In summer 2016 Heather Townsend revealed the 10 lessons that every potential partner needs to learn to an audience of 200 lawyers and accountants. In this short 2-minute video clip, Heather talks through the eighth lesson – the importance of treating your practice like a business. In this series of 10 lessons, I’m going to shine a light on what you have to do to make partner. This is the eighth lesson. Imagine the scene; there’s me, there’s my client, and there’s their sponsoring partner, we’re having a catch-up and reviewing what’s happening.  There’s no notes on her desk, she’s just generally having a chit-chat. That was when I realised that she wasn’t ready for partner. Because the eighth lesson is, you need to treat your practice like a business. That’s after all what you’re going to be allowed to do when you’re partner, is own a part of the business.  So you have to treat your practice like a business.

  • That means that you always have your numbers to hand.
  • That means you have your marketing plan with you when you’re talking to the partners that matter.
  • That’s where you’re able to say ‘this has gone well, this hasn’t gone well, this is what we’re doing’.
  • You need to be able to push stuff down and delegate it to others, and build a team up beneath you.
  • You’ve got to demonstrate to your partners that you treat your practice like a business.

That’s the eighth lesson, treat your practice like a business.

Related Post

  • How to become a recognised expert in your field

    How to become a recognised expert in your field

    This is what I have done over the years to become a recognised expert in helping people make partner, and when they get there, stay there. Do you want to become a recognised expert in your field? For clients and work to come to you based on your known expertise? In this episode, I’m sharing…

    CONTINUE READING > >

  • The 10 minute conversation to create strong working relationships from the word go

    The 10 minute conversation to create strong working relationships from the word go

    Do you hate working with someone new? Knowing that it is going to take time to work out how to get the best of them? When you start working with someone new, do you just hope for the best? The most effective people managers don’t leave working relationships to chance. They have a repeatable and…

    CONTINUE READING > >