Tuesday, August 29, 2017

Move Over Rooney, The Mansfield Rule Is Here

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August 29, 2017

Forty-four major law firms and 55 corporate legal departments are teaming up to boost diversity in the legal profession by drawing on two inspirational figures: the late Dan Rooney, beloved owner of the Pittsburgh Steelers, and Arabella Mansfield, a 19th century women's rights activist who became the first American woman admitted into the legal profession in 1869.

The 'Mansfield Rule' is a data-driven, modified version of the Rooney Rule, which was first proposed by Dan Rooney and adopted by the NFL in 2003. At first, the rule required NFL teams to interview at least one minority candidate to fill head coaching vacancies. Eventually, it was expanded to include general manager positions and female candidates. In its first 10 years the Rooney Rule ushered in some real gains — but over time, its impact began to wane.

The new rule takes the old rule’s shortcomings into account. It was clear the Rooney Rule didn't go far enough, says Caren Ulrich Stacy, the CEO of Diversity Lab, a research outfit that is experimenting with ways to improve diversity ratios in the legal profession. The Mansfield Rule, which is one of the diversity initiatives the Lab has helped shape, will measure whether firms are actively considering diverse candidates for at least 30% of open leadership and governance roles. If you've got a slate of 10 potential hires, three need to be people of color or women. "Research shows that 30% in a candidate pool is a real tipping point," says Stacy.

The new rule also makes it very clear what a "governance role" actually is. Stacy ticks off a list: "Managing partner, chairperson, practice group leader, office head, compensation committee, policy committee, executive committee, equity partner — anything that has governance and leadership responsibilities associated with it has to hit the 30% consideration threshold," she says.

Stacy has gone to the mattresses before over diversity. She spent 25 years as the head of talent for various law firms before heading out on her own. Diversity Lab is her second venture. "I spent all this time hiring lawyers and half of them worked out and half didn't," she says, "I thought, 'there must be a better way to think about this.'" She turned to data, research and behavioral science. "Other industries are doing a lot of research and development around talent, so why not apply that thinking to the law?"

It's a big issue. While the gender balance for first-year lawyers is roughly equal, "by the time they get to equity partnership, about nine or 10 years down the road, only about 16% are women." Attorneys of color, particularly women, are up against a more substantial problem. "It's not so much a leaky pipeline, though we lose plenty of attorneys of color along the way," she says. "It's that there is no pipeline."

One of the best aspects of the Mansfield Rule is that it was designed, in part, by actual lawyers. Last year, Diversity Lab held a Women In Law Hackathon in collaboration with Stanford Law School and Bloomberg Law, in search of new, scalable inclusion ideas. Some 54 senior-level partners from law firms across the U.S. worked in virtual teams of six, with two expert advisors and assistance from a Stanford Law student, for six months. The teams presented their ideas in a high-energy pitch event in front of big league judges, including Tony West, Pepsico's General Counsel and Alan Bryan , Walmart’s senior associate general counsel. While the Mansfield Rule was the big winner, four other ideas presented that day are also being developed at the Diversity Lab.

Because so many firms participated in the hackathon, the Mansfield Rule had a built-in, receptive audience from the get-go. The inaugural participants now have 12 months to prove the idea's merit. Any firm that can demonstrate they adhered to the guidelines throughout the year will become Mansfield Rule certified. This distinction comes with a real perk: the candidates hired or promoted through the process are eligible to attend a two-day client forum in 2018, attended by 55 corporate in-house legal honchos, who will be there to network, mentor and perhaps offer lucrative new business. Among those committed are representatives from 3M, Cargill, Facebook, Ford, Google, Medtronic, Saleforce,Target and Walmart.

"We believe that diversity delivers better results," said Julie Gruber, executive vice president and global general counsel of Gap Inc. said in a statement. "We've worked for years to help drive meaningful diversity at our preferred law firm providers, and supporting the Mansfield Rule Client Forum is an important next step in this work."

This same corporate cohort is working with Diversity Lab to adapt the Mansfield Rule, which is law firm specific, to traditional corporate structures. And just in time. "Since we announced this, I've gotten calls from financial services firms, manufacturing, healthcare and tech firms asking about it," says Stacy. The plan is to study the results from the first year and share everything they learn. "We'll see where it moves the needle and where it falls short," she says. "And then iterate from there."

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Well, when you think about it, the place where we call home really decides for many of us our access to jobs. It decides for many people what kind of schools we're going to go to, for our children. It determines for a lot of people just whether or not they're going to have access to good, healthy food. And we don't think about many of those things in terms of what it means for equality. So what I try to do is to sort of get us to think about the whole, particularly in the wake of the foreclosure crisis, how essential it is to our access to opportunity, and think about equality as access to opportunity. And so much of that stems from where we call home.
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