Kamlani notes that a greater emphasis on technology is changing how these services are performed. Case in point: Pangea3 has already integrated predictive coding -- the use of computer algorithms to aid in document review and discovery -- for a few of its clients. Describing how his company has changed, Kamlani says, "What started out as purely a labor play is now a technology-enhanced lawyer play."
It's also a lucrative play. Chicago-based legal consultancy Fronterion LLC estimates that the industry will have 2012 revenues of around $350 million. Indian research company ValueNotes Database Private Ltd., using a broader definition of LPO services, estimates that the industry could have revenue of $1.1 billion by 2014.
Still, Fronterion managing principal Michael Bell questions whether growth in new areas such as technology services is driving business to the extent claimed by Perla and Kamlani. While he agrees that LPOs have had a significant impact on how some legal services are delivered, he believes that most revenue is still generated by the industry's bread and butter: litigation work. "Some of these new areas are making up an increasing portion of the LPO service offerings, but 80-85 percent, from a dollar standpoint, is still litigation document review," he says.
Deepti Krishnan, an analyst at ValueNotes, says that outsourcing will produce huge changes in the culture and business processes at law firms, but only after a significant pushback. "LPO providers will need to invest in an onshore team to assuage the concerns of lawyers," she says, pointing to clients' desires to keep at least some of the outsourced work close to home. That means LPOs will have to continue to launch operations in the United States and Europe, as Pangea3 did when it opened a location outside of Dallas in 2011.
Pangea3 and its competitors must also contend with law firms that launch their own internal LPO shops. But while that's a threat, Fronterion's Bell says that the bigger worry is from companies such as Axiom Law, which handles advanced-level lawyer staffing for corporations, and Huron Consulting Group, which advises law firms on operations issues. But now both companies are adding traditional LPO work to their range of offerings. "The biggest head-to-head competition [for LPOs] is not with law firms, but probably with the third-party vendors who have replicated the best practices of the LPOs," Bell says.
New Pangea3 head Greg McPolin, who previously served as vice president and managing director, pushes back against this analysis. He says that only a handful of law firms have started in-house LPO shops, as the majority choose to work with companies like Pangea3 first. Still, he recognizes the challenges facing LPOs, saying, "There's still work to be done."
Perla and Kamlani, meanwhile, are already planning to push into new ventures. Speaking in general terms only, Kamlani says that the two want to find ways to help India's 40 million contract laborers, who perform the most menial tasks in offices such as cleaning. These workers may be employed for years at the same company but never enjoy any of the benefits, such as training or health care, that full-time staff receive. "We're looking at ways to disrupt that part of the market," Kamlani says.
"Sanjay and I are a little wistful about moving on," Perla adds, but "we are very excited about what's next for us."



















