Cross-border law firms have known practice management is hard for thirty years. The firms that have actually solved it have made a small number of specific operating choices that compound over decades.
Cross-border practice management in top-tier law firms is decided by a small number of specific operating choices — and the firms that get them right open profitability and growth advantages that compound year over year.
First, profit-pool architecture. Whether the firm operates a single global profit pool, regional pools, or a federation of national partnerships. The choice cascades into compensation, partner mobility, investment decisions, and ultimately strategic agility. Firms with single profit pools tend to be more strategically coherent and pay a coordination cost. Firms with federated structures are easier to govern and harder to direct.
Second, conflict and engagement management. The operating discipline for managing conflicts across jurisdictions — particularly in transactional practice — is a hidden differentiator. Firms with mature conflict systems can take on work that less-mature firms cannot. Third, partner mobility and secondment. How easily, frequently, and effectively partners move between offices to serve clients. This is a culture and operating-model question, not just a logistics one.
Most large cross-border firms have inherited their structure from history rather than designed it for strategy. The profit pool architecture made sense when it was designed and may no longer fit. The conflict system has been built up incrementally and shows the seams. The partner mobility model exists in policy but not in practice.
The cost shows up in three places: in profitability gaps to best-in-class peers; in lost work where structural friction made the firm uncompetitive; and in partner mobility decisions that quietly favour incumbents and slow strategic moves.
The firms that take cross-border practice management seriously do three things. They review the underlying structural choices periodically — every five to seven years at minimum — and are willing to make changes when the strategy has outgrown the structure. They invest in the operating systems that support cross-border practice — conflict management, knowledge management, partner mobility logistics — at a level that looks excessive to firms still using legacy approaches.
And they make the conversation a partnership-level one, owned by the senior partner and managing partner together, not delegated to a chief operating officer or strategy function. Cross-border practice management is too strategic to be operationalised away from the partnership.
This is the kind of problem we work on. If you are leading a cross-border firm structure that has been inherited rather thrunning an designed for current strategy, the team at Grant & Graham would be pleased to talk. We provide operating-model design, partnership advisory, and cross-border practice management to managing partners and senior partners of cross-border law firms. Contact us.