'It's a bidding war for talent': City headhunter Ed Parker on the lateral partner market
Top headhunter Ed Parker lifts the lid on the high-stakes world of elite lateral partner moves.


Contents
The City legal market is evolving fast. US firms continue to aggressively hire in London, team moves are at record levels and the traditional partnership model is under pressure. Ed Parker, a top partner-level headhunter and managing director at Fides Search, has had a front row seat to the transformation.
"In the last ten years, we’ve effectively seen five new Magic Circle firms created in London - just from partners moving from UK firms to US firms", he tells us in an interview for The Non-Billable Podcast. "And in the current cycle, we think that same stat will replicate itself within five years."
Parker founded Fides in 2013 to offer law firms and in-house teams a more data-driven, analytical approach to hiring. The firm also provides due diligence services, helping clients assess candidates’ skills and, importantly, the portability of their client relationships before they write a cheque. "Candidate X says they have a book of Y. What will actually come across?" he says. "That’s one of the biggest risk factors."
Listen to the full-length interview on the podcast. Episode page with links here.
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The lateral arms race
The UK partner market has remained stubbornly competitive, even as transactional work has slowed down. "It's not been the easiest market for sure", Parker says, "but it's super competitive when it comes to finding the right talent."
The pace of growth has driven law firms to scale up their recruitment operations, with some now hiring over 40 lateral partners a year just to maintain momentum. That activity isn't limited to the US players - although the likes of Sidley, Paul Hastings and Paul Weiss continue to set the pace.
"The UK international firms are some of the biggest investors in lateral talent", he says, listing Ashurst, Bird & Bird, Eversheds and DLA among the most active. "There’s not really any category of firm that can rest on its laurels right now."
Parker says firms often lead with practice groups that drive broader revenue. "A lot of firms lead with those multiplier practice groups, like private equity and corporate, where it creates cadence for partners across different practice areas."
He also flags a notable uptick in team moves - more than he’s seen at any point in his 18-year career. "It’s much easier to port the work in a wholesome way if you move as a team”, he explains, "Whereas if you move as an individual, you're potentially competing with your former team and the external market."
There’s not any category of firm that can rest on its laurels right now.
Law Firm | Trainee First Year | Trainee Second Year | Newly Qualified (NQ) |
---|---|---|---|
Addleshaw Goddard | £52,000 | £56,000 | £100,000 |
Akin Gump | £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 | £140,000 |
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 Steen & Hamilton | £57,500 | £62,500 | £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 | £98,000 |
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 | £135,000 |
McDermott Will & Emery | £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 Emanuel | n/a | n/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 | £97,000 |
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 | £54,000 | £59,000 | £120,000 |
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) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | DLA Piper* | £3,010,000,000 | £2,400,000 |
2 | Clifford Chance | £2,300,000,000 | £2,040,000 |
3 | A&O Shearman | £2,200,000,000 | £2,200,000 |
4 | Hogan Lovells | £2,150,000,000 | £2,200,000 |
5 | Freshfields | £2,120,000,000 | Not disclosed |
6 | Linklaters | £2,100,000,000 | £1,900,000 |
7 | Norton Rose Fulbright* | £1,800,000,000 | £1,100,000 |
8 | CMS** | £1,620,000,000 | Not disclosed |
9 | Herbert Smith Freehills | £1,300,000,000 | £1,300,000 |
10 | Ashurst | £961,000,000 | £1,300,000 |
11 | Clyde & Co | £844,000,000 | £739,000 |
12 | Eversheds Sutherland | £749,000,000 | £1,300,000 |
13 | BCLP* | £661,000,000 | £748,000 |
14 | Pinsent Masons | £649,000,000 | £793,000 |
15 | Slaughter and May*** | £625,000,000 | Not disclosed |
16 | Simmons & Simmons | £574,000,000 | £1,076,000 |
17 | Bird & Bird** | £545,000,000 | £696,000 |
18 | Addleshaw Goddard | £495,000,000 | Not disclosed |
19 | Taylor Wessing | £480,000,000 | £915,000*** |
20 | Osborne Clarke** | £456,000,000 | £771,000 |
21 | Womble Bond Dickinson | £448,000,000 | £556,000 |
22 | DWF | £435,000,000 | Not disclosed |
23 | Fieldfisher | £407,000,000 | £966,000 |
24 | Kennedys | £384,000,000 | Not disclosed |
25 | DAC 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:
Big money, big expectations
So what’s the financial logic behind poaching rainmakers?
"Most of the highest-price-tag partners are almost all in the category of £3 to £8 million", Parker says. "Eight being very high, but you see a lot around the £3 to £5 million mark." Firms will weigh the certainty of the partner’s revenue stream, their synergies with existing clients and how much their book boosts other practice areas.
"If someone is trading in an area that really leverages revenue for other groups, they might come in with an £8 million book and warrant a £5-6 million comp package", he says. "But what’s interesting is how long they’ll keep them on that sort of package."
Compensation guarantees are one tactic. "It’s a two-pronged thing. It de-risks the growth for the firm and mitigates the risk of someone departing." But firms get burned too. "We regularly see partners underperform versus their plan. Often it’s because the firm mis-sold the platform, or the partner mis-sold the book."
This is where Parker’s due diligence practice comes in. "The LPQ [lateral partner questionnaire] gives you a three-year track record. But what you can’t fully test is how much of that is down to the brand of the business versus the brand of the partner."
Private capital and repeat revenue
For many firms, private equity clients remain the biggest prize.
"Private equity deals generate a huge amount of fee income for other practice groups", says Parker. "It’s why so many firms lead with those multiplier groups." The challenge is assembling the full ecosystem - M&A, leveraged finance, competition, tax, regulatory - and doing so with lawyers who can handle the pace and expectations of PE clients.
"It's finding the right people who can service that kind of client base", Parker says. "A private equity deal has a very different momentum to it than a public M&A or an IPO."
It’s also about repeat work. "With litigation, once the matter’s resolved, that client might not come back. But private capital clients will do multiple deals within a year. That makes their relationships more portable."
Private equity deals generate a huge amount of fee income for other practice groups.
The rise of non-equity partnership
Another major shift is the growth of non-equity partner roles, particularly at US firms.
"Kirkland is the strongest advocate for a two-tier model. For every equity partner, there are five to six salaried partners - in some offices even more", says Parker. "And they actively manage it. If you don’t make equity in four to five years, you’ll know you’re not going to make equity full stop."
Some firms are trying to simplify their structures. "There was a shift in narrative - we’re all partners, salaried or equity", Parker notes. But the Kirkland model is proving difficult to ignore. "Hiring motivated people with a fantastic skill set and giving them the partner badge works. Clients don’t care whether someone is salaried or equity. They see the title ‘partner’."
When asked if the partner-in-name-only title can create perception issues among clients, Parker says clients want outcomes and stability more than anything. If that means promoting your best associate talent to keep hold of them, then so be it. "I’d say 6-9 PQE is a fair window to promote someone. It’s a new skill set being a partner."
Advice for associates: don’t wait, be strategic
For ambitious associates, Parker’s advice is clear: don’t passively wait your turn.
"You need to actively manage it. Look at who’s ahead of you. If you’re 6-8 PQE in a team that only makes up one partner every two years, and there are five motivated peers ahead of you, it’s going to be tough."
Some associates are jumping ship, sometimes prematurely. "If they miss the boat, they default to a counsel role or go in-house, and that makes partnership harder to achieve later."
The key is to engage early in business development. "Just sitting there billing hard is the easiest way to get left behind", says Parker. "Every lawyer has a decent technical skill set. What counts is relationships, specialism and credibility with clients."
He urges associates to interview with firms - even if they’re not actively looking - to gather intelligence. "Stress test the risk factors, understand the opportunity. If you do have to make a move, don’t make it for financial reasons. Make it for the long-term upside."
And what of those tempted by the promise of rapid promotion at a US firm?
"You have to understand your own risk appetite", says Parker. "The grass isn’t always greener. But if you’re ambitious, and you can meet the KPIs, and you want to stretch and grow - then you’ve seen enough."
Just sitting there billing hard is the easiest way to get left behind - what counts is relationships, specialism and credibility with clients.
Firm | London office since | Known for in London |
---|---|---|
Baker McKenzie | 1961 | Finance, capital markets, TMT |
Davis Polk | 1972 | Leveraged finance, corporate/M&A |
Gibson Dunn | 1979 | Private equity, arbitration, energy, resources and infrastructure |
Goodwin | 2008 | Private equity, funds, life sciences |
Kirkland & Ellis | 1994 | Private equity, funds, restructuring |
Latham & Watkins | 1990 | Finance, private equity, capital markets |
Milbank | 1979 | Finance, capital markets, energy, resources and infrastructure |
Paul Hastings | 1997 | Leveraged finance, structured finance, infrastructure |
Paul Weiss | 2001 | Private equity, leveraged finance |
Quinn Emanuel | 2008 | Litigation |
Sidley Austin | 1974 | Leveraged finance, capital markets, corporate/M&A |
Simpson Thacher | 1978 | Leveraged finance, private equity, funds |
Skadden | 1988 | Finance, corporate/M&A, arbitration |
Weil | 1996 | Restructuring, private equity, leverage finance |
White & Case | 1971 | Capital markets, arbitration, energy, resources and infrastructure |
Law firm | Type | First-year salary |
---|---|---|
White & Case | US firm | £32,000 |
Stephenson Harwood | International | £30,000 |
A&O Shearman | Magic Circle | £28,000 |
Charles Russell Speechlys | International | £28,000 |
Freshfields | Magic Circle | £28,000 |
Herbert Smith Freehills | Silver Circle | £28,000 |
Hogan Lovells | International | £28,000 |
Linklaters | Magic Circle | £28,000 |
Mishcon de Reya | International | £28,000 |
Norton Rose Fulbright | International | £28,000 |
This is a condensed version of our full length interview with Ed Parker 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 | £54,000 | £59,000 | £120,000 |
Firm | Merger year | Known for in London |
---|---|---|
BCLP | 2018 | Real estate, corporate/M&A, litigation |
DLA Piper | 2005 | Corporate/M&A, real estate, energy, resources and infrastructure |
Eversheds Sutherland | 2017 | Corporate/M&A, finance |
Hogan Lovells | 2011 | Litigation, regulation, finance |
Mayer Brown | 2002 | Finance, capital markets, real estate |
Norton Rose Fulbright | 2013 | Energy, resources and infrastructure, insurance, finance |
Reed Smith | 2007 | Shipping, finance, TMT |
Squire Patton Boggs | 2011 | Corporate/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 | £54,000 | £59,000 | £120,000 |
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