What Uncomfortable Data Reveals About Firms That Want to Grow

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Law firms like to talk about growth in terms that are easy to see: more attorneys, more offices, more cases, more market share. Much less often do they talk about the systems that enable growth. Yet the firms that scale well are usually not the ones with the loudest ambitions. They are the ones willing to look closely at the work happening underneath the surface, especially when the results are uncomfortable.

That is where performance data becomes useful and, for some organizations, threatening. A firm may believe its operations are sound until a report reveals repeated data-entry errors, delayed requests, inconsistent follow-up, or staff habits that quietly slow cases. Once those patterns are documented, the firm faces a choice. It can treat the information as a chance to improve, or it can treat the source of the information as the problem.

When the Data Gets Personal

This is one of the less discussed tensions in legal operations. Many of the processes that shape case movement are handled at the staff level, often by paralegals, legal assistants, or records personnel, who work under pressure and at high volume. In many firms, those tasks are not regularly audited with the same discipline applied to case outcomes, settlement figures, or attorney productivity. Mistakes accumulate quietly. A wrong date of service here, an incorrect provider there, a request returned for missing information, a delay no one traces back to its source.

Problems of that kind rarely feel dramatic in the moment. They look like normal friction. A few extra days. A few more calls. A request was resubmitted. But once a vendor, consultant, or internal audit puts real numbers around those issues, the conversation changes. What seemed minor becomes measurable. The cost is no longer abstract.

That is often the moment when discomfort enters the room. Data does not just identify a process problem. It can point to specific habits, specific teams, and sometimes specific people. For leadership, that can be useful. For organizations unused to operational scrutiny, it can feel accusatory, even when the information is accurate.

Why Some Firms Reject the Mirror

Not every firm responds well when its weak points are made visible. Some do what strong organizations tend to do: they coach staff, tighten workflows, adjust oversight, and improve. Others do something else. They change vendors, dismiss the report, or sidestep the issue entirely.

That response is easy to misread as a disagreement about service quality. In many cases, it is closer to a reluctance to confront internal management problems. If the data is right, then someone has to act on it. Someone has to ask why errors were missed, why patterns were allowed to continue, and why no one caught the problem sooner. Those are leadership questions, not vendor questions.

This is one reason firms can cycle through outside partners without seeing better results. A new vendor may arrive without the prior history, without the same performance reporting, and without the baseline that made the earlier problems visible. For a while, that can feel like relief. The friction has been removed from view. But it has not actually been removed from the system.

The firms that improve tend to understand a simple point: changing the messenger does not change the message. If request quality is poor, if staff training is inconsistent, or if no one in leadership is reviewing operational metrics, the same issues are likely to reappear no matter who is handling the work.

Kevin Silva from The Records Company mentions, “The most dangerous thing you can give a poorly run firm is accurate data about itself. Not because the data is wrong — because it’s right.”

Scale Depends on Operational Honesty

This is where the conversation becomes bigger than record retrieval. Law firms that want to grow cannot rely on informal habits and unwritten workarounds forever. Scale requires systems that hold up under pressure. It requires leadership that pays attention to the less glamorous parts of the business: process quality, documentation standards, staff accuracy, turnaround times, and the real cost of avoidable errors.

That does not mean partners need to micromanage. It means they need sufficient visibility to know whether the firm’s machinery is actually working. Ambition without operational discipline creates a certain kind of fragility. A firm may look successful from the outside while harboring preventable inefficiencies that become more costly as volume rises.

This is also where outside partners can play a useful role. A records retrieval company, for example, may not just retrieve documents. It may be one of the few parties in a position to see recurring workflow problems across requests, staff submissions, and follow-up patterns. 

For instance, The Records Company, over the years in the U.S. record retrieval industry, has mastered recognizing repeated submission errors, weak follow-up habits, delays caused by incomplete information, and the kinds of small failures that leadership often notices only after they start affecting timelines or outcomes. They treat records retrieval as operational infrastructure rather than a clerical function. The work may look administrative from a distance, but it often reveals how well a firm is functioning beneath the surface.

Laura Elam from The Records Company also emphasizes how legal firms should treat performance data as useful rather than threatening. Honest reports are an opportunity to train, to redesign, to improve. Firms that respond that way get better. Firms that respond by changing vendors get the same problems with a different invoice. 

Libby Osman adds, “Firms that build these structures see the same results: cases move faster, requests come back cleaner, disbursements are simpler, and settlements land closer to their full documented value. None of that happens by accident. All of it starts with being willing to look at the data.”

The Firms That Get Better

The difference between firms that grow well and firms that stall is not always talent. It is often tolerance. Some organizations tolerate too much operational ambiguity for too long. They accept delays that no one has measured, mistakes that no one has priced, and workflow breakdowns that no one has truly owned.

The firms that get better tend to do three things differently. They look at performance data without taking it personally. They evaluate vendors and systems at the leadership level rather than treating them as minor administrative matters. And they are willing to correct internal habits even when doing so is awkward.

None of that is especially dramatic. It does not make for a flashy growth story. But it is often what separates firms that scale with control from firms that simply get busier.