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Home › This Week”s Issue › KPMG Study Examines How General Counsel Can Add Value

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KPMG Study Examines How General Counsel Can Add Value

By Catherine Dunn Contact All Articles 

Corporate Counsel

December 3, 2012

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For general counsel looking to become more valuable to senior business leaders, one crucial skill set is the ability to identify future legal and regulatory risks to the business, according to a new study by the consultancy KPMG.

In a new quantitative and qualitative report, "Beyond the Law," KPMG gauges survey responses from 320 general counsel in 32 countries, as well as in-depth interviews with 16 GCs at multinational corporations. The findings point to increased integration between law departments and the businesses they represent. But it also points out several ways that general counsel can improve their contributions to the business side.

"Our survey found more GCs overall are involved in business strategy than they were five years ago, and this reflects the changing mindset of many organizations towards the contribution GCs can make," the authors wrote. "However, we also found a gap between the number of GCs who want to be involved and those who are actually getting that greater involvement."

For example, the survey asked whether "involvement of the GC in the commercial decision-making process could improve the performance of the company and reduce its risks." While 79 percent of respondents agreed that it could, only 67 percent said they were "actually more involved in formulating business strategy now than five years ago," according to the results.

Turning to the in-depth interviews, the authors identified a number of skills that would stand GCs well in the eyes of company leaders. "These include being more commercially and financially aware in order to take a more proactive stance in risk identification and assessment, [and] working in partnership with others across the organization," the report states.

It places a definite emphasis on a general counsel's ability to predict risks, adding:

A number of GCs commented that predicting problems and risks before they arose was key to success. The role is moving from one of 'fire-fighting' and reacting to events to being more strategic and proactively anticipating risks at an earlier stage. Our research showed that less than one third (29 percent) of GCs are currently focusing on this as one of their top three tasks, so there is a clear need for many to shift to this way of thinking.

Bryan Jones, a partner in KPMG's forensics practice, says senior management and board members want GCs to help them stay ahead of the curve — not just react to issues when they arise.

"They're looking for more than 'deal with my legal problems,' " says Jones. "They want more than that, and that makes the general counsel more relevant."

Jones calls this approach something of an "early warning system" for legal and regulatory challenges that could impact business strategy. "That's an important preventive role," he says.

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