TheCorporateCounsel.net

June 22, 2023

Survey: Law Department Benchmarking

The Association of Corporate Counsel recently released the results of its 2023 Law Department Benchmarking Survey, which covered 449 legal departments in companies of all sizes across 24 industries and 20 countries. Here are some of the key takeaways:

– Privacy is now the most common business function directly overseen by Legal (57% and six points more than reported in 2022) overtaking compliance, which traditionally tops the list (56%). An additional 19% of departments, however, indicated that compliance is a separate department that reports to legal. Therefore, in total, 77% of legal departments reported that the CLO ultimately oversees compliance compared to 70% that have oversight over privacy.

– The median total legal spend for all participating companies increased from $2.4 million last year to $3.1 million this year and although this increase occurred across companies of all sizes, the largest increases were driven by companies with greater than $20 billion in revenue, with a median total legal spend of $80 million this year compared to $50 million last year.

– The median total legal spend as a percentage company revenue (a key measure of Legal’s overall cost to the business) also increased to 0.63% compared to 0.56% last year. However, the total inside/outside spend distribution has remained roughly the same with 53% of total spend going to internal costs and 47% of total spend going to outside costs.

– About three in ten departments track internal diversity metrics related to the legal department’s composition, and 21% report tracking diversity metrics with respect to their outside counsel. There has been little movement in these numbers over the past three years despite the increased attention and desire to establish a more inclusive and equitable environment within the legal profession.

The increases in total legal spend are pretty eye-popping, particularly for large companies. A recent LegalDive.com article on the survey notes that although law firms increased their rates by an average of 5.5% in the first quarter of 2023, other factors, such as increased litigation and regulation, are more significant contributors to the jump in overall spending.

John Jenkins