Press Release

The American Lawyer Tech Survey: CIOs Back Personal Devices, Pan Windows 8

The American Lawyer Tech Survey: CIOs Back Personal Devices, Pan Windows 8

NEW YORK – November 5, 2012 – Large law firm Chief Information Officers are supporting their lawyers’ use of Apple and Android personal devices for firm business, as 88 percent expect to provide less BlackBerry support over the next 12 months, according to the annual survey of law technology in the November issue of ALM’s The American Lawyer and online at americanlawyer.com. However, only 7 percent of technology managers plan to migrate their enterprise systems to Microsoft’s touchscreen-friendly Windows 8 operating system in the next year.

 

Other highlights in The American Lawyer’s new issue include:

  • The first-ever study of compensation of nonequity partners, who have mushroomed to 45 percent of the partnerships at the 168 Am Law 200 firms that report them. Besides charting data on all 168, profiles detail how some firms define and structure compensation systems within the highly diverse nonequity universe.
  • The inside story of the three-year effort by convicted felon Bradley Birkenfeld and his lawyers that yielded a $104 million whistle-blower award from the Internal Revenue Service for his help in collecting $5 billion in unpaid taxes.

 

While allowing personal phone, tablet and other device use, law firm CIOs are still wrestling with the security issues they present, according to the survey. Nearly two-thirds of the firms prohibit lawyers from using cloud storage and synchronization services on mobile devices, and a similar number use mobile device management (MDM) software to exercise some control over them. On the other hand, 80 percent place no restriction on mobile apps that can be downloaded to personal devices used for work.

 

At the enterprise level, however, cloud computing is becoming more widely accepted, with 50 percent of CIOs reporting increased usage compared to last year; only 3 percent are using it less. Still, opinions diverge dramatically on which applications should move to the cloud.

CIO morale is high, with 90 percent of respondents reporting satisfaction with management’s technology-related decisions and 84 percent satisfied with their compensation. Compensation of between $300,000 and $399,999 was reported by 36 percent, up from 25 percent last year. The group earning $400,000 or more shrank slightly to 24 percent of the total, compared to 26 percent the year before.

 

Firm technology budgets are stable. Only 15 percent of CIOs report more than 10-percent increases in capital budgets compared to last year; 11 percent see decreases of more than 10 percent. Operating budgets rose more than 10 percent at only six percent of firms, while another six percent experienced decreases of that magnitude.

 

Social networking technology is being used to some degree by 75 percent of responding firms. Among them, LinkedIn is used by 90 percent, Twitter by 64 percent, and Facebook by 61 percent.

 

The survey is based on responses from 83 Am Law 200 firms between mid-July and mid-September.

 

Complete technology survey results are available for purchase in Excel format from ALM Legal Intelligence at http://www.almlegalintel.com/Surveys/AmLawTech. The nonequity partner compensation data is part of the Am Law 200 survey, available at http://www.almlegalintel.com/Surveys/AmLaw200.

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