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Home > Creating a Managing Partner and Administrator Team

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Law Firm Management

Creating a Managing Partner and Administrator Team

By Robert D. Fox and John S. Kirk Contact All Articles 

The Legal Intelligencer

February 26, 2013

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Robert D. Fox

Robert D. Fox

kirk

John S. Kirk

There is no 'I' in "teamwork," but there is a "me" and a "we." When talking about building an effective managing partner and administrator team, the trick is to cultivate the "we" and eliminate the "me."

In 2010, John Michalik, the former executive director of the Association of Legal Administrators (ALA), undertook a research project that was targeted toward identifying the important role that managing partners and administrators play in making law firms successful.

Manko, Gold, Katcher & Fox was selected to participate in Michalik's research, and we were asked subsequently to participate in a panel discussion, "Creating and Maintaining an Extraordinary Managing Partner/Administrator Team," at ALA's annual conference in May 2011. Although MGKF is a boutique environmental and energy law firm, the qualities that a managing partner and administrator team aspire to are the same regardless of the size or geographical location of the firm.

Through this process, we validated what we always believed intuitively were the key qualities essential to success in our respective leadership roles within the firm: respect, trust, transparency, candor, shared values, dedication and commitment. A little friendship and sense of humor don't hurt, either. We learned that together we can be stronger than each of us alone, even though we have different strengths.

Division of Labor

The proper division of labor between managing partner and administrator represents the first and most important element of the relationship. As Michalik points out in his book, The Extraordinary Managing Partner: Reaching the Pinnacle of Law Firm Management, managing partners are responsible not only for their own conduct as lawyers in their practice of law, but also for the conduct of nonlawyers who work with them in running the business of the firm. From our experience, in a typical law firm environment, the managing partner plays a key role in setting the direction and vision of the firm and managing all that entails. The administrator plays a major role in challenging, testing and implementing that vision. To make the managing partner/administrator team seamless, then, the key is to establish boundaries and define clearly the respective roles and responsibilities.

Respect and Trust

In addition to the division of labor, a managing partner and administrator must have unwavering trust in each other's motives. In our case, we may not always agree with each other, but we understand that our actions are always grounded in the best interests of our firm. This unwavering trust makes for open channels of communication and keeps us from being defensive with each other when there is disagreement. It also helps us understand and complement each other's skill set, have confidence in each other's abilities and leave each other alone to carry out specific goals and tasks that have been approved.

In addition to trust, three aspects of respect are essential to this working relationship. We respect each other as people. We respect each other's time and schedule. It is particularly important for the administrator to respect the time of the managing partner, who is frequently challenged with unpredictable client demands. And, finally, it is critical that the managing partner respect the administrator because micromanaging and second-guessing can be crippling to an administrator's efficiency and credibility.

Shared Values and Vision

Fortunately for us, we share a wonderful friendship and many of the same values, both professionally and personally. This makes for a less stressful working relationship and lends a better understanding to knowing where each person stands on achieving our firm's goals. Being committed to upholding the highest moral and ethical standards and practices in the office and in our personal lives further supports our mutual trust.

To this end, we avoid sending conflicting messages. We know that if we are on the same page, others are more likely to be on that page, too. When we look at things with the same eyes and ears, we can better keep a pulse on what's going on among the attorneys and staff and minimize morale issues based on misinformation.

This shared approach also leads to transparency in daily interactions. Transparency, in turn, avoids hidden agendas. As an example, if one of us forgets to communicate a decision or a required action to appropriate groups, transparency enables us to acknowledge this oversight and promptly correct it.

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Companies, agencies mentioned

    
  • Pinnacle
  • Manko, Gold, Katcher & Fox
  • Association of Legal Administrators
  • Division of Labor

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