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A proposal for law firms and law departments to entertain tiered billing rates
What would be the result if a law firm asked its lawyers to charge their time not at a single hourly rate (say, $400 per hour) but at three levels. At the lowest level, where the service was simple or inefficient or travel, perhaps the rate would be 20 percent less ($320 an hour). The typical rate, for work in the comfortable sweet spot of the lawyer, would be at the standard rate. For work over the weekend, rushed, or demanding special teamwork research or creativity, the rate would be 20 percent above ($480).
Set aside the logistical impediment of time and billing systems, the inevitable subjectivity on the part of the billers, and the complication of bill review that might result. Tiered billing would at least attempt to bring costs closer to client value. The data would also be illuminating. Does the department see the value of work the same way its law firm’s lawyers do? Why not try this with a primary firm for a quarter?
Posted on August 22, 2006 at 10:51 PM in Outside Counsel | Permalink
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» One step closer to value billing from LawBiz Blog
Rees Morrison suggests a very interesting concept ... sort of a blend of hourly rate billing and value billing ... Perhaps we need this intermediate step to get to true value billing. What would be the result if a law... [Read More]
Tracked on Aug 23, 2006 11:16:05 AM
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Interesting approach. This may be the intermediate step that is required for lawyers to move closer to value billing.
Posted by: Ed Poll | Aug 23, 2006 11:19:19 AM
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