Are LPOs Under A Two Pronged Attack?

by Gabe Acevedo on May 11, 2010

in All

Over at The LPO Observer, there ‘s a post about how LPOs are taking on attacks both from the United States and India. The blogger first addresses the Indian issue.

In India, a group calling itself “The Association of Indian Lawyers” filed a petition in the Chennai High Court against foreign law firms doing business in India, despite a ban against them. The petition mentions top US and UK law firms, but also includes Integreon, the largest and most credible LPO provider. The inclusion of LPO’s stems, according to the petitioners, from the LPO’s being illegal foreign law offices.

But the Observer notes the reason Indian lawyers are coming after LPOs, the want a cut of the deal.

It is to be noted that a number of top Indian law firms, most notably Kochhar & Co. and FoxMandal Little have tried to penetrate the LPO market, with little success.  This is mostly due to the passive mentality of Indian lawyers and the nature of practicing law in India which conflicts with the much more aggressive and dynamic US and UK legal systems. Clearly, the traditional Indian lawyers are feeling threatened by the new entrants, and want a “piece of the action”.

So what’s the American’s problem with Legal Process Outsourcing? I wil give you the details and why the LPO Observer thinks the Indian lawyer challenges will most certainly fail after the jump.

Here is what irks this blogger with the Americans.

Around the same time, in the US, both the ABA Commission on Ethics 20/20 and the ABA Section on International Law have requested inputs on the ethical aspects of both domestics and foreign outsourcing of legal work.

Really?  Isn’t this the same commission that Lisa Solomon is screaming about taking more input from solos or small firm attorneys. Or isn’ t this the same ABA that “endorsed” outsourcing a few years back?

Apparently other branches of the ABA are poking around at LPOs as well.

The ABA Section on International Law in turn held a meeting on April 17, 2010 titled Public Forum on Offshore Outsourcing of Legal Services in New York. The stated goal of the meeting is “information gatehring” [sic], but participants did put LPO representatives on the defensive.

But have no fear LPOers, after painstaking research, the Observer has mathimatically broke this down to a less than 1% possibility on any of this affecting you.

Our opinion is that the Indian front will get bogged down in the notoriously inert Indian legal system (0.8 prob ability), and will achieve little in the foreseeable future. The US action will unlikely produce any significant threats to the industry, but may introduce more specific guidelines around the ethics of Legal Outsourcing (.7 probability). Such guidelines could prove beneficial to the industry and to the globalization of the legal trade.

So the Indian lawyers are lazy and the Americans won’t ever take a major standon anything.  See nothing to worry about whatsoever.