Skip to content
Legal Business
Twitter Logo Email Icon Youtube Circle Icon Facebook Circle Icon LinkedIn Icon Google+ Circle Icon
Newsletter Subscribe App Trial
Menu
  • Blog
    • stock_justinCooley London head Stock exits to Akin in three-partner moveAlex Ryan
    • riding on a Kirkland & Ellis wrecking ball‘When someone is so disaffected it’s best to get them out sooner rather than later’: Kirkland to hold back pay for departing partners; cut notice periodElisha Juttla
    • Linklaters' HQLinklaters claims top spot in Stonewall Top Employers listTom Cox
    • dagostino_justin_2024‘Strong momentum’: Revenue and profit rise as Herbert Smith Freehills marks 11th consecutive year of growthAnna Huntley
    • City of LondonO’Melveny and Hogan Lovells lead PE hiring wave as Kirkland boosts tech team with Clifford Chance hireAnna Huntley
    • More Blogs
    • SUBSCRIBE TO LEGAL BUSINESS
  • Analysis
      • cover ai layerLB320 – issue menu
      • cover ai layerThe ESG report 2024
      • Young,Woman,,Employee,Balancing,Between,Working,Tasks,And,Home,Lifestyle,Stress test – partners on how they deal with a life under pressure
      • esg_overviewBeyond ‘nice to have’ – ESG goes business fundamental
      • gen_z_esgWhat Gen Z lawyers really want from their careers
      • KrisHumphreysPhotography(c)_-56Enterprise winners
      • lb314_issue_menuPrevious issues
        • Law firm financial data

          Access the full range of Legal Business financial reports, including  The LB100 and Global 100 – comprehensive coverage of the largest law firms in the world by revenue.

          Disputes hub


          Head to the LB Disputes hub for focused Disputes coverage, including news, events, analysis, comment and the latest Disputes Yearbook.

      • Working in a warzone
      • LB320 – issue menu
      • Access your pdf edition of LB magazine – issue 320
      • The ESG report 2024
      • Beyond ‘nice to have’ – ESG goes business fundamental
      • What Gen Z lawyers really want from their careers
      • More analysis
    • SUBSCRIBE TO LEGAL BUSINESS
  • Insight
      • Law Tech: GC readers manualSponsored briefing: Legal tech – Too much of a good thing?Guest Blog
      • Tunnel diverThe New GC Toolkit: New game, new rules, new playersLegal Business
      • banks_peter_partnershipThe Path to Partnership: A Special ReportLegal Business
      • digital mapInternational Arbitration Insight: Bigger, longer, more complicatedJames Wood
      • Brexit close to finalThe edge of the cliff – Brexit response for worried GCsJames Wood
    • More Insight
    • SUBSCRIBE TO LEGAL BUSINESS
  • Comment
        • LB318 cover file.inddMaking an ESG lawyer – law firms search for the magic formula
        • Making an ESG lawyer – law firms search for the magic formula
        • The Last Word: ESG to the fore
        • Stressing the positives – why opening up about the demands of City life helps everyone
        • Talk of the town: Why Kirkland/Paul Weiss underlines the value of controlling the management message
        • After the party – market slowdown pushes US leaders to take stock in London
        • The Last Word: Capital call
      • More Comment
    • SUBSCRIBE TO LEGAL BUSINESS
  • News review
      • Herbert Smith Freehills‘Clients are not only seeking legal expertise but also looking for firms that practice what they preach’ – ESG Q&A: Herbert Smith FreehillsGuest Blog
      • womble_bond_dickinson_2024ESG: Evolution or revolution?Guest Blog
      • AxiomThe state of UK general counsel in 2024: Key insights and challengesGuest Blog
      • LB320 p12-13 L500 data US.inddLegal 500 US: Latham tops the charts in new US rankingsBarnaby Merrill
      • basu_ranajoyESG Award winner Ranajoy Basu on leveraging structured finance expertise to support ESG causes in emerging economiesElisha Juttla
    • More news review
      • Crisis management

        Law firm coverage of crisis management amidst the Covid-19 pandemic

    • SUBSCRIBE TO LEGAL BUSINESS
  • International
        • Africa
            • PrintMENA focus: Middle Eastern dreams
            • Dubai,At,SunriseMENA focus: From the World Cup to the world stage
            • Doha,,Qatar,-,November,24,2021:,Fifa,World,Cup,Qatar,2022Middle East and North Africa focus: The competitive edge
            • Private Practice Powerlist: Africa Specialists

              The Arbitration Powerlist: Africa 2021

              The Legal 500 law firm rankings: Africa

        • Cyprus
            • Elias-Neocleous-logoTech outlook in Cyprus in 2024
            • Cyprus doveA new hope for Cyprus’s recession-battered lawyers
            • Cyprus flag puzzleCyprus: Picking up the pieces
            • GC Powerlist: Greece and Cyprus 2022

              The Legal 500 law firm rankings: Cyprus

        • China
          • GC Powerlist: China 2019

            The Legal 500 law firm rankings: China

        • Germany
          • durerEuro Elite 2024: Germany – Navigating tumultuous waters
          • arqis-newSponsored briefing: ESG in Germany
          • LB – BerlinEuro Elite 2023: Germany – The centre holds
          • GC Powerlist: Germany 2023

            The Legal 500 law firm rankings: Germany

            The Legal 500 law firm rankings: Deutschland

        • Iberia
          • picassoEuro Elite 2024: Iberia – Out the other side
          • LB – LisbonEuro Elite 2023: Iberia – Back on track
          • plmj logoSponsored briefing: Looking ahead: What does 2023 hold for Portugal?
          • GC Powerlist: Iberia 2022

            Event: GC Powerlist Europe: Latin America Specialists 2023 – 26 October 2023

            Event: Green Summit Portugal 2023 – 12 October 2023

            The Legal 500 law firm rankings: Portugal

            The Legal 500 law firm rankings: Spain

        • Ireland
            • ExpressCare_Logo_AktivGroteskQ&A: Sarah Thompson, Arthur Cox
            • ireland_dublin_paintingEuro Elite 2024: Ireland – Under pressure
            • addleshaws_rt_2023The Ireland debate: Don’t fear the robots
            • GC Powerlist: Ireland Teams 2023

              Event: Legal Business and Addleshaw Goddard GC Forum Dublin - 19 October 2023

              Event: Green Summit Ireland - 23 November 2023

              The Legal 500 law firm rankings: Ireland

        • Israel
            • Tel,Aviv,Skyline,At,Night,,Skyscraper,And,Ayalon,Freeway,-Israel focus: Sea change
            • s_horowitz_100 yearsSponsored briefing: Time and tide – Current trends in the Israeli M&A market
            • yigal_arnon_tadmor_levySponsored briefing: The application of Consumer Protection Legislation to international platforms operating in Israel
            • GC Powerlist: Israel 2023

              The Legal 500 law firm rankings: Israel

        • Italy
          • Ornate,Picture,Frame,Art,Gallery,Museum,Exhibit,Interior,White,ClippingEuro Elite 2024: Italy – Time to shine
          • Rome,,Italy,View,Towards,The,Colosseum,With,Archeological,Areas,AtEuro Elite 2023: Italy – Toughening up
          • PrintThe Italian report – Midway upon the journey of our life
          • GC Powerlist: Italy 2022

            The Legal 500 law firm rankings: Italy

        • Latin America
          • Latin America Skyline Landmarks Colouful SilhouetteThe Latin American mosaic
          • Web‘So big it never stops’ – why Brazil’s legal market is still booming despite political instability and economic uncertainty
          • perdiz_de_jesusThe Brazilian legal market
        • Malta
          • Aerial,View,Early,Morning,At,Sunrise,Of,Lady,Of,MountMalta focus: Grey skies turn to blue – the Malta report
          • logotype (Print)Sponsored briefing: Q&A: James Scicluna, co-managing partner, WH Partners
          • PrintLife in a bubble – the Malta report
          • The Legal 500 law firm rankings: Malta

        • Middle East
            • PrintMENA focus: Middle Eastern dreams
            • Dubai,At,SunriseMENA focus: From the World Cup to the world stage
            • Doha,,Qatar,-,November,24,2021:,Fifa,World,Cup,Qatar,2022Middle East and North Africa focus: The competitive edge
            • GC Powerlist: Middle East 2022

              The Legal 500 law firm rankings: Middle East 2022

        • Nordics
          • Man,In,Gallery,Room,Looking,At,Empty,FramesEuro Elite 2024: Nordics – Horizon scanning
          • The,Oresund,Bridge,Between,Copenhagen,Denmark,And,Malmo,Sweden,WhenEuro Elite 2023: Nordics – New challenges
          • nordics bridgeNordics: Northern Lights
          • Nordic rivals
          • The Arbitration Powerlist: Nordics 2022

            The Legal 500 law firm rankings: Europe

        • Offshore
          • Office people with office desk.Offshore report: Tempering against the tempest
          • offshore_boat_caribbeanCaribbean Offshore Report: Light behind the cloud
          • offshore_rollercoasterUK Offshore Report: Weatherproof
        • Southern and Eastern Europe
            • Gajski, Grlić, Prka & PartnersSponsored profile: Gajski, Grlic, Prka & Partners, Zagreb, Croatia
            • BucharestSouthern and Eastern Europe – A different hue
            • Zagreb.,Helicopter,Aerial,View.Croatia – ups and downs
        • Switzerland
            • kleeEuro Elite 2024: Switzerland – Endurance race
            • The,Aerial,View,Of,Zurich,City,From,The,Top,OfSwitzerland focus: Testing the mettle
            • bar & karrerSponsored briefing: Overview of ESG law in Switzerland
            • GC Powerlist: Switzerland 2023

              The Legal 500 law firm rankings: Switzerland

        • Turkey
          • turkey cover concept (slight adjust)Türkiye International Focus 2023/24 – issue menu
          • turkey cover concept (slight adjust)The road to recovery – how Türkiye’s law firms are pulling through
          • Aksan-Law-FirmSponsored briefing: Mitigating the risks of the current economic climate
          • Türkiye 2023

            The Legal 500 law firm rankings: Turkey

        • Euro Elite 2023
          • euroeliteEuro Elite 2023: Annual survey finds the 100 leading firms across more than 40 jurisdictions still in a strong position
          • Sunset,Or,Sunrise,Over,Cityscape,Of,Vilnius,,Lithuania,In,SummerEuro Elite 2023: Baltics – Covering all bases
          • LB-Benelux (2)Euro Elite 2023: Benelux – Hitting the buffers
          • LB – CEEEuro Elite 2023: CEE – Looking ahead
          • LB – FranceEuro Elite 2023: France – Pretty good year
          • LB – BerlinEuro Elite 2023: Germany – The centre holds
  • In-House
      • Keim, ChristianThe Client Profile: Christian Keim, AdobeAnna Huntley
      • gc_legal_tech_pulse_2024GC Legal Tech Pulse 2024 – in association with Thomson ReutersLegal Business
      • paterson_nigel_2024The Client Profile: Nigel Paterson, CurrysElisha Juttla
    • SUBSCRIBE TO LEGAL BUSINESS
  • Awards
      • MPP8074Photos from The Legal Business Awards
      • MPP8091Sponsors
      • Contacts
  • Events
      • Logo for the GC Powerlist Series

        Powerlists

        Nominations

      • Available Now…

        GC Powerlist: Philippines 2023

        The GCs and in-house legal teams in the Philippines making a major contribution to positive change, either at an industry or sector level

        GC Powerlist: Denmark Teams 2023

        The most influential and innovative in-house teams working in Denmark…

Analysis

Baker McKenzie: One eye open

The leadership of Baker McKenzie has earned hard-won plaudits for having a clear strategy where others have failed, even as tragedy and controversy threatened to derail it. Has the sleeping giant finally awoken?

Posted on 9 February 2024 13:29pm27 February 2024 09:35am
Elisha Juttla
Profile Baker McKenzie Leadership

‘What defines Baker McKenzie over the last few years is the sheer amount of work that has gone into financial integration. This is a massive achievement but it has come at a cost. Now, establishing the differentiator to attract the next generation is important. It isn’t going to turn into Kirkland & Ellis, but what is going to drive that entrepreneurial aspect now Bakers looks more like other firms?’ So speaks one commentator of the quandary facing Baker McKenzie, a sentiment reprising a prevailing theme of our 2017 deep dive into the firm, ‘Waking the Giant’, which found a firm struggling to maintain its unique international selling point amid escalating globalisation of Big Law.

Then, the firm had just embarked on a new and ambitious phase, with the respected veteran intellectual property (IP) partner Paul Rawlinson instated as its first British chair in October 2016. The mandate? To implement the firm’s 2020 strategy, which focused on integrating Bakers across three profit pools, increasing profitability and growing the firm’s transactional practices in London, New York and China.

Of course, tragedy intervened in April 2019 with the shock death of Rawlinson, leaving innumerable peers and colleagues to feel keenly his loss still. Bakers lifer Milton Cheng took over the role the following September with the accolade of being its first Asian global chair. The Chicago-bred firm has also had to grapple with other global tragedies, with the coronavirus pandemic, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and political and economic turmoil in the financial centres of the US and the UK all continuing to take their toll.

LB revisits Bakers to discover how the firm is faring as market pressures show little sign of letting up.

Déjà vu

In LB’s 2017 analysis, Rawlinson garnered much praise for articulating a clear strategy, emphasising three fundamental pillars: integration, innovation, and profitability. Cheng, whose term runs until October 2025, asserts: ‘We are still progressing with the same strategy – that is partly why I took on this role in the first place.’

However, he notes: ‘The strategy has certainly evolved due to changes in circumstances around the globe,’ and points to three factors. Namely, political protectionism worldwide, including changes in trade flows and supply chains, the digital transformation which has been felt by all sectors, as well as the firm’s push on its alignment efforts, both internally and externally with clients, with the aim of becoming a unified entity.

Colin Murray

‘We have continued to combine our management structures and removed a lot of inefficiencies. We have made steady progress towards aligning our structures which is a change from the past.’
Colin Murray, Baker McKenzie

Underpinning the firm’s strategy are six distinct sector focuses: healthcare and life sciences; energy, mining, and infrastructure (EMI); financial institutions; TMT; consumer goods and retail; and industrials, manufacturing, and transformation.

As Cheng comments: ‘Over the last five years, we’ve consistently seen growth in healthcare and life sciences work, in part due to Covid. Technology-related work has been busy not only for tech sector companies but across all industries. In more recent times, work in energy, mining and infrastructure, particularly in relation to energy transition, has been consistently growing for us.’

And there is a list of weighty recent mandates to justify the investment. In 2021, a New York team advised US healthcare company and longstanding client Johnson & Johnson on its split into two public companies, involving partners specialising in M&A, tax, and IP.

Meanwhile in tech, 2022 saw a London team advise digital infrastructure company Colt Technology Services on its acquisition of Lumen Technologies’ Europe, Middle East and Africa business for $1.8bn. More recently, the firm’s global EMI partners advised Iberdrola on the $6bn sale of 8.4GW of combined gas cycle assets in Mexico.

While market observers acknowledge the firm’s strengths in tax, IP and EMI, one former partner is more scathing, noting: ‘Bakers has had success to a degree but it is probably not in the tier it aspires to be in for those sectors yet. Being in every jurisdiction means that ensuring the quality of those offices is a consistent challenge.’

The integration conundrum

In 2017, Rawlinson presented a vision for achieving full financial integration by 2020. The focus had been on uniting Bakers across three profit pools, albeit while recognising this would be an ongoing thorny issue, given that struggles to pull it off (veterans will recall) date back to the leadership of Christine Lagarde in the late 1990s.

These efforts have not all been in vain. In 2018 the firm marked a notable milestone by consolidating eight of its offices in Europe, the Middle East, and Africa (EMEA) into a unified profit pool. This move, viewed by many as a pivotal step towards achieving full financial integration in the region, went some way to addressing criticism of the firm’s decentralised ‘franchise model’.

However, the 2012 integration of the US business into a single profit pool is just one example of how fraught such processes can be, with the lucrative Dallas contingent securing a special deal before coming into the fold, while partners in Washington DC also held out for a deal before agreeing to join. The wrangling, needless to say, led to its fair share of resentment at the time.

Colin Murray, chief executive of North America, is sanguine: ‘We have continued to combine our management structures and removed a lot of inefficiencies through a combined talent programme, combined governance and a pricing committee that is now composed of members of different jurisdictions. We have made steady progress towards aligning our structures which is a change from the past.’

And even former partners admit that the management has made strides on integration. One notes: ‘The firm has addressed the historical weakness of its lack of financial integration, which is a credit to leadership for doing a lot of hard work over the past decade.’

Milton Cheng

‘It’s been a satisfactory year. We have a natural hedge against volatility in any particular geography or practice area by being as globally diverse as we are.’
Milton Cheng, Baker McKenzie

Another commentator adds: ‘Most of the firm is now integrated by region, apart from a few offices that have to be independent due to local Bar rules,’ alluding to Germany and France, which faced tax and compliance obstacles that put paid to them joining that unified profit pool.

Elsewhere, as it stands, the firm’s 17 offices in Asia-Pacific are organised into five different profit centres, a testament to how onerous a task is still at hand.

One former partner notes: ‘The leadership of Bakers has been pushing the offices into profit pools but they are aware this isn’t something you can do overnight.’

Another enduring criticism is that of an unwieldy management arrangement, with teams having a local, regional and global head. One alumnus puts it bluntly: ‘It is still clunky, over-managed and expensive. You can really over-manage law firms and you need to slim down management.’

Another former partner asserts: ‘A by-product of financial integration is that the leadership of the regional profit pools are now very big voices of the firm. The challenge has moved from having distributed leadership to having a group of very powerful management partners.’

Historically, Bakers’ strength lay in its global coverage, surpassing its peers and boasting market-leading practices in numerous jurisdictions that few competitors were willing to explore.

Nevertheless, our 2017 feature exposed the firm’s struggle to uphold its distinctive international selling point, in the face of increasingly global competition. Commentators continue to echo this sentiment, asserting that Baker’s unique strength – an expansive international network – is no longer a distinctive feature, given the widespread adoption of a similar model by other firms, including DLA Piper, Dentons and Hogan Lovells.

As one ex-partner comments: ‘The global footprint was always a strength but I’m not sure it is the differentiator that it was, as lots of firms have that now.’

However, Adam Farlow, global chair of Bakers’ capital markets group, defends the firm’s position: ‘People who join Bakers are interested, almost without exception, in doing cross-border work. If you only wanted to work with other Brits for English companies, then there are other firms for that.’

Swings and roundabouts

There has been some progress too in the stated ambition of bolstering profitability, with profit per equity partner (PEP) increasing 38% from $1.3m in the 2016/17 financial year, to $1.8m for 2022/23. Nevertheless, this must be viewed in the context of a 7% decrease in the number of equity partners, dropping from 708 in 2016/17 to 665 partners in the most recent financial year.

Related  The golden age of law firm leadership has passed… what now?

Revenue growth has been more muted, increasing 24% on the same track from $2.7bn to $3.3bn. In the most recent financial year, Bakers’ PEP fell by 10%, while revenue was flat on the previous year. The unprepossessing year-on-year results will not have been helped by the firm’s unusual reporting period, which runs until 30 June, consequently encompassing a tricky spell in 2020 accounted for earlier by many firms, beleaguered by spinning off its Russia business, a nosedive in transactional work, not to mention currency and inflationary reversals.

Cheng insists he is satisfied with the firm’s position, considering. ‘We are reasonably happy when we look at all the things that have happened – inflation, interest rates, geopolitics, all of that affects almost all businesses. All in all, it’s been a satisfactory year. We have a natural hedge against volatility in any particular geography or practice area by being as globally diverse as we are.’

Securing fourth position on the Global 100 table, Baker McKenzie currently boasts 5,086 lawyers globally, including 665 equity partners and 828 non-equity partners. It has the highest number of lawyers at the top of the table, surpassing Kirkland, Latham & Watkins and DLA on headcount.

Over five years, the firm has added 232 partners globally, including 74 equity and 158 non-equity partners. Most recently, in December 2023, Bakers hired back Richard Needham as a partner in its corporate organisations group, who returned from KPMG after leaving Bakers in 2021. Back in 2019, Bakers managed to lure Allen & Overy’s former head of UK insolvency and litigation Marc Florent to its City office. In the usual fashion of law firm partner moves, last year Bakers’ London office saw the departure of partner Haden Henderson for Freshfields’ leveraged finance practice, and the year before Bakers’ IP partner Jason Raeburn left after 12 years to head up Paul Hastings’ London IP and technology litigation practice.

Samantha Mobley

‘Our values around inclusion, diversity and equity are integral, not lip-service. Our firm holds those values dear as part of our culture.’
Samantha Mobley, Baker McKenzie

Under Rawlinson, the plan had been to recruit between ten and 20 transactional partners in London, and more than double the size of its New York practice to 250 lawyers. The strategy had also been to make substantive capital injections into its Shanghai, Beijing and Hong Kong transactions teams.

In the City at least, there has been some headway. Since the start of 2018, the firm has hired 27 transactional partners in London, including capital markets partners Rob Mathews and David Becker from White & Case in 2019.

Progress in New York has been more sluggish, with Manhattan now housing only 140 lawyers, an increase of just 20 lawyers since 2017 and well shy of the target. However, Murray points to significant hires in New York, including former Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance joining in 2022 as global chair of the firm’s cyber security practice. More recently in August 2023, Steven Sandretto, previously a shareholder at Greenberg Traurig, joined as a capital markets partner in the same office.

Asia has seen notable developments, as last year Bakers launched its joint venture with Korean law firm KL Partners. Cheng reiterates the commitment to the money centres of London, New York and China, while also placing increased emphasis on Asia, with an eye on the Singapore market.

Taking it on the chin

For her part, Samantha Mobley, co-head of the EMEA competition practice, stresses imperatives around equity, diversity and inclusion (ED&I), stating: ‘Our values around inclusion, diversity and equity are integral, not lip-service. Our firm holds those values dear as part of our culture.’

Palpable examples of management putting its money where its mouth is on that score are the decision to cease operating in Russia in 2022 after Putin’s invasion of Ukraine and the termination of a UAE alliance with member firm Habib Al Mulla & Partners after partner Dr Habib Al Mulla posted a series of homophobic tweets the same year.

Cheng’s response suggests that he believes the firm has recovered from the unedifying episode. ‘Just a few months ago, I was in the UAE visiting our new Dubai office and morale is good and people are happy.’ He notes that Bakers has re-established its presence in the region by opening an office in Dubai and Abu Dhabi since the controversy.

However, Bakers experienced another setback last year when Belgium managing partner and Bakers lifer, Daniel Fesler, left the firm under a cloud following a review into racism accusations made by a former associate in the Brussels office.

Cheng is candid: ‘We haven’t tried to shy away, we’ve taken it on the chin ourselves by clearly asking what we need to do to uphold our values, and we acted quickly and decisively. Likewise, I visited Brussels during the second half of last year. We regret what happened to that ex-colleague, and that should not happen to anybody. We’ve done a thorough investigation and followed through on the recommendations.’

Making shockwaves at the time, the firm’s London head, Gary Senior was found to have committed serious professional misconduct by the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal in 2020, dating back to an incident in 2012 where he tried to drunkenly kiss a junior associate in his hotel room.

‘What is going to make the firm attractive for the next generation of partners who want to drive it forward? That is what Bakers needs to address.’
A former Baker McKenzie partner

Cheng claims: ‘We’ve spent a lot of time and effort on improving the channels within the firm through which people can reach out if they’re feeling uncomfortable about things. On top of that, we make it part of our leadership assessment for leaders to take responsibility for these things. We’ve learned many lessons from it.’

One former partner defends their erstwhile firm: ‘Bakers has been a bit unfortunate, as it’s not as if other big firms don’t have these issues. The firm has actually dealt with them, which is a credit to management there.’

Cheng receives praise from current and former partners, describing himself as ‘a good listener, balanced and someone who has invested the time to understand the different pieces that make up [the] firm’s value proposition’.

He comments: ‘One similarity among all of our firm chairs is that we all want to bring out the best Baker McKenzie to serve our clients, even though our leadership styles may vary.

Paul [Rawlinson] was very charismatic, John [Conroy] was very methodical and meticulous. My way of getting things done is different to some of my predecessors but I believe, and the partners tell me, that it’s suitable for what we need at this time.’

One market commentator damns with faint praise: ‘There’s hardly any egos – if I asked you to name the top five Bakers partners in London, no-one knows, which is amazing considering its turnover. It has achieved this kind of brand over the individual business style, which I think reflects a lot of the changes that have been made.’

It could be argued that a merger with a Wall Street firm with transactional clout would be the ideal solution for a firm in need of bolstering its New York capabilities substantively. Of course, the difficulties of sealing such a mandate are well-documented, let alone of finding a willing firm with the right profile for starters.

For now, Bakers’ best bet – arguably as good as any – many well be to focus on the next generation of partners coming through.

As one former partner concludes: ‘What is going to make the firm attractive for the next generation of partners who want to drive it forward? That is what Bakers needs to address.’

And, while Cheng has done a creditable job in leading Bakers through some of the most trying conditions in modern history, the firm he will potentially hand over to a successor in 2025 is far from the finished product. Maybe it is best to let sleeping giants lie.

With additional reporting by Ayesha Ellis.

elisha.juttla@legalease.co.uk

Share
Tweet
Share
Reddit
WhatsApp
Email
  • Subscriber Login

  • Latest Issue

    LB318 cover

    • Euro Elite 2024
    • Baker McKenzie: One eye open
    • If you build it – firms put together infra dream teams as market booms
    • Infrastructure profile: Sara Pickersgill – ‘Pick something you love doing and do it only for as long as you love it’
    • Financial Regulatory and Disputes Summit: Stranger than fiction
    • Life During Law: Richard Lever
    • The Client Profile: Nigel Paterson, Currys
    • News review
    • The Last Word: Euro vision
  • Related by topic

    M&A perspectives: Melissa Fogarty
  • Related by topic

    pop art woman with the word Brexit reflected in her sunglasses lens
    Comment: As specialists thrive in law’s Darwinian age too many drift on
  • Related content

    ‘I had strong support and people wanted me to continue’: Bakers’ Poulton seals second term as head of London office
    Private Client perspectives: Ashley Crossley
    Warning signs? Baker McKenzie records stagnant financials in year-end results
  • © 2024 Legal Business Magazine

    Legalease Ltd, 188 Fleet Street, London, EC4A 2AG

    T: +44 (0)20 7396 9313 | E: subscriptions@legalease.co.uk

    About & Contacts | Privacy Policy | Cookie Policy | Subscriptions