By Victor Li
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“Legal ops provides the strategic planning, financial management, project management and technology expertise that enables legal professionals to focus on providing legal advice,” according to the consortium.
Additionally, legal ops are a multidisciplinary profession that includes backgrounds such as finance, marketing, data analytics and engineering, among others.
In other words, they handle a lot of the business and technological stuff that many lawyers either aren’t trained to handle or don’t want to deal with. All so lawyers can focus on practicing law and representing their clients to the best of their abilities.
A fixture in the in-house world for a long time, legal ops recently expanded into the law firm realm.
In October, Am Law 100 law firm Shearman & Sterling announced that it had set up a legal ops division to provide knowledge management, legal technology, business intelligence and other services for its corporate law department clients.
What does all that mean? And why was this such a unique move for a law firm?
Anthony Widdop, Shearman & Sterling’s newly minted global director of legal operations, spoke to the ABA Journal’s Victor Li about his group’s objectives, goals, current and future projects and uniqueness in the law firm world.
Anthony Widdop
Anthony Widdop is the global director of legal operations at Shearman & Sterling, where his role is focused on embedding tools, techniques and behaviors as part of the firm’s commitment to finding innovative and efficient legal solutions and service delivery for its clients. He leads Legal Operations by Shearman, which is a client offering designed to meet the people, process and technology needs of in-house law departments. He also leads Shearman’s global legal project management program, which is a multidisciplinary legal operations team focused on embedding change through project management, pricing, data analytics, technology, process improvement and innovation solutions.