Julie Jones, Ropes & Gray

Ropes & Gray has selected corporate partner Julie Jones to become the firm's first-ever chairwoman after its current chair, R. Bradford Malt, retires at the end of 2019.

The change will not take effect until 2020, but when it does, Jones, 48, will join a select number of women at the top levels of leadership in Am Law 200 firms. She'll also become the first woman to hold the chair position in Ropes & Gray's more than 150-year history.

The leadership transition coincides with Malt's reaching the firm's mandatory retirement age of 65 at the end of 2019. The firm's policy committee, which acts as its governing board, selected Jones as the firm's next chair after conducting one-on-one consultations with all of the firm's partners, according to Malt and Ropes & Gray managing partner David Chapin. Chapin is also due to retire at the end of 2019, and he said a similar process would take place next year to determine his successor as managing partner.

Malt, who has been Ropes & Gray's chairman since 2004, said in an interview that there was “stunning unanimity” among partners that Jones was the right fit as the firm's next chair.

“For someone who has been a lifer at this firm,” he said, “I just couldn't feel more confident knowing that the firm will be in Julie's hands. We've been turning to Julie for some of our most thorny issues for some time now.”

While she is now Ropes & Gray's chair-elect and poised to become the firm's top leader, Jones has long held leadership roles at the firm. From 2006-11, she was head of its securities and public companies group and, since then, has served as a member of Ropes & Gray's policy committee.

Starting at the firm in 1994, Jones made partner in 2003 and has built a reputation over the years as a top dealmaker for private equity clients. Based in Boston, but also working out of New York, she has had a hand in transactions across a host of industries, including a recent role advising TPG Capital in a reported $2 billion sale of hospital chain IASIS Healthcare Corp. to Steward Health Care System.

Jones had a particularly active year in 2010, when she represented TPG Capital in a $3 billion acquisition of clothing retailer J. Crew Group Inc., guided Thomas H. Lee Partners toward its $1.1 billion acquisition of biotechnology company inVentiv Health Inc. and advised on an initial public offering by brokerage firm LPL Financial. That year she was also part of a Ropes & Gray team that represented Bain Capital in its $1.8 billion acquisition of children's clothier Gymboree Corp.

Jones said she expects that once she formally becomes chair in 2020, that role will take up the vast majority of her time. But she stressed that she won't be walking away from clients altogether.

“I can't imagine a world in which I'm not there to support clients in moments of significant judgment,” she said.

In the interim two years, Jones is expected to work closely to help guide the firm's direction alongside Malt, Chapin, the firm's policy committee and its partners in the United States, London and Asia. Chapin, Malt and Jones all said they don't expect any major strategic shifts in the short term. They also explained that the firm decided to announce the leadership change well in advance to provide ample time to undertake the transition.

“The transition's been underway, in the planning stages, for a while,” Chapin said.

The firm's leadership announcement comes toward the end of a year that has seen personnel shake-ups at Ropes & Gray, which saw a number of partners depart in 2017 and which completed a spinoff of its patent prosecution group. Those developments, however, didn't play any role in the firm's plans for a transition of leadership, according to Malt, who described them as “the kinds of strategic decisions that well-managed firms make.”

Looking ahead, Jones said she expects to spend the next couple of years reaching out to partners and the firm's clients to “spend time thinking together about where they want the future of Ropes & Gray to be.”

She also reflected on her rise to the top of the firm's leadership as a woman—something that remains rare in the world of Big Law. Jones said she views her leadership role as both an honor and a testament to the values that Ropes & Gray maintains as a firm.

“I was always judged on merit. We value intelligence, hard work and commitment—and those things are gender-blind,” she said. “I feel lucky because of the values Ropes & Gray has as a firm, and because we've always had strong women leaders and I benefited from that. I feel a sense of duty in that regard. I need to continue to demonstrate our commitment to those core values.”

Jones is not the only female partner to be moving up in Ropes & Gray's leadership. Jane Rogers, the firm's former global co-head of finance, has been appointed to the firm's policy committee. Mike Kazakevich has succeeded her as global co-head of finance.