Latham & Watkins requires an agile support infrastructure to
promote global collaboration
Renowned for its
internationally recognized practices, work on landmarkmatters, and
culture of teamwork, innovation, and entrepreneurialism, Latham &
Watkins is proud of its “one-firm” culture. Since Latham’s founding in
1934, it has grown into one of the world’s leading law firms, with
deep expertise across a number of transactional, regulatory, and
litigation and trial practices.
A global company with no headquarters, Latham & Watkins’
management is located in offices around the world, a model designed to
foster inclusive decision-making. A law firm of Latham & Watkins’
size and practice diversity requires an agile support infrastructure
that operates seamlessly across the globe.
Latham & Watkins is committed to a comprehensive shared services
strategy. By combining global and local presence with enterprise-wide
automation, the firm has broken down the barriers of time and
location, maximizing the value of its support resources in a rapidly
evolving and growing business environment.
According to Latham & Watkins Director of Technology for Support
Services Bror Andringa, “By leveraging local resources globally, we’re
able to dramatically increase our capabilities and effectiveness. For
example, we can offer our lawyers German language services from
wherever we have German language skills, or give our London lawyers
support in the middle of the night with our West Coast admin staff.
And, because we’ve standardized and automated these support processes,
everything happens seamlessly and consistently.”
ServiceNow helps Latham & Watkins deliver enterprise-wide
service that supports its “follow-the-sun” model
The Now
Platform is Latham & Watkins’ global enterprise service delivery
platform. While the firm started out using ServiceNow in IT, it
quickly expanded to a platform delivering services ranging from
document services, financial information, and library reference
requests to facilities and business development support. Staff can
request the services through an intuitive self-service portal.
ServiceNow drives the fulfillment process, including routing work to
the right team, obtaining approvals, tracking progress, escalating
issues, and capturing key metrics, such as fulfillment costs for
billing purposes. One example of the impact of ServiceNow can be found
within the Latha & Watkins Firm Associate Support Team (FAST).
Originally set up to ensure that all first-year attorneys had
secretarial support, the program has rapidly gained momentum.
Rather than locating a secretary down the hall from a lawyer—which
is neither practical nor scalable—lawyers can now submit support
requests directly in ServiceNow, or send an email that is
automatically converted into a ServiceNow admin support work order.
ServiceNow automatically assigns the work to the appropriate person
based on key characteristics—typically within five minutes—so that
secretaries can start working on the request, even if they are on a
different floor or in another city.
This model has been expanded beyond the FAST team and has
dramatically increased secretarial utilization, with each secretary
supporting up to three times the number of lawyers they did before.
And, this virtual approach delivers better coverage and service hours
for lawyers, using a follow-the-sun model to deliver after-hours support.
With ServiceNow, HR optimizes training and skills alignment while
IT drives continuous service improvements
According to
Sheila Stanton, Global HR Senior Manager, Latham & Watkins,
“Performance Analytics gives us the insights we need to ensure
best-in-class service for our lawyers. We now know how members of the
FAST team are spending their time—whether that’s on research,
proofreading, coordinating meetings, or any one of dozens of other
service categories. That lets us optimize the team, getting the right
training and skill sets in place to support our lawyers’ needs. We can
also see how much work is done after hours and how much is virtual,
which allowed us to validate the FAST model.”