
The COVID crisis has bitten law firms hard in some areas with two major law firms – Meredith Connell and Lane Neave – shedding staff.
Lane Neave has confirmed that 12 per cent of its staff, 21 lawyers and others, have been released as a result of the pandemic.
[adrotate banner=”93″]
In large part the downturn in work at Queenstown has been behind the problems with Lane Neave.
“A careful process was undertaken with, and support has been provided to, affected staff members – and to their colleagues – through both internal and external sources,” Managing Partner Andrew Shaw told the NZ Herald.
The firm was also paying back $1.11 million in wage subsidies that it had taken for 162 employees.
Meredith Connell has also confirmed to BusinessDesk that it was making some redundancies but fewer than 2 per cent of its staff of 250.
Meredith Connell recently took over boutique Prestige Law, due to complete on 1 July.
Prestige Law specialises on cross-border litigation and dispute resolution work at also received over $118,000 in wage subsidies for its 18 staff.
LawFuel has been told that other redundancies are likely to occur in the near future from other firms with the downturn in work as a result of the pandemic, although some practices have also seen an upturn in work but have worked hard to trim overheads as the economy continues to adapt to the difficulties created by the pandemic.
[adrotate banner=”89″]
Australian Layoffs
Australia is seeing a second way of layoffs which, like the New Zealand law firm situation, is hitting professionals.
Deloitte, one of the big four professional services firms, announced on Monday that it would lose 700 professional staff from its 10,000-strong Australian workforce.
And the business downturn there, as in New Zealand, has been largely due to compliance, mergers and related commercial work reducing substantially.
Last week PwC cut 400 staff from its 8,000 strong workforce, mainly from the consultancy and financial advisory division.
Major law firm Ashurst has cut partner draws by 20 per cent for six months and staff took pay cuts until July, with a similar cut in hours.
Other law firms have cut partner draws by up to 50 per cent and furloughed workers.
More from LawFuel
- The Receptionist Test: How Top Law Firms Really Pick Their Grads (And What They’re Paying)How Top Law Firms Really Choose Their Graduates (And What They’re Paying… Read more: The Receptionist Test: How Top Law Firms Really Pick Their Grads (And What They’re Paying)
- Listed Law Firm Gately Faces ObstaclesGateley Grows, But One-Off Costs Drag Profit Down Gateley, one of the… Read more: Listed Law Firm Gately Faces Obstacles
- NZ Law – DLA Piper deepens specialist capability with senior promotions and strategic hiresDLA Piper senior lawyers: Nick Byrnes, Kieron Creagh, Jennifer Smith, Tyson Hullena,… Read more: NZ Law – DLA Piper deepens specialist capability with senior promotions and strategic hires
- Law Firm Marketing Traffic TrapRemember when everyone said “content is king”? It appears that the king has been dethroned with the launch of AI Overviews and the onset of AI summaries. Sarah Perez at TechCrunch just dropped some sobering numbers. Since Google launched AI Overviews in May 2024, nearly 69 percent of news searches end with zero clicks to actual websites. That’s up from 56 percent before AI summaries took over. So if you search for “Supreme Court ruling on AI patents” Google’s AI gives you a neat summary right at the top.
- BHP’s Massive Legal Battle Over Brazil Dam DisasterBHP’s Staggering Legal Bills Updated 17 July 2025 Ben Thomson, LawFuel contibuting… Read more: BHP’s Massive Legal Battle Over Brazil Dam Disaster
- SEO For Lawyers Using AI: How Law Firms Can Finally Stop Sucking at Online MarketingLet’s be honest: most law firm websites are the digital equivalent of… Read more: SEO For Lawyers Using AI: How Law Firms Can Finally Stop Sucking at Online Marketing
- Legal Pads Are DeadIt’s 2025. If your firm still runs on paper and guesswork, you’re… Read more: Legal Pads Are Dead