Know Your Snack Bracket
Cakes and Pies on the Island Princess. Photo by the Author.

Know Your Snack Bracket

One of my best clients was a very large privately owned corporation. I had a great relationship with Steve, the majority shareholder/CEO. Our firm was the ‘go-to’ corporate counsel for the company.

The first time that Steve’s company was looking to handle some acquisitions, the CEO asked me, “What is your snack bracket for this type of work?”?What he wanted to know was what size of deal we were comfortable handling. The answer at the time was deals of up to about $100,000,000. Beyond that a larger firm would better serve him.

So Steve gave us all of his acquisition work which was within our snack bracket but looked elsewhere for the huge deals.

Now, I could have told Steve that we could handle larger deals as well, but Steve probably would not have believed me and I might have lost the trust which was the keystone of our relationship.

It is important to understand that every client with any level of sophistication will slot their lawyer into a snack bracket. However, most clients will not be as upfront about it as Steve was. As a lawyer, you always have to be aware of your snack bracket, and equally important, manage your client’s expectations about what you can handle.

I failed at this many times.

There was Gordon who used our firm for all of his work for many years until it was time to sell his business. Then he turned to another firm without even asking me about our ability to handle it. Perhaps I had never explained our capabilities to him. Or maybe I did not get close enough to his accountant who he saw as his trusted advisor and who steered him to someone who referred business to him.

Then there was Dan, another long-term client who got himself into a franchise dispute which our firm could easily have handled. But Dan panicked and ran downtown to consult with a franchise lawyer at a large firm for a second opinion. That lawyer convinced David that our firm was too unsophisticated for this type of dispute and he was gone.

And of course I can never forget Doctor Bob who ran a specialty medical clinic and had all sorts of difficult contractual issues to handle. Doctor Bob seemed to truly appreciate the creativity and diligence that I brought to that work. But when he sold the clinic, he went to a lawyer recommended by his accountant without even asking me if I could handle it. The first that I heard about it was when Doctor Bob called to ask me to help facilitate the due diligence requirements for the transactions lawyer.

I often thought that the explanation for each of these failures was that the client was unappreciative, disloyal, and generally a lesser level of human being than myself. However, as I ruminate over it now, I realize that each of these failures was my fault. In every case I had failed to communicate my snack bracket and infiltrate the client’s network of influencers.

Here are some questions for you to ask yourself:

1.??????Does your client know what your capabilities are beyond the type of work that you have traditionally done for them?

2.??????Is your client familiar with the resources in your firm that you can draw upon to handle types of work which are not within your skill set, and believe that you are willing to bring them in when required?

3.??????Have you introduced your client to other lawyers in your firm who can handle different specialties, or kept the client close to your vest to protect your originating credits?

4.??????Do you know who your client’s trusted advisor is, and have you reached out to get to know that person and found ways to support their business?

Lawyers tend to forget that marketing to their existing clients is the easiest type of marketing that they can do. It all starts with knowing your snack bracket and making sure that your clients also know it. If you don’t, you can be sure that they will be snacking elsewhere.


This article was originally published by Law360 Canada, part of LexisNexis Canada Inc.

Peter Sutton

Experienced and passionate specialist in Brownfield redevelopment

1 年

As usual, your reflections are applicable to nearly all professional service practitioners. I wish I had someone 30 years ago to explain to me the importance of professional networking and building, maintaining, and nurturing those relationships.

Tony Shepherd

Global Communication & Negotiation Specialist, Lawyer, Musician & Author

1 年

A very open, self reflective article Murray, which we’ve all come to expect and learn from. A side angle I’d offer is that co-advisors, like accountants, often jealously guard that trusted advisor status and can be threatened by co-professionals in whom their clients innocently express faith. This can be the kiss of death. So cosying up may not help, when they’d rather “own” the co-professional servicing their client, as opposed to sharing them. I’ve seen this phenomenon involving not only lawyers and accountants, but architects, engineers, etc

Daniel Rizzi ??

Helping You Think Differently to Change Your Life | Tech Scaleup Anti-Lawyer | Co-founder @ We-Watch | Helping Founders Need Less Lawyers as They Scale | Sharing My Startup Journey | Business Fundamentals

1 年

I think a lot of the time we assume clients know what a "corporate/commercial" (or fill in any other type) lawyer does, but why would they assume that covers M&A, fundraising, lending, or whatever else we've had a chance to deal with. This is a great point that I need to do better on!

Mohammed Talib

Partner at Pinsent Masons | Helping the construction industry solve disputes the right way

1 年

Love the idea of a snack bracket. Thanks for sharing Murray Gottheil.

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Murray Gottheil的更多文章

  • Foot Foot Goes Boating

    Foot Foot Goes Boating

    Once upon a time, a long, long time ago and in a far, far, away place, there lived a little boy named Foot Foot. Foot…

    26 条评论
  • How To Raise a Baby Lawyer

    How To Raise a Baby Lawyer

    Those who know me would not be surprised to learn that I think that I was a brilliant supervising lawyer and mentor…

    15 条评论
  • Verily a Man May be Known by his Attorney

    Verily a Man May be Known by his Attorney

    “The sharp employ the sharp; verily, a man may be known by his attorney.” Douglas William Jerrold Criminal lawyers are…

    25 条评论
  • Partnership – Not the Holy Grail, Part Seven – One Size Does Not Fit All

    Partnership – Not the Holy Grail, Part Seven – One Size Does Not Fit All

    We all know people in a wonderful marriage. We also know people in terrible marriages.

    8 条评论
  • Worrying in the Legal Profession

    Worrying in the Legal Profession

    In my first four years of practicing law, I learned how to be a lawyer through the “sink or swim” approach. I did this…

    51 条评论
  • What Have You Done For Me Lately?

    What Have You Done For Me Lately?

    In the summer of 1976, I worked for the largest law firm in Montreal, which was Ogilvy, Cope, Porteous, Montgomery…

    22 条评论
  • Lawyers: Understand the Math

    Lawyers: Understand the Math

    I sometimes hear from young (and sometimes not so young) lawyers who do not understand the math that supports their…

    27 条评论
  • It is Okay to Put Up With Some Injustice

    It is Okay to Put Up With Some Injustice

    After much thought, I have concluded that young people should be more willing to put up with tyranny. Before the howls…

    48 条评论
  • Tough Love - U.S. Style

    Tough Love - U.S. Style

    They say that the Americans are tougher than we are when it comes to business. I think that it is probably true.

    10 条评论
  • Got Ya!

    Got Ya!

    Quite some time ago in Toronto, there was a major retail landlord who had some very desirable space in the downtown…

    13 条评论

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了