Turning data into dollars: inside DLA Piper's client retention data analytics programme

Even the biggest firms can have trouble retaining and growing revenue from clients. That was the issue facing DLA Piper in 2014.

Out of 20 clients that the firm had placed in its key partner programme, 18 had revenue to the firm stay flat or decrease over the previous year. And in the firm's marketing department, many were at a loss why this decrease was happening, let alone how to reverse it.

The answer they found was in analytics - but not just in looking at the numbers, but rather forming a data action plan focusing on specific (and perhaps unexpected) metrics that the firm found influenced retention rates more than others.

The marketing team, alongside analytics partner Axiom Consulting Partners, revealed the results of this endeavour to a standing-room-only crowd at the 'Harnessing predictive analytics to drive client growth and retention; session at the International Legal Technology Association Conference (ILTACON) in Las Vegas on 14 August.

The idea for the project came from a Time magazine article read by Kim Rennick, director of sector marketing at DLA Piper. The article explained new and interesting ways big data was being used on college campuses, such as utilising influential metrics to identify students most at risk of dropping out, then giving them extra care and tutoring. Rennick saw numerous applications to the law: You could say that's client service for the student, she explained to the conference crowd.

However, firm leadership was not yet on board. Rennick explained that they were not as excited as we might have wanted at the proposal from DLA Piper chief marketing officer Barbara Taylor, but allowed the marketing team to take the project on.

Building the model

To actually launch the project, DLA Piper undertook a four-step process. The first key step, said David Kuhlman, partner at Axiom Consulting Partners who helped spearhead the initiative for the firm, was to establish the foundation of what the data was looking to solve.

It's not important to set up a question at the beginning. You just have to know the direction you're going, Kuhlman said.

For DLA Piper, that meant finding out more about client retention. Heather Reid, director of practice marketing at DLA Piper, explained that this meant the firm would single out what we did differently with clients that grew versus clients that shrunk.

Secondly, the team actually had to build a data model, which Kuhlman described as 70% of the work. In this case, that meant combing through four years of data and about seven million records to find the insights the firm wanted.