BigLaw and SmallLaw partnerships - solutions to helping clients

As a now solo practitioner, I am sometimes asked how I can handle complex real estate transactions by myself. The answer? The same way I did at BigLaw. It is easy!

I was therefore happy to see this story about large and small firm "partnerships" for certain matters. I do wish they'd taken the next step, though.

Sometimes large firms refer matters to me because I can handle price-pressured matters at a more reasonable cost while also maintaining high quality. I can do it because of low overhead. And when my clients have huge deals needing a large staff, I send it to some great shops where I have relationships.

Other times firms refer work to me because they don't handle commercial real estate. So I am their guy, so to speak.

Out of state? I've got that covered with a network of local counsel that I've developed over 15 years in the business.

Non-transactional matters? No problem. I don't litigate, but I have friends who do, and I cannot tell you how many pieces of litigation I have referred to large and small firms.

What about wacky real estate matters? Sometimes I do them. But because the client comes first, I want them to have the best. So I have some sub-specialist lawyers on my list of people to call for some matters, such as GSA leasing, Cook County property tax appeals, local zoning, etc. I can do these things, but sometimes the sub-specialist is the right call.

Oh, shameless plug department: if you are one of those big firm or small firm folks out there (and I know you are reading), don't hesitate to drop me a line to see if we can work on deals going forward. I'm always looking to expand my base and meet good lawyers.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Why real estate in San Diego is so expensive

I must be getting old...

Interesting trend - don't buy the dirt, buy the developer