I want to walk across the M4!

I want to walk across the M4!

Hello and a warm welcome to the fourteenth edition of the 2to3days newsletter - for people in business who are responsible for hiring decisions and who want to accelerate the pace of change when it comes to women’s equality. I was always led to believe that the fundamental premise behind recruitment is that it’s about finding the best person for the job.

It wasn’t me who said this.?

?It also wasn’t me who said: “I have often thought about stepping in front of a car as I walk down Balham High Road”...

?These stories were from two separate senior lawyers of corporate law firms, who had shared them with their bosses, who then shared them with me.

?These stories are horrendous.?

?How can any industry – not least one that is responsible for?creating?legislation designed to protect people – put its practitioners under such suicidal pressure?

?I am not a lawyer. But I speak to a lot of lawyers, and I also?speak to the HRDs of law firms.

?Until last week I had automatically assumed that these lawyers contemplated such horrific actions because they were burnt out and stressed beyond endurance. And yes, that is correct, but the nuance that had passed me by and which was explained to me only last week by an equity partner of a national law firm, is that all lawyers are held hostage by the clock on their billable hours. The pressure is relentless. Only a medical appointment is reason enough to ‘stop the clock.’

?A modest billable target of 1,400 billable hours a year breaks down to 6 hours a day. This might not seem that unreasonable but that doesn’t include non-billable hours which are also rapidly on the rise as administrative staff have largely been replaced by technology and lawyers are now expected to do this work too. The hours in the corporate legal world are crazy. Something has to give. Typically, it's the women as families can’t survive (the last time I checked) with no parents at home!

?So, it’s no wonder that 37% of UK lawyers have considered leaving their job for mental health or parents are fabricating meetings just to be able to get to see their children!?

?Last week I was invited to speak at The Law Society’s conference on the ‘Future of Work.’ At the conference a female equity partner told me she had resigned as she couldn’t stand the short termism of the majority male ‘partners boys club’ anymore. The morning after the conference, I was walking early on West Wittering beach with a friend of mine (non-lawyer) whose daughter left Uni this summer to start her first job with a law firm. I was told that she’d already made the decision ‘to milk the system’ and was plotting her escape in a few years’ time! ?By sheer coincidence as my mate was telling me this, we passed a?lady who my mate told me was until?recently a senior equity partner in one of the leading city law firms but had just quit - she apparently is done.?

?Within 24 hours I was being bombarded with stories of women quitting the legal industry.?

These stories are just in my inner circle. There will be thousands more.?

?What an undeniable waste of talent.?

And then the irony is that companies ask me to find them more women as they keep losing them in the mid to senior level positions. Go figure!

?Never ever in the 8 years that I have been building 2to3days has any other candidate in any other industry shared with me any such stories that even get close to comparing.?

What’s the solution??

?Join a consultancy

?@nexa Keystone Law Farringford Legal Cognitive Law Limited are examples of consultancy law firms who have set up thriving legal practices. They are hiring lawyers who?are quitting?the big firms so that they can take back control of their lives. The irony is that the corporate law firms are then in turn outsourcing some of their work to these consultancies.

?Stop billable hours

Pinsent Masons and Slaughter and May are just two international law firms who have done away with Billable hours.

?Maternity and Paternity leave

?This is 101 stuff. Law firms need to support fathers to take time off when their children are born and not to have the policy but then make it known that fathers who do take it up will be damaging their careers!

?Maternity returners and career returners

?With maternity returners, firms should create a plan with the mother to be before they leave to have their baby. Include touch points, team updates so they feel supported, valued and want to come back. When they do come back – and this is the kicker – don’t assume that they have lost any of their ambition. Children have a happy knack of growing up and needing less of their parents’ time over time. So many times, I hear stories of men giving them less interesting work, and work that is less worthy of a promotion. So, they get sidelined, and either give up or?become consultants. Career returners who have had a break for 2 or more years who want to come back are highly valued talent. They simply need support in getting back up to speed, which takes a short number of months (no longer than a standard probationary period).?

?Work life integration

?Support your staff to integrate work into their lives – be that hybrid working, compressed weeks, part time or job shares.?

?Leadership

The above starts with whose in charge. What you don’t want on your watch are the continuation of these horrific stories being played out. It needs to happen now and not left for your successor.

?What have I been up to??

?I am making a conscious effort to lead a more intentional life.?

  • ?With a group of girlfriends, I am walking the South Downs Way (Winchester to Eastbourne) and this weekend we did a 12-mile?leg in glorious sunshine.?
  • ?It’s been an ambition of mine to cold water swim?but up until now I have been too much of a wuss. But in the last week I have swum 5 times. It’s utterly amazing. But it’s early days and I need to get to Christmas before I feel a crow coming on!
  • ?Lowbrow - I watched the Beckham documentary! I was reminded that there are always two sides to a story, and that focus, resilience, determination and family are important. Not endless hours in the office!
  • ?Midbrow I have started to watch the latest Planet Earth. Always a great reminder that we need to put our planet before profit.

Who am I?

I am Juliet Turnbull, the founder of 2to3days, the company I set up because I believe that women in the 21st century have a fundamental right to reach their full potential at work. I believe the UK plc needs a female focused talent marketplace that supports women, inspires women and connects women to organisations that want to hire more women to work flexibly. I myself have worked flexibly for the past 20 years. I don’t believe you can have it all but I do believe you can ‘have both’ - a great work and home life which comes through integration.?

I am a straight talking, crack on and make it happen sort of girl. I believe in speaking truth to power and being your authentic self. I am on the third chapter of my career - I started life as a Chartered Surveyor before moving into business coaching and now I am an entrepreneur building a purpose-led business.

Denyse Whillier

Purpose-Led Business Strategist & Coach | Empowering Female Founders to Build An Unforgettable Brand | Former CEO | We Are Mimosa Founder

1 年

This is truly shocking Juliet. I had no idea it was this bad. On a separate note, I've never thought of you being too much of a wuss for anything!

回复

Brilliant article. It is unbelievable that many firms are still as they were in the 90s when I qualified. I made the choice to step away from the Corporate world in order to have both as you say Juliet. I became a leader in HM3 Legal a female led practice that supports women to have both!

Mark Brown

Director Taylor Brown Solicitors

1 年

Juliet Turnbull this is timely - it is great to hear your voice - I have read the comments and you have clearly struck a chord! As Donna Taylor said - it is a great read! I know that the phrase "thought leader" is the "in thing" - but in your case it warrants being said - you are a Thought Leader - an Inspiration - an Influencer - a Change Bringer. When I set up my high street practice 10 years ago we decided not to set targets - we are not slaves to billable hours - don't get me wrong we work hard, but are not driven by this. My Firm has been able to re-engage with a Solicitor who qualified with us, made a decision to begin a family, and has just re-joined us as a Consultant. It is exciting - rewarding and life giving. As Nigel Clark said, he is looking forward to working with you to increase the pace of change - I too am looking forward to working with you to see where this journey takes you - and the Legal Profession.

Julia Fenwick

Founder & Director at BoldMove Consulting - ethical PR & comms talent partner and coach - Champion of 2to3days - [email protected]

1 年

Shocking! I had a friend who when she had children took a role with an American law firm so she could work evenings when her children were in bed because she just couldn't find the flexibility she needed with a UK firm to be both a mum and Lawyer.

Alex Webb

Organisational Health, Team Performance, Leadership Consultant & Resilient Women Leaders. Working with HR Managers, L&D Leads & CEOs. International Bestselling Author.

1 年

This has been a very timely posting Juliet Turnbull. Thank you for sharing. We currently have a few lawyers in our current Resilient Women Leaders 3-month programme and this subject came up in our 1:1 session. To be able to share your newsletter with them, so they can see the companies who are trying to do things differently has been really helpful. Billable hours seem to be the thing that is stopping them from developing into the leaders they want to be. Fingers crossed there is some change coming for all those lawyers out there.

要查看或添加评论,请登录

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了