• September 19, 2001 |

    Southam blow for Osborne Clarke

    Legal Week reports

    1 minute read

  • September 19, 2001 |

    The aftermath of the goldrush

    At the height of the dotcom goldrush, many lawyers re-branded themselves as e-commerce specialists eager to get in on the lucrative start-up market. But now the party's over, Helen Mooney asks, is there still enough work out there?

    1 minute read

  • September 13, 2001 |

    Disentangling the web

    Hundreds of law firm websites are missing the opportunities to build client loyalty offered by the internet. Is yours one of them? Gerald Newman, ex-deputy director of communications at the Law Society, explains how to benchmark yourself

    1 minute read

  • September 12, 2001 |

    Former UK allies in German merger

    Frankfurt partners join forces to combat dominance of UK and US

    1 minute read

  • September 5, 2001 |

    Middle march

    Osborne Clarke is rolling out a new client relationship management system. Dan Von Weihe, the supplier's UK representative, teams up with the firm to explain the thinking behind the project

    1 minute read

  • August 29, 2001 |

    Burges Salmon property win

    Legal Week reports

    1 minute read

  • August 8, 2001 |

    The great divide

    Senior lawyers in national firms may dream of challenging the City firms, but Legal Week's top 50 performance table shows the north-south divide is larger than ever. James Lumley looks at what the figures mean for national and regional firms

    1 minute read

  • August 8, 2001 |

    Allied Domecq names legal head

    Legal Week reports

    1 minute read

  • August 8, 2001 |

    The usual suspects

    Hardened by increasing competition from US firms, regional invaders and each other, the top 50 City firms have excelled again in 2000-01. James Baxter reports on the results and finds that whether the strategy is profits or growth, focus is everything

    1 minute read

  • August 8, 2001 |

    The webmasters

    A survey of firms' websites has found a gap in quality between those that shine and those that are below par, writes Derek Bedlow

    1 minute read