CKR Law website CKR Law website

The 5-year-old CKR Law firm spent much of its short existence expanding its reach globally.

In January 2018, the New York-based firm announced its “rapid expansion” with California office openings in San Diego and Orange County. A month later, the firm said it added even more partners by opening offices in Philadelphia, Seattle and Wilmington, Delaware. By July it had its first Texas office. The same month, it established “strategic locations” in Estonia, Switzerland, Turkey and, in the same breath, Wyoming.

A Miami office bulked up last year and had nine attorneys before shrinking to five this month. The firm's website lists its address as WeWork space at Brickell City Centre.

The firm grew to at least 50 locations on five continents. But managing partner Jeffrey Rinde wrote partners in May about why they hadn't received their draws yet, according to internal emails viewed by ALM.

CKR, which lists more than 200 lawyers on its website, faces a “cash flow crunch” and plans to make cuts, including letting go underperforming partners and reducing expenses, according to a May 10 internal email. Pay was promised May 15, but some non-equity partners went without, meaning they have gone at least three months without their anticipated partner draws, sources close to the firm told ALM.

Law firms often boast they are in growth mode, whether by adding new offices, new partners or new practices. And while CKR asserts its cash shortfall is unrelated, its swift expansion may serve as a warning of the potential risks that come with rapid growth through lateral additions.

To be clear, rapid lateral growth is not inherently reckless: Some successful Am Law 200 firms add laterals almost every week or open locations in far-flung locales around the world by acquiring local shops.

Kent Zimmermann, a Zeughauser Group law firm management consultant, speaking generally on the legal industry, said he doesn't see fast expansion alone as a chronic problem in the industry. But growth through unsuccessful lateral hires or adding laterals without a core strategy is a widespread problem, Zimmermann said.

Based on what he's heard from law firm leaders, only about a third of lateral partner hires on average are successful after 18 months. “Laterals don't work out most of the time, and if you only grow with laterals, many firms are coming to the conclusion that that's a slow, error-prone, expensive way to grow, and that's partly why you see so many firms putting mergers on the table,” Zimmermann said.

Problems stem from vetting laterals incorrectly and not having a core strategy about who to pursue and which practice areas, Zimmermann said.

It's not only about adding laterals with portable client business. If the lateral partner has a book of business that doesn't complement the firm's strategy or specialization, “it's pretty hard to see how that will ever work,” said David Barnard, a firm consultant at Blaqwell, also speaking generally.

Some firms aim to reach a certain head count — say 500 or 1,000 lawyers — but there's no magic number that suddenly makes a law firm more profitable or more successful, and there's no data to show firms become more profitable as they get bigger, said Altman Weil law firm consultant Tom Clay. “It's that kind of thinking that could get people in trouble,” Clay said about firms setting arbitrary head count goals.

“There is some merit in having more critical mass if your clients need it but … there's no statistics or history to tell you being a 100 lawyers versus 400 versus 600 is a benefit to you” or helps a law firm's profits, Clay said. “You need to match your size with your market.”

For its part, CKR discounts speedy growth as the reason for its financial struggles. “We do not believe our rapid growth materially contributed to the cash flow circumstances intimated in the press,” Rinde said in a statement to ALM on Friday.

His statement only vaguely addressed what he described as the “root cause” of the firm's situation: He said it related to ”nonrecurring events which caused certain contractually committed revenues owed to the firm to be deferred” beyond the first quarter.

“We have already taken appropriate steps to remedy this issue and prevent any recurrence. We expect these delayed revenues will be realized during the course of 2019 and expect to achieve our 2019 revenue and profit goals,” Rinde said.

'Right-sizing'

A look at CKR's lateral announcements shows a wide array of practices for new hires in the last two years, including immigration, tax, real estate, blockchain, finance, IP, bankruptcy and litigation. Many were solo practitioners or practiced at small firms. Overall, the firm announced the addition of about 58 lawyers in 2018 alone.

Rinde's statement Friday said that although he believes the firm's lateral success rate “exceeds industry standards,” CKR is now “right-sizing in part by terminating relationships with underperforming partners.” CKR, he said, will also revise its arrangements with “certain other attorneys to be more consistent with their individual performance.”

CKR's internal emails this month acknowledge some attorneys “failed to bill hundreds of thousands of dollars' worth of time,” money that could have been used to pay some outstanding draws.

Retaining unproductive nonequity partners is an industrywide phenomenon. A new Altman Weil study showed firm leaders believed 51% of nonequity partners are not sufficiently busy. That's an “egregious” number, Clay said.

The survey also showed more than half of firm leaders thought overcapacity was diluting their firms' profitability, yet the vast majority said they would pursue growth through lateral hires in 2019.

Rinde's statement to ALM obliquely addressed missed payments to partners, noting, “Some contract partners may be disappointed with the firm's decisions concerning their ongoing relationship with CKR, including timing and payment of draws” and “the adherence to firm policies as a pre-condition to payment.”

But despite the financial struggles and its plans to reduce expenses, CKR is still in talks to add more laterals. Rinde told ALM that the firm will evaluate lateral opportunities, including individual partners, practice groups or firms. “Certain lateral partners and groups have recently joined the firm, and we expect other prospects to join in the near term,” Rinde's statement said. He said CKR has “no outside debt.”

“We have received assurances from the vast majority of our partners of their commitment to the firm and our continued success,” Rinde's statement added. “We believe our underlying business model is sound.”

Jack Newsham contributed to this report.