barmag67 Jan. 2016 | Page 27

like active digital marketing campaigns. There is a new expectation from those looking towards management teams for leadership, for them to be provided with more useful information, available at the ‘tap-of-a-button’. Members crave access to data that will allow them to hone and improve their practices. Clerks desire quick, yet powerful, graphical analysis of data they can rely upon to help review individual/chambers performance. Traditional financial reports, or tallies of cases by source, are all well and good, but users at all levels want more. Chambers are therefore, tasked with meeting those needs by capturing and providing more. The crucial question is what information to provide and how best to deliver it? In recent times, The Bar Standards Board (BSB) has campaigned to increase Chambers awareness of their regulatory responsibilities relating to Equality & Diversity and Fair Allocation of Work. In summary, the BSB Equality Rules Handbook states: ‘Chambers has to record whether the work came into chambers marked for a particular barrister/pupil, or whether it was allocated, and if so, who it was allocated to and who was responsible for allocating the work’. Whilst these requirements have been in play for quite some time; recently, the fact that the BSB has (albeit gently), raised the spectre of being labelled ‘non-compliant’, has focused Chambers on ensuring the data required to fulfil the regulatory responsibility is being regularly captured and made available. Some management teams in Chambers however, have seized this opportunity and instructed their clerks to raise the bar and go one step further. They have shrewdly reacted to the increased competitiveness of the Bar Market, by harnessing an additional, vital, stream of information relating to the fair allocation of work. Information that allows them to view their business in a completely different light. Those sets have recognised that gathering data on ‘the reason why and by whom’ an individual is allocated to a particular piece of work, really only captures a snap-shot of a much wider picture. For every successful instruction recorded (the reporting value of which is not in itself in dispute), there will undeniably be many more instances where individuals are offered, but refused. competitors on the basis of cost or experience. The statistics pivoting around opportunity related data, can undoubtedly improve Chambers understanding of the fairness of how, and to whom, work is allocated. From a practice management perspective however, the insight achievable through analysis of this data, is equally as profound. Identifying and recording lost opportunities, opens up new methods of detecting weaknesses in Chamber’s armoury. Yet, despite this data being extremely valuable, under normal circumstances in most Chambers, it is lost. This is primarily down to the hurdles that must be overcome for Chambers wishing to collate such data. Recording any additional data takes ‘Time’, and the ‘Software’ to do so. Demands on clerks are increasing year-on-year, and there is an understandable reluctance to take on more responsibility without careful consideration of the impact it may have elsewhere. Clerks need functionality at their fingertips to assist them to record informatio