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Articles / LAW9000
Earlier this year, QL Incorporated and SAI Global, with
support from the NSW Law Society and the College of Law launched
“LAW9000”, as a replacement for QL Best Practice scheme. This
article explains what LAW9000 is, and what it means to legal practice
management.
LAW9000 is an Australian legal practice management
benchmark built on the ISO9001 international standard. ISO is a
Geneva-based organisation whose members are national standards bodies
(including Standards Australia, the British Standards Institution, and over
a hundred others). It publishes standards which are used for
everything from health records to port security. But its most
far-reaching and widely-applied standard is ISO9001.
ISO9001 was first published in the late ‘80s, and was
based on an earlier British standard. It specifies the level to which
an organisation controls its business processes. In a manufacturing
firm, these will include raw materials and parts purchasing, manufacturing
and delivery. In a bank they will include teller operations and
security audits. The processes will be different in every case: but
ISO9001 does not care what they are. It cares only about the level to
which they are controlled.
The basis of this control is (usually) a set of written
policies and procedures, which set out exactly what managers and staff need
to do to run the organisation effectively. When an organisation feels
that they have these sufficiently developed to meet the ISO9001 standard,
they can then purchase the services of an accredited firm to come and audit
the organisation, and - if the audit finds no major problems - issue a
certificate which shows to the world at large that the organisation complies
with ISO9001. This gives the organisation the right to claim that it
is “Certified to ISO9001 by XYZ Audits”. There are over a dozen
such firms operating in Australia.
The general term for this process is ‘quality
assurance’; the certification process ‘assures’ the organisation’s
customers that the organisation has a ‘quality system’ in place which
conforms to the ISO9001 standard.
Many thousands of Australian organisations (including,
incidentally, Realisation) have gone through this process. But why do
they do it?
There are two reasons, one with small short-term benefits
and the other with major long-term benefits.
In the short term, many customers (and in particular,
government) require tenderers to either have ISO9001 or be working towards
it. Some insurers will give a discount where the insured organisation
has certification. Some organisations hope to use their ISO9001
certification as a ‘badge of honour’ to show their owners, customers and
competitors that they are truly committed to quality.
In the long term, costs and risks are what drive all
organisations. And both of these can be reduced through the
intelligent implementation of ISO9001. Unfortunately, a focus on
the short term (“let’s just get the stuff in place to pass the audit”)
tends to mitigate against the long-term benefits, and many organisations
drop their certification after a few years because it doesn’t deliver
benefits.
The requirements of ISO9001 are very carefully constructed
so that they can be applied to any organisation (including government
organisations) in any field of endeavour. LAW9000 takes this base set
of practices, and adds some very specific requirements for legal practices.
For example, a typical ISO9001 requirement is that an
organisation communicates product information, customer feedback/complaint
mechanisms, and enquiry mechanisms to its customers. LAW9000 adds to
this specific requirements on costs and disbursements, undertakings and
retainers.
As with ISO9001, law firms can apply to be certified to
LAW9000 by an external audit organisation.
Implementing LAW9000 (or ISO9001) is not something to
undertake lightly. A typical ‘standing start’ implementation will
take 6 to 12 months, and should involve every single individual in the
organisation in some way. The College
of Law runs a training course (partly using material developed by us) for
interested practices.
Organisations which have been through an ISO9001
implementation come in two kinds: those who implemented the standard in a
cynical and superficial way and did not gain long-term benefits, and those
that took the whole process to heart, got everyone involved, and will reap
the cost and risk benefits for years or decades to come.
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