'It creates conflicts': Why Wedlake Bell is cautious on external capital, and all-in on culture

Senior partner Camilla Wallace on the 245-year-old City firm's approach to culture, growth and wellbeing.

'It creates conflicts': Why Wedlake Bell is cautious on external capital, and all-in on culture
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Wedlake Bell turned 245 this year, but Camilla Wallace wants you to know it doesn’t behave like it. "We always say 1780 but contemporary," she tells us in a conversation for The Non-Billable Podcast. "We were one of the first firms to go almost paper free. We were one of the first to go almost completely open plan - partners don't even have their own offices."

A private client specialist who qualified at Dechert and later worked at Macfarlanes, Wallace has spent 18 years at Wedlake Bell and nearly two as senior partner. In that time, the firm has grown from a partnership of less than 20 to an overall headcount of more than 350. It sits, proudly, in the City’s mid-market with four full-service pillars: real estate, business, private client and disputes.

Growth, she argues, has come from a mix of client demand and targeted moves. "We’ve been quite strategic in terms of bolting on bits of business that we felt that we were lightweight in," she says, pointing to the 2021 merger with Moon Beever, which delivered "a really robust tier one restructuring proposition," and to the firm’s "tier one arts and luxury assets team" that is "the leader in the country."

Listen to the full-length interview on the podcast. Episode page with links here.

Strategy without external capital

You won’t find Wedlake Bell racing to open a dozen offices in Europe. The firm has "clients from all over the world," Wallace says, but still operates from a single office off Cannon Street, and nowhere overseas.

She is candid that scale-for-scale’s-sake holds little appeal: "We get a lot of our work because of our positioning, being that mid-tier firm. I think we would have an identity crisis if we suddenly merged with an American firm or became the London office of a European franchise."

That caution extends to external investment. "We won’t be doing that and we won’t be listing either," she says. The reason isn't ideological. "The moment you have outside capital and you have that pseudo shareholder relationship, you’ve got a conflict with your duties and your obligations. Are you trying to generate profit to return it to your investor? Are you trying to service your client?"

For a client service business, she argues, "that type of change in business strategy doesn’t serve your client very well."

The moment you have outside capital and you have that pseudo shareholder relationship, you’ve got a conflict with your duties and your obligations.

The modern senior partner: chair, diplomat, counsellor

Wallace sees the senior partner-managing partner relationship as the classic chair-CEO split. "The managing partner has no clients and does the operational nuts and the bolts, making sure everything is stacking up." Her role is different: "I still have my clients which is fantastic," and the senior partner remit breaks into three parts.

First, "the functional role": "I chair partners meetings, I chair equity meetings, I chair board meetings to make sure that the partners have a voice." Second, "an ambassadorial role," outward-facing through media, meetings and "lobbying." And third, "internal and pastoral," where she has "taken on 80 partners or so as my new clients" to ensure "they are happy and healthy and they have the resources they need."

The model works, she says, in part because of complementary backgrounds at the top. "We’ve got a CEO in Martin [Arnold] who is a litigator - really commercial - and then we’ve got this chair in me that is highly empathetic, a private client lawyer, and a diplomat," she says.

Law Firm
Trainee First Year
Trainee Second Year
Newly Qualified (NQ)
Addleshaw Goddard£52,000£56,000£100,000
Akin£60,000£65,000£174,418
A&O Shearman£56,000£61,000£150,000
Ashurst£57,000£62,000£140,000
Baker McKenzie£56,000£61,000£145,000
Bird & Bird£47,000£52,000£102,000
Bristows£46,000£50,000£88,000
Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner£50,000£55,000£115,000
Burges Salmon£47,000£49,000£72,000
Charles Russell Speechlys£50,000£53,000£88,000
Cleary Gottlieb£62,500£67,500£164,500
Clifford Chance£56,000£61,000£150,000
Clyde & Co£47,000£49,500£85,000
CMS£50,000£55,000£120,000
Cooley£55,000£60,000£157,000
Davis Polk £65,000£70,000£170,000
Debevoise £55,000£60,000£173,000
Dechert£55,000£61,000£165,000
Dentons£50,000£54,000£100,000
DLA Piper£52,000£57,000£130,000
Eversheds Sutherland£46,000£50,000£110,000
Farrer & Co£47,000£49,000£88,000
Fieldfisher£48,500£52,000£95,000
Freshfields£56,000£61,000£150,000
Fried Frank£55,000£60,000£175,000
Gibson Dunn£60,000£65,000£180,000
Goodwin Procter£55,000£60,000£175,000
Gowling WLG£48,500£53,500£105,000
Herbert Smith Freehills Kramer£56,000£61,000£145,000
HFW£50,000£54,000£103,500
Hill Dickinson£43,000£45,000£80,000
Hogan Lovells£56,000£61,000£140,000
Irwin Mitchell£43,000£45,000£76,000
Jones Day£56,000£65,000£160,000
K&L Gates£50,000£55,000£115,000
Kennedys£43,000£46,000£85,000
King & Spalding£55,000£60,000£165,000
Kirkland & Ellis£60,000£65,000£174,418
Latham & Watkins£60,000£65,000£174,418
Linklaters£56,000£61,000£150,000
Macfarlanes£56,000£61,000£140,000
Mayer Brown£55,000£60,000£150,000
McDermott Will & Schulte£65,000£70,000£174,418
Milbank£65,000£70,000£174,418
Mills & Reeve£45,000£47,000£82,000
Mischon de Reya£47,500£52,500£95,000
Norton Rose Fulbright£50,000£55,000£135,000
Orrick£55,000£60,000£160,000
Osborne Clarke£54,500£56,000£94,000
Paul Hastings£60,000£68,000£173,000
Paul Weiss£55,000£60,000£180,000
Penningtons Manches Cooper£48,000£50,000£83,000
Pinsent Masons£49,500£54,000£105,000
Quinn Emanueln/an/a£180,000
Reed Smith£50,000£55,000£125,000
Ropes & Gray£60,000£65,000£165,000
RPC£46,000£50,000£90,000
Shoosmiths£43,000£45,000£105,000
Sidley Austin£60,000£65,000£175,000
Simmons & Simmons£52,000£57,000£120,000
Skadden£58,000£63,000£173,000
Slaughter and May£56,000£61,000£150,000
Squire Patton Boggs£47,000£50,000£110,000
Stephenson Harwood£50,000£55,000£100,000
Sullivan & Cromwell£65,000£70,000£174,418
Taylor Wessing£50,000£55,000£115,000
TLT£44,000£47,500£85,000
Travers Smith£55,000£60,000£130,000
Trowers & Hamlins£45,000£49,000£80,000
Vinson & Elkins£60,000£65,000£173,077
Watson Farley & Williams£50,000£55,000£102,000
Weightmans£34,000£36,000£70,000
Weil Gotshal & Manges£60,000£65,000£170,000
White & Case£62,000£67,000£175,000
Willkie Farr & Gallagher£60,000£65,000£170,000
Withers£47,000£52,000£95,000
Womble Bond Dickinson£43,000£45,000£80,000
Rank
Law Firm
Revenue
Profit per Equity
Partner (PEP)
1DLA Piper*£3,010,000,000£2,400,000
2Clifford Chance£2,300,000,000£2,040,000
3A&O Shearman£2,200,000,000£2,200,000
4Hogan Lovells£2,150,000,000£2,200,000
5Freshfields£2,120,000,000Not disclosed
6Linklaters£2,100,000,000£1,900,000
7Norton Rose Fulbright*£1,800,000,000£1,100,000
8CMS**£1,620,000,000Not disclosed
9Herbert Smith Freehills£1,300,000,000£1,300,000
10Ashurst£961,000,000£1,300,000
11Clyde & Co£844,000,000£739,000
12Eversheds Sutherland£749,000,000£1,300,000
13BCLP*£661,000,000£748,000
14Pinsent Masons£649,000,000£793,000
15Slaughter and May***£625,000,000Not disclosed
16Simmons & Simmons£574,000,000£1,076,000
17Bird & Bird**£545,000,000£696,000
18Addleshaw Goddard£495,000,000Not disclosed
19Taylor Wessing£480,000,000£915,000***
20Osborne Clarke**£456,000,000£771,000
21Womble Bond Dickinson£448,000,000£556,000
22DWF£435,000,000Not disclosed
23Fieldfisher£407,000,000£966,000
24Kennedys£384,000,000Not disclosed
25DAC Beachcroft£325,000,000£700,000

What do City lawyers actually do each day?

For a closer look at the day-to-day of some of the most common types of lawyers working in corporate law firms, explore our lawyer job profiles:

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Mental health as a business issue

The pastoral remit has pushed mental health up the agenda. "We live in a little bit of a bubble here at Wedlake Bell because we have a fantastic culture," Wallace says, but "when you broaden it out and you look at the legal industry, it’s not that great at all."

As a champion for industry mental health charity LawCare, she cites its latest survey: "Nearly 60% of people working in the legal industry reported poor mental well-being. 32% said that they would leave the sector entirely, 79% saying that they work beyond their contracted hours and 56% said they would leave within five years." Her conclusion: "We definitely need to take some action on all of this."

Some of that action starts at home. She has convened a best-practice group she calls LawWell and rolled out "anonymous learning reviews" inside teams to build "psychological safety." The aim is cultural: "All of us make mistakes, it’s really how you respond that counts."

Yet lawyers "suffering from mental health issues make more mistakes and then they don’t speak about it, they don’t speak up and they cover it up and the mistake gets bigger." Anonymous reporting lets teams explain, "this mistake was made, it was identified and this is what we did," which "creates more transparency and mitigates mistakes going forward."

What juniors want and why it matters

Younger lawyers, she says, want something different than the hours-at-all-costs culture of old.

"I grew up in the era where you just literally said, what do you want? 24 hours of my day, you’ve got it," Wallace admits. "We have to recognise that that’s not healthy."

Today’s juniors "are driven by purpose and autonomy," which "feeds into flexible working, having some time at home, being trusted, and just getting the job done without too much micromanagement." At Wedlake Bell, "they only need to be in three days a week," and the firm invests heavily in extracurriculars so cross-practice teams already "know each other."

I grew up in the era where you just literally said, what do you want? 24 hours of my day, you’ve got it.

‘The millionaire exodus’ - and why it’s not just non-doms

As a tax and estates partner to high- and ultra-high-net-worth clients, Wallace sees the UK's wealth migration debate up close, and actually thinks the headlines underplay the problem. "It’s not just the non-doms that are leaving. British entrepreneurs and talented British financiers or lawyers or accountants or family office personnel [are] relocating so that they don’t have to pay as much tax."

The economic footprint of the wealthy, she says, is broader than their personal tax bill. "What we saw was whole ecosystems that built up around them - all those activities employ people in the UK and generate more tax so it’s incredibly difficult to put a number on it but we have seen parts of London change as everyone has moved to Milan."

Keep it simple

Asked how she would approach keeping the UK’s wealthiest and most productive people, Wallace's long-term preference is far simpler than most policymakers make it: "I would have a flat rate of 20% tax across the board - VAT at 20%, corporation tax at 20%, inheritance tax at 20%, capital gains tax at 20%, and income tax at 20%," she says. "Imagine if you had the flat 20% regime. How many people would come here and spend money here and invest here."

That captures the balance she thinks the country - and firms like hers - should strike: stay competitive while holding on to what already works. "We are custodians of this very old business," she says of Wedlake Bell’s partners. The job is to look after it - and its clients - while looking forward. Or, as she puts it, "1780 but contemporary."

We are custodians of this very old business - we want to look after it.
FirmLondon office sinceKnown for in London
Akin 1997Restructuring, funds
Baker McKenzie1961Finance, capital markets, TMT
Davis Polk1972Leveraged finance, corporate/M&A
Gibson Dunn1979Private equity, arbitration, energy, resources and infrastructure
Goodwin2008Private equity, funds, life sciences
Kirkland & Ellis1994Private equity, funds, restructuring
Latham & Watkins1990Finance, private equity, capital markets
McDermott Will & Schulte1998Finance, funds, healthcare
Milbank1979Finance, capital markets, energy, resources and infrastructure
Paul Hastings1997Leveraged finance, structured finance, infrastructure
Paul Weiss2001Private equity, leveraged finance
Quinn Emanuel2008Litigation
Sidley Austin1974Leveraged finance, capital markets, corporate/M&A
Simpson Thacher1978Leveraged finance, private equity, funds
Skadden1988Finance, corporate/M&A, arbitration
Sullivan & Cromwell1972Corporate/M&A, restructuring, capital markets
Weil1996Restructuring, private equity, leverage finance
White & Case1971Capital markets, arbitration, energy, resources and infrastructure
Law firmTypeFirst-year salary
White & CaseUS firm£32,000
Stephenson HarwoodInternational£30,000
A&O ShearmanMagic Circle£28,000
Charles Russell SpeechlysInternational£28,000
FreshfieldsMagic Circle£28,000
Herbert Smith FreehillsSilver Circle£28,000
Hogan LovellsInternational£28,000
LinklatersMagic Circle£28,000
Mishcon de ReyaInternational£28,000
Norton Rose FulbrightInternational£28,000

This is a condensed version of our full length interview with Camilla Wallace on The Non-Billable Podcast. View the episode page here.

Law Firm
Trainee First Year
Trainee Second Year
Newly Qualified (NQ)
A&O Shearman£56,000£61,000£150,000
Clifford Chance£56,000£61,000£150,000
Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer£56,000£61,000£150,000
Linklaters£56,000£61,000£150,000
Slaughter and May£56,000£61,000£150,000
Law Firm
Trainee First Year
Trainee Second Year
Newly Qualified (NQ)
A&O Shearman£56,000£61,000£150,000
Clifford Chance£56,000£61,000£150,000
Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer£56,000£61,000£150,000
Linklaters£56,000£61,000£150,000
Slaughter and May£56,000£61,000£150,000
Law Firm
Trainee First Year
Trainee Second Year
Newly Qualified (NQ)
Ashurst£57,000£62,000£140,000
Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner£50,000£55,000£115,000
Herbert Smith Freehills£56,000£61,000£145,000
Macfarlanes£56,000£61,000£140,000
Travers Smith£55,000£60,000£130,000
FirmMerger yearKnown for in London
BCLP2018Real estate, corporate/M&A, litigation
DLA Piper2005Corporate/M&A, real estate, energy, resources and infrastructure
Eversheds Sutherland2017Corporate/M&A, finance
Hogan Lovells2011Litigation, regulation, finance
Mayer Brown2002Finance, capital markets, real estate
Norton Rose Fulbright2013Energy, resources and infrastructure, insurance, finance
Reed Smith2007Shipping, finance, TMT
Squire Patton Boggs2011Corporate/M&A, pensions, TMT
Law Firm
Trainee First Year
Trainee Second Year
Newly Qualified (NQ)
Ashurst£57,000£62,000£140,000
Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner£50,000£55,000£115,000
Herbert Smith Freehills Kramer£56,000£61,000£145,000
Macfarlanes£56,000£61,000£140,000
Travers Smith£55,000£60,000£130,000
Author of blog post.
Olivia Rhye
11 Jan 2022
•
5 min read