Too many lawyers in private practice are frustrated in achieving their personal and professional objectives because of the absence of sound management and administration of their firms.
Many attorneys seem to take comfort in the notion that like the legendary shoemaker, they are too busy with client affairs to look after their own administrative and financial matters. The primary cause of many of their problems is related directly to their own doing. Many attorneys, highly trained and skilled in substantive areas of law, regard their prime mission in life to be of service to their clients. When this attitude is coupled with the belief that firm administration is a “necessary evil,” the situation oftentimes leads to the negligence of the business affairs of their law firms.
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