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How LeanLaw + QuickBooks Online solve the law firm compensation dilemma - no matter what kind of law firm you’re at.

LeanLaw and QuickBooks online solve the law firm compensation dilema - two lawyers shaking hands

Unless your firm has a pure lock-step system, you need financial software that can easily and quickly calculate the compensation metrics that are important to your firm. LeanLaw + QuickBooks Online shine in supporting compensation calculations because of the deep integration between LeanLaw and QuickBooks that creates a single set of compensation data on which to base the calculations. This blog post shows how LeanLaw + QuickBooks Online supports the main compensation models.

Law firm compensation systems have many variants, but they all include some combination of the same four factors.

Hale & Dorr, aka, Finder, Minder, Grinder

The first factor is objective productivity, and usually looks at the attorneys’ contributions under the “finder, minder and grinder” metrics made popular by Hale & Dorr in the 1940s, otherwise known as: originating attorney, responsible attorney and working attorney. The compensation system may focus on billable time, billed dollars, or collected dollars in analyzing these metrics.

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Ownership Share

The second factor is an ownership share, which may be in addition to objective productivity or it might stand on its own. The share might be based solely or partially on seniority (the old lock-step model), but more often on an assessment of productivity, which may look backward to a prior year or may be based on the current year’s productivity.

Subjective Assessment

The third factor is a subjective assessment. This includes a valuation of non-revenue contributions to the firm including firm management, marketing, and community profile.

Overhead Model:

The final factor is overhead, which is used to convert revenue contributions into profit calculations. Overhead may be allocated per capita, pro rata or based on actual expenditures.

Watch this video to learn how LeanLaw & QuickBooks are uniquely suited for law firm compensation reporting:

Why LeanLaw & QuickBooks Online are uniquely well suited for law firm compensation modeling

Data Tracking

When a payment is made, LeanLaw calculates compensation metrics for the appropriate person. It will first pay out any expenses. The remaining revenue, whether a partial or full payment, will be attributed to those stakeholders in a pro rata way. The end result will show, for any given period, what was billed, what was collected — whether that was invoiced three months ago or yesterday.

  • LeanLaw identifies who is responsible for matters, who originated matters and knows everyone who contributed to a matter at a line item level.
  • LeanLaw tracks fixed fees and other forms of compensation that an attorney might receive.

LeanLaw will show calculations according to origination. It will show what work that attorney originated. If the firm chooses, LeanLaw shows what the firm takes out for overhead. The end result is a live and transparent representation of each attorney’s contribution and expected revenue. Each attorney can see that information in explicit detail at the client / matter level and even which payments were made to which specific invoices.

If the firm has additional compensation tracking based on the underlying data, LeanLaw allows you to export the reports and the underlying data to Excel to manage your custom tracking formulas.

An alternative (or additional) method is to enable classing within QuickBooks Online and LeanLaw. In this model, as LeanLaw sends the line item information specific to the responsible attorney and each contributor to QuickBooks Online where classing reports can be generated. This enables the law firm to look at full P&L statements for each attorney’s work.

Three Ways to Track Attorney Compensation

  1. LeanLaw’s automated compensation report – live in real time, connected to QuickBooks Online and QuickBooks Payments
  2. Running your own custom reports using the underlying data and building them into your own Excel reports
  3. Building full P&Ls by partner or responsible attorney and using QuickBooks’ internal tools, custom form fields, and/or classing

LeanLaw also has timekeeper productivity reports to track all the billable, non-billable and the invoiced value of any time trackers contribution to the firm. These can be exported to Excel for additional manipulation and are the basis for many firms who use this data to calculate bonuses or other performance based compensation.

Lastly, we would encourage you to take advantage of an accounting professional who understands LeanLaw, QuickBooks and law firm accounting. We call them LeanLaw Accounting Pros — you can search for one yourself or ask us for a recommendation. These pros will maximize your law firm’s satisfaction with clarity and transparency in divvying up the compensation. Your firm may also benefit from a business consultant who can help you understand and track key metrics to improve the productivity and profitability of your business.

Sign up for a demo today.