Invited to speak to Ontario lawyers on
the topic of alternative fee structures at the Law Society of Upper Canada annual Small and Solo Law Firm conference.
Not exact matches
The full survey covers a broader range
of topics, including
alternative fees, billing and invoicing, competition and collaboration.
Among the
topics on the agenda are new model law firms, the challenges
of diversity, the consumer law revolution, the future
of managing partners, and the nuances
of value and
alternative fees.
Incidentally, if you are looking for additional guidance on flat
fees and
alternative billing, perhaps one
of the best authorities is Allison Shields
of Legalease Blogs, who has written extensively about this
topic.
Egeland is a frequent speaker on
topics ranging from expert witness deposition strategy and employer liability and intentional tort claims to
alternative fee arrangements and matters relating to the effective and efficient practice
of law.
The firm is hardly the only one to consider billing
alternatives — fixed
fees, success
fees, and the like — but it is making itself distinctive and different simply by talking about the taboo
topic of how law firms charge their clients.
Mary is a frequent writer and speaker on tax, benefits, asset protection planning, and estate planning
topics as well as on law practice related
topics including improving the delivery
of legal services, technology in the practice
of law, building sustainable law firms, and
alternative fee structures.
But I'm so interested in talking about this publication and its importance to the developing field
of alternative fee arrangements (AFAs, a
topic we're focused on these days at Edge) that I'm willing to blur genres — and in any event, at 150 pages, it's not like this is a pamphlet.
Note: Mr. Esposito is a frequent speaker and author on a wide - range
of topics facing the legal industry, including
alternative fee arrangements, legal project management, and law firm profitability models.