header-logo header-logo

Lewis Silkin sets up fixed-cost commercial law service

26 April 2020
Categories: Legal News , Covid-19 , Profession , Commercial
printer mail-detail
Law firm Lewis Silkin has launched a fixed-cost/subscription-style commercial law product as part of its response to COVID-19

The product, LS Assist, operates on a fixed-fee monthly subscription-style model. It will be led by partners Jo Farmer and Alex Kelham, supported by a team of senior associates and associates from across the firm’s commercial practice group.

Farmer said: ‘The world is changing rapidly around us, and we are facing an unprecedented period of disruption which has been exacerbated still further by the impact of COVID-19.

‘No business is unaffected and with organisations of all shapes and sizes rightly putting cost control at the heart of their operations we as a firm know that it is critical we take steps to innovate and to adapt our business model and offerings in anticipation of evolving client demands.’

Client costs for LS Assist will be based on anticipated usage of its three core components. These components are, first, its secure online portal and document library, with template letters, contracts and checklists along with access to help from lawyers. Second, there is a helpdesk for general day to day support and help for routine legal enquiries. Third, there is a fixed-fee service for bespoke project work such as contract review or ‘red flag’ checking of supplier contracts.

Kelham, co-head of LS Assist, said: ‘Now more than ever clients want the peace of mind provided by certainty―of cost, quality and experience.’

Lewis Silkin also provides a low-cost, fixed-fee employment law product, Rockhopper, which it launched in 2014. 

MOVERS & SHAKERS

Birketts—Michael Conway

Birketts—Michael Conway

IP partner joins team in Bristol to lead branding and trade marks practice

Blake Morgan—Daniel Church

Blake Morgan—Daniel Church

Succession and tax team welcomes partner inLondon

Maguire Family Law—Jennifer Hudec

Maguire Family Law—Jennifer Hudec

Firm appoints senior associate to lead Manchester city centre team

NEWS
Ministers’ proposals to raise funds by seizing interest on lawyers’ client account schemes could ‘cause firms to close’, solicitors have warned
Pension sharing orders (PSOs) have quietly reached their 25th anniversary, yet remain stubbornly underused. Writing in NLJ this week, Joanna Newton of Stowe Family Law argues that this neglect risks long-term financial harm, particularly for women
A school ski trip, a confiscated phone and an unauthorised hotel-room entry culminated in a pupil’s permanent exclusion. In this week's issue of NLJ, Nicholas Dobson charts how the Court of Appeal upheld the decision despite acknowledged procedural flaws
Is a suspect’s state of mind a ‘fact’ capable of triggering adverse inferences? Writing in NLJ this week, Andrew Smith of Corker Binning examines how R v Leslie reshapes the debate
The Ministry of Justice (MoJ) has not done enough to protect the future sustainability of the legal aid market, MPs have warned
back-to-top-scroll