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    Wisconsin Lawyer
    December 01, 2001

    Wisconsin Lawyer December 2001: The Economics of Practicing Law

    The Economics of Practicing Law: A 2001 Snapshot


    See how the business side of your practice compares to that of your peers in several key areas: billing methods, hourly rates, overhead costs, personal income, and more.

    by Dianne Molvig


    Figure 1 - 2000 Attorney Net Income by Principal Position

    Figure 2 - 2000 Annual Net Income by Years in Practice, Full-time Attorneys Only

    Figure 3 - 2000 Median Net Income by Gender and Years in Practice, Full-time Respondents Only

    Figure 4 - 2000 Median Net Income by Gender and Years in Practice, Full-time Private Practitioners Only

    Figure 5 - Distribution of 2001 Attorney Hourly Billing Rates by Region and City Population

    Figure 6 - 2001 Typical Flat Fees Charged for Legal Services

    Figure 7 - 2001 Use of Marketing Device by Firm Size


    How much do lawyers charge? How much does the average attorney earn after being in practice for five, 10, or 20 years? What chunk of those earnings goes to pay staff salaries, rent, and other overhead costs? How do lawyers spend their time in a typical workweek?

    Determining and presenting accurate answers to these and other questions is the purpose of the State Bar's 2001 Economics of Law Practice Survey. It provides data for countering many commonly held misconceptions about how lawyers practice. More importantly, it gives lawyers a tool for gauging how they're doing on the business side of their practices in comparison to colleagues with similar experience, working in similar settings.

    "This is great information for management," says Tom Schumacher, managing partner of an eight-attorney law firm in New Richmond. How will he use the data? For one, he'll look at overhead costs. "I can pull figures right off our year-end statement," he says, "and see how we compare to the numbers in the survey. We can look at the areas where we're off, and figure out changes we could make to bring us more in line."

    De Forest sole practitioner David Grove, chair of the State Bar's Law Practice Section, says he'll use survey data to help him adjust his rates. "I have a general feel for what competitors are charging in my area because we talk," Grove points out. "But with this survey, I now have information from a larger pool."

    Private practitioners aren't the only ones who will find useful information in this year's survey. It also presents data on net incomes and time usage, for example, for attorneys in diverse job settings - government agencies, in-house counsel, legal service nonprofits, judicial clerkships, and more.


    Dianne Molvig operates Access Information Service, a Madison research, writing, and editing service. She is a frequent contributor to area publications.


    Supplying all the pieces of information were 890 attorneys, out of the 3,741 randomly selected in-state, active Bar members who received the survey questionnaire by mail this past June. That's a response rate of 24 percent. For details on the demographic makeup of the respondent group, see the accompanying sidebar, "Who Are the Respondents?"

    The remainder of this article highlights key survey findings. A word of explanation at the outset: Because respondents completed the survey in mid-2001, they gave current (2001) figures for hourly rates, time usage, and so on. When numbers had to be on an annual basis, such as net income and overhead, respondents provided 2000 data. Also, you'll find few comparisons to the 1998 survey (taken in mid-1999) because the two surveys differ greatly in the types of data collected and the target group.

    Net Incomes

    The average survey respondent is 46 years old and has been practicing law for 17 years. Among those working full-time, the average net income for 2000 was $94,501. The average for full-time private practitioners was $104,288.

    Median net income figures are lower than the averages, which seems to indicate that a few extremely high figures inflated the averages. For all full-time attorneys, the median for 2000 was $79,000 - that is, half of the attorneys earned less than that amount and half earned more. Full-time private practitioners had a slightly higher median net income of $80,000.

    Figure 1 shows year 2000 net incomes broken down in various ways for full-time attorneys in different types of practices. To see where attorneys' net incomes stand at various career stages, see Figure 2.

    The gap between male and female lawyers' incomes persists. Overall, female attorneys working full-time earned 72 percent of what their male counterparts made in 2000 (a median net income of $60,000 versus $83,500). The prevailing wisdom explains this away by pointing out that, as a general rule, men have been in practice longer than women, so naturally their incomes are higher. Or could it be that women just are not compensated equally? As Figure 3 shows, the gap remains when comparing men and women who have worked in full-time practice for equal tenures. Figure 4 shows the same type of comparisons for full-time private practitioners. Overall, women in full-time private practice fared even a little worse, earning 62 percent of what men earned, although they earned slightly more than men in some subgroups.

    How does this survey's gender gap compare to that of the last survey? Unfortunately, no direct comparison is possible. The 1999 survey polled only private practitioners, and it asked respondents for gross income, rather than net. Also, it did not separate out attorneys working part-time. Considering those factors, women's 1998 gross income was 51 percent of men's.

    The disparities shown in the current survey's results could stir cries of protest. But State Bar President-elect Patricia Ballman, a Milwaukee attorney, cautions against drawing conclusions without looking behind the numbers. She's now been in private practice for 24 years, all of them in a big firm. As a single mother, she worked full-time but put in fewer hours than her male counterparts as she was moving up through the ranks. It always seemed fair to her that people who worked more, earned more.

    "If I earn less now, it's because of my life choices," she says. "Even after your kids are grown, it's hard to get back to the level of your peers because you've given up years' worth of hours while you were raising a family. I know that sounds sexist, saying that men don't raise families. But we know the reality: Women still do most of the home chores and most of the child care."

    Juggling those demands pushes some women to leave private practice, whether to not work outside the home or to take jobs, as government or in-house counsel, with more predictable hours. "It's not just women," Ballman adds. "We've had men leave our firm, too, for some of the same reasons."

    Child care isn't the only distraction, notes Oshkosh attorney Alyson Zierdt. "Now we're seeing middle-age women attorneys, like myself, who have aging parents," she notes. Thus, various family issues affect women's - and men's - choices in their law careers and their earning power. What's more, younger lawyers, of both sexes, are conveying a clear message that they want a life, not just a career.

    Meanwhile, private law firms are trying to operate in a more business-like fashion in order to survive. With that comes a demand for higher productivity. The push for more billable hours and the demand for a more flexible worklife seem on a collision course. "But," Zierdt observes, "I think there's a place for everybody. People who are comfortable with the productivity demands and recognize the commensurate financial rewards that go with them, will hang in there. Others will make other choices."

    Billing Rates

    The survey reports that 94 percent of private practitioners have an hourly rate that they use as a standard or starting point for computing fees. Among private practitioner respondents, the current average hourly rate is $146. Figure 5 shows average and median hourly rates by region and by city population. Usage of flat fees is prevalent for many types of legal services, as shown in Figure 6.

    The 2001 hourly rate is up from $139 two years ago, for a 5 percent increase. In the six-year span between the two previous surveys (done in 1993 and 1999), the hourly rate increase was nearly 20 percent. This would seem to indicate a slowing of the rate of increase in the last two years, compared to the previous six years. This year's survey also found that only 46 percent of respondents had raised their rates in the previous 12 months.

    "In a way this is consistent with what we see everywhere," observes James Wilber, principal at Altman Weil's Midwest office in Milwaukee, "which is the inability of lawyers to raise their rates by much. But I am surprised that the increase in Wisconsin is so little compared to what we see nationally."

    Only 103 out of 573 private practitioner respondents, or 18 percent, say their firm has a policy for minimum billable hour requirements. Usually, such policies exist in larger law firms, but other firms have minimums as well; they just don't express them in terms of billable hours. "We look at actual collections," Schumacher notes. "We have three associates now, and we expect annual collections from each of them of $125,000. Then we run a report that tells us how many hours it took them to get there, which gives us an effective hourly rate."

    Time Usage

    The survey found that on average, full-time attorneys put in a 44-hour workweek, while private practitioners work 43 hours per week. Both the entire respondent group and private practitioners say that, on average, seven hours of their workweek go to noncompensable tasks. Many observers remarked that the numbers seemed low, especially for private practitioners, based on their own experiences and what they see among colleagues. "You have to work nine hours, eating lunch at your desk, to bill seven hours a day," Ballman notes. "And then there's work at night and on weekends."

    Grove also believes that the normal private-practice lawyer's workweek may be longer than the survey shows. "I figure most work about 50 hours a week," he says. "They start early and work late, they're not just putting in eight-hour days." One can only guess at the reasons for the disparities between survey findings and what people perceive as the real lawyer workweek. Grove suspects it may be that many attorneys don't pay enough attention to how they actually use their time - especially the unbillable time. "The question is always," he says, "what do you count in that? Do you count the Rotary luncheon as networking and marketing, or do you just count it as lunch?"

    But one point the survey numbers do make clear, says State Bar President Gerald Mowris of Madison, is that attorneys are generous in donating their time. Nearly 40 percent of respondents report spending from two to 45 hours a week in unbilled community service. "That's a lot. Then on top of that," Mowris notes, "they're doing several hours of pro bono work per year. It's gratifying to see attorneys giving that much of their time." Nearly two-thirds of respondents reported pro bono hours, ranging from one hour to a high of 520 hours per year.

    Overhead Expenses  >

    Overhead Expenses

    Only private practitioners responded to this portion of the survey, with 155 sole practitioners and 234 firms providing information.These respondents indicated that for 2000, their average per-attorney overhead was $68,654, broken down into $33,884 for labor (salary and benefits for all nonlawyer personnel), $13,980 for occupancy (rent or mortgage, phone, utilities), and $23,631 for all other nonsalary expenses. The average gross receipts per attorney for 2000 was $159,269. Thus, for 2000 the average expenses-to-gross-receipts ratio was 0.35.

    Now to compare medians. The median total overhead figure was $60,000, while median gross receipts tallied $145,000. Comparing median overhead to median gross receipts yields a ratio of 0.41. For median data on overhead, gross receipts, and ratios by region, firm size, and community population, see the full report, available from the State Bar.

    Grove, whose lean management structure allows him to keep his expenses-to-gross-receipts ratio in the range of 0.22 to 0.27, says he's encouraged to see the survey findings on this ratio. Perhaps, he concludes, attorneys are making changes in how they use technology. In the past, too many attorneys merely slapped new technology on top of an old management structure, hoping that the added cost would be offset by productivity gains. It often was not.

    "Maybe what's happening now," Grove says, "is that technology is starting to pay off in productivity increases and lower expenses due to changes in management structure. For example, it may no longer be one attorney, one assistant, but rather three attorneys, one assistant or, as in my case, two attorneys and no assistant."

    Wilber finds the survey's expenses-to-gross-receipts ratios are roughly similar to what he sees nationally. But as for the average gross receipts figure of $159,269, "that's lower compared to what we see in firms across the United States," Wilber says, "where that number might be $250,000 per lawyer, or even $300,000 or $350,000 per lawyer in bigger firms." The difference persists when comparing firms of similar size. For instance, nationally for firms with fewer than nine attorneys, the average gross receipts per lawyer was $266,053 for year 2000, according to Altman Weil's latest survey. Compare this to the $162,085 average (gross receipts figure) reported by Wisconsin attorneys in similar-sized firms.

    Finally, Wilber offers a caution on expenses/receipts ratios. Avoid focusing too much on cutting overhead as a way to improve the ratio, he advises. Sure, you want to trim your overhead as much as is reasonable, which depends on the nature of your practice. But, "in our view," Wilber says, "the more important number is the revenues-per-lawyer. That's where the action is. If you want a more profitable firm, you have to get your people busy and engage in marketing."

    Expenses Billed to Clients

    Roughly two-thirds of responding private practitioners say they "always" or "usually" charge clients for travel time and costs, while 88 percent charge clients for time spent on phone calls. Almost half always or usually pass on copying/duplicating costs to their clients.

    But the number that perplexes some observers, as it did in the 1999 survey, is the high proportion of private practitioners who fail to charge clients for legal assistant time. Only 46 percent say they always or usually pass on this cost to clients. "That floored me," says Lori Kannenberg, a law firm administrator at Lawton & Cates, Madison, and past-president of the Wisconsin Association of Legal Administrators. "We've been talking for years and years about billing for paralegal time. It's unfortunate that more firms aren't doing that."

    Still, the survey finding could be skewed, because of a lingering problem with definition. The survey asked about billing for legal assistant time without defining "legal assistant." Some firms, however, use that job title for staff who actually are secretaries, not paralegals. And the vast majority of firms do not charge clients for secretarial time (only 11 percent of survey respondents always or usually do so).

    That leaves a somewhat fuzzy picture of whether firms bill often enough for paralegal time. But if they don't, "they're losing out on potential revenue," Kannenberg notes. "And they probably have employees who feel undervalued."

    At Kannenberg's firm, for example, some staff members who opted to get training as paralegals now serve as both secretaries and paralegals. They're paid more for the paralegal portion of their work. In turn, their paralegal time is billed to clients, who are happy to pay the paralegal's rather than the lawyer's rate for legal work. Does this disparity in pay for support staff having mixed duties create tensions among staff? Not if you educate employees about the reasons for the difference, Kannenberg maintains. "Here we make it no secret," she says, "that if you take on more responsibility, you will be paid more. And you will bill for your time."

    Marketing and More

    Seventy-two percent of private practitioner respondents say they market their services. Figure 7 shows how firms, in three size categories, use various marketing devices.

    A couple of statistics, in particular, caught the eye of Jennifer Rupkey, director of client development for Michael Best & Friedrich, a large Milwaukee law firm, and president of the Wisconsin chapter of the Legal Marketing Association. She notes that for larger firms, the usage rate for Web pages is a close second to the rate for firm brochures. "In the past, the brochure was typically the core piece," Rupkey points out. "Now the Web site is close behind. In the future, I don't see firms replacing their brochure with a Web site, but rather using the Web page to complement the brochure. Brochures will remain useful for distributing at client meetings and seminars," she says.

    Rupkey also notes that only 12 percent of firms with fewer than 10 attorneys have a Web page. "I'm surprised at that," she says, "because they're the ones whose clients would be on the Internet looking to hire a lawyer. Smaller firms could get clients as a result of their Web site." By contrast, larger firms, because of their target clientele, use Web sites as "an informational tool that complements our other marketing devices," Rupkey explains. "We don't look to get new clients through our Web site."

    When asked to assess the quantity of their work, 61 percent of private practitioners say their workload is "about right," while 29 percent report it is "more than they can handle," and only 10 percent say it's "insufficient to keep busy."

    Finally, of private practitioners, 59 percent responded that the number of lawyers in the community in which they practice is "about right." This result is nearly the reverse of a similar question in the recent Bench/Bar Survey, as reported in the November Wisconsin Lawyer. In that survey, 53 percent of respondents said there are "too many attorneys in practice today for the amount of work to be done."

    The difference in findings between these two surveys is a result of what the questions asked of respondents - that is, an overall assessment of the lawyer count versus sizing up the situation close to home. "It's similar to the differences in public perceptions about lawyers," Mowris points out. "Overall, they rank lawyers low. But they rank their own lawyer high. It may be the same factor at work here. How close you are to something skews your perception."

    Wisconsin Lawyer


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