection or browser settings.

    The kinds of people walking through the front door of law firms or joining in-house teams are changing too. The lawyers increasingly depend on data and tech specialists to help them provide the legal expertise.

    More firms and in-house legal teams have subsidiaries or specific units designed to help digitise services. The term “non-lawyer” has fallen into disfavour as business service professionals in law firms join and take up client-facing roles; in-house legal operations professionals are now central to legal teams.

    Some content could not load. Check your internet connection or browser settings.

    Neal Katyal, a prominent US litigator, forecasts that future legal practice, even in a very complex area such as his own, will be all about “breaking down disciplines, just like academia” — where the best papers and discoveries are multidisciplinary.

    With technological disruption and threats to the rule of law intensifying, lawyers may need more than adaptability for the next 20 years — or even the next five.

    As Immelt warns: “Don’t fall in love with what you are doing today. The critical skillset will be the ability to keep learning.”

    How the lists were compiled

    Law firms, individuals and in-house teams were selected as representing the standout trends in 20 years of innovation in the legal sector

    Law firms
    The top 20 law firms list comprises those that have appeared most often in the top 10 places of the overall rankings in the FT Innovative Law regional reports — specifically those published in Europe from 2006 to 2024; in the US and North America from 2010 to 2024; and in Asia-Pacific from 2014 to 2025.

    In total, the reports have ranked nearly 300 different firms. The selection of the top 20 law firms over 20 years is determined by the number of times a firm has appeared in the top 10. The number of times a firm has featured anywhere in an overall ranking (within or below the top 10) is also listed.

    Where law firms have merged, and one or both predecessor firms were listed in a top 10 in any particular year, a single entry is allotted to the successor firm.

    The top 20 list is dominated by UK and North American firms because they are the world’s largest and most global, and accordingly dominate the top 10 rankings in the Europe and Asia-Pacific regional reports.

    To recognise regional law firms that also have a record of innovation, additional top 10 lists for Europe and Asia-Pacific have been compiled. These are firms headquartered in Europe, excluding the UK, and firms headquartered in Asia-Pacific. These lists are based on how often each firm has appeared anywhere in the most innovative law firm rankings for FT Innovative Lawyers Europe and FT Innovative Lawyers Asia-Pacific respectively.

    Although the lists together comprise many of the world’s largest law firms, they include only firms that have engaged with the FT Innovative Lawyers programme and should not be construed as exhaustive.

    Individuals
    The five lists of 20 individuals comprise law firm and in-house lawyers, professionals, operations experts, entrepreneurs and academics whose work has either featured in several FT Innovative Lawyers and related reports, or has stood out for originality and impact over their careers.

    The “FT/RSGI recognition” column highlights the year and regional report or award event in which they were singled out for individual mention.

    Most were formally shortlisted for an individual Innovative Lawyers award, including some outright winners chosen by a judging panel, of that year’s “practitioner”, “leader” or “intrapreneur” category. A few are recognised simply for work spread over many years.

    With a few exceptions, they are drawn from the 900 or so individuals who have been profiled by, or whose organisations have participated in, the FT Innovative Lawyers series. They were also selected to represent the three geographical regions — Europe, North America and Asia-Pacific — in which the FT and RSGI investigate legal innovation.

    The lists are illustrative of outstanding work but should not be construed as exhaustive.

    In-house teams
    The in-house legal teams list is based on how often they have featured in rankings of the most innovative in-house legal teams in the FT Innovative Lawyers reports: specifically those covering Europe from 2007 to 2024, in the US and North America from 2010 to 2024, and in Asia-Pacific from 2014 to 2025, which together have ranked more than 350 organisations’ teams. These lists include only those that have engaged with the FT Innovative Lawyers programme, and should not be construed as exhaustive.



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