Episode 205 - Helen Griffiths of Fladgate on Delivering a BD Plan That Works in Practice
Passle CMO Series Podcast · 2026-06-24 · 35 min
Substance score
45 / 100
Five dimensions, 20 points each
Helen Griffiths, Head of Business Development at Fladgate, discusses her approach to implementing a structured business development function at the firm, including establishing clearer role hierarchies, collaborative training programs, robust departmental BD plans, and improving CRM practices to drive meaningful client engagement and measurable outcomes.
Key takeaways
- Establishing a clear career development framework for BD team members increases transparency and helps staff understand advancement criteria and skill gaps.
- Collaborative BD planning with department managers, using a 'fewer, bigger, better' approach, generates more targeted initiatives with greater impact than ad-hoc activities.
- Integration of lateral hires through BD involvement and capability mapping is crucial to capturing value from partner acquisitions and lateral moves.
- Creating marketing partner champions at the department level helps navigate resistance and ensures BD initiatives align with departmental needs and culture.
- Rigorous post-event debriefs and ROI analysis, while unpopular, are essential to improving future activity effectiveness and holding partners accountable.
Guests
What our scoring noted
Our reviewer’s read on each dimension, with quotes from the episode.
Insight Density
The episode contains a few genuinely practical ideas - the career development framework, the PSMG co-hosted training programme as a budget workaround, and the marketing partner champion structure - but these are buried under extensive career storytelling, culture platitudes, and a quickfire section that eats 10+ minutes with zero substance. The insight-per-minute ratio is low.
there's an over reliance on partners and fee earners generally manually entering information...they're not going to spend time, you know, thinking, I've just got back from a client meeting, I must go in and log into that system
we had five or six sessions where PSMG members would come, but we would host in floodgate and um, my team would be invited, um, to train the team on those themes
Originality
The episode recycles almost entirely standard BD wisdom: keep plans simple, use them consistently, say no to low-ROI activities, culture matters, don't wait for perfection. Nothing is contrarian or first-principles; the closest thing to a fresh angle is automating CRM data entry to reduce fee-earner burden, which is hardly novel.
Keep it simple. It's probably my advice.
you won't develop in your career and climb up the ladder by just doing more
Guest Caliber
Helen Griffiths is a legitimate practitioner who has genuinely done the work - managing a global insurance BD team of 18 at Clyde & Co, spanning Freshfields and litigation funding - and is now running BD at a real growth-stage law firm. She is not a thought-leader-for-hire, but she is mid-senior level at a mid-market firm rather than an exceptionally senior or prominent figure.
led the global insurance BD team, managed uh, a team of 18 in, in the UK
I moved from the Judge to Freshfields, clearly you know, massive different in size
Specificity & Evidence
There are a handful of real specifics - Memory Crystal lateral hire group named, Fladgate's £100M+ revenue and near-doubling in five years cited, PSMG sessions quantified, team of 18 mentioned - but the episode lacks any named ROI figures, specific BD plan outcomes, named CRM vendor, or concrete examples of initiatives dropped and why, leaving most claims at an illustrative rather than evidential level.
you hit over 100 million in terms of turnover, um, which I believe is nearly double in five years
we hired, you know, a big group of partners from Memory Crystal this time last year
Conversational Craft
The host lands one genuinely useful challenge ('Can you share examples of things that haven't worked?') and follows up on the CRM roadmap and resistance points, but he is largely deferential, summarises back rather than probing, and the softball quickfire section consumes a significant portion of the episode with zero value for a B2B operator audience.
Have you got examples of things that, you know, that haven't worked, that you have now fallen by the wayside because they don't fit into the strategy anymore?
Are you taking all the glory for that, Helen, since you joined
Conversation analysis
Computed from the transcript - who did the talking, and the verbal tics along the way.
Share of words spoken
- Speaker B82%
- Speaker A18%
Filler words
Episode notes
Building a BD function that actually drives revenue, not just activity, is something many law firms talk about but few get right. On today's episode of the CMO Series Podcast, Will Eke is joined by Helen Griffiths, Head of Business Development at Fladgate, who brings a genuinely distinctive perspective to the role, having spent her career across litigation funding, global law firms and a leading commercial barristers' chambers. Since joining Fladgate in 2024, Helen has overhauled the firm's approach to BD, introducing a more structured, targeted model built around clear ownership and measurable results. Helen and Will discuss: How a career spanning small agile businesses to large global firms shaped her approach to stepping into the Fladgate role What she found when she arrived, and the four priorities she set from day one How she brought both the BD team and fee earners on the journey, and where the resistance actually came from How the firm is measuring what's working and what it has stopped doing What's on the technology roadmap, including a CRM transformation in progress Her one piece of advice for BD leaders trying to build a plan that sticks
Full transcript
35 minTranscribed and scored by The B2B Podcast Index.
Speaker A: Hello and um, welcome to another episode of the PASSL CMO series podcast where we talk about all things business development and marketing. I'm the dulcet tones of uh, Willik. I'm an SVP here on the commercial team at passl and today we're going to be talking about delivering a business development plan that works in practice. If you think about building a business development function that actually drives revenue, it's not always just about activity. It's actually something that many law firms want to talk about, but few get it right. So today in our episode we're going to be joined by Helen Griffiths, who's the head of Business Development M at Fladgate. And Helen brings a really unique perspective on this role, having spent a number of years in her career across litigation funding, global law firms and also a leading commercial barristers chambers. Now, Helen joined Flatgate in 2024 and since then she, she's really introduced a more structured approach to how the firm um, goes about its BD activities and that's normally built around a targeted strategy and ownership. And we're going to be talking more in depth about how she found Cloudgate when she arrived, what she's done with the team and partners to bring them along on that journey. And also we're going to delve into what she.
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Speaker A: Really excited. Welcome Helen, thanks for joining us.
Speaker B: Thank you for having me.
Speaker A: Delivering a business development plan that works in practice. Um, now if we take it back, Helen, just have a quick look at uh, your sort of career. You've had really distinctive career in business development and that's been, you know, within litigation funding, uh, at uh, some of those global law firms that we talked about and also a commercial barristers chambers at Fladgate specifically. Now you're head of business development. How do you think those experiences along your career have really helped shape how you sort of hit that ground running at Flatgate?
Speaker B: Well, I suppose every role sort of teaches you what you, what you Want and what you don't want doesn't it, or what you're good at and what you're not so good at. Um, I think, I think my career so far has taught me a few things really in terms of, in terms of that. So I've always enjoyed being really hands on. That's something that I've learned about myself. I think when I first started my career at the Judge which is a um, broker of litigation funding and insurance. Um and um, as compared to some of the law firms that I've worked at, it's, it's a small business. I um, was one minute I would be kind of brokering litigation funding packages and working with solicitors and their clients and the insurance and funding market to negotiate terms. Uh, and the next I would be you know, very client facing out doing business development meetings with, with um, law firms, training sessions. And I also looked after the marketing and the business development across the, across the business. So that sort of taught me that I loved kind of variety, I loved getting m. My hands dirty, getting, getting really stuck into things. Um, and actually when I moved from the Judge to Freshfields, clearly you know, massive different in size. Um, and that was the challenge for me going to that big magic circle environment where I was used to doing everything, to suddenly being one of you know, a huge and um, brilliant um team sort of trying to sort of figure out where I fit in with that. I suppose there was, there was specialists for events websites, there was sector bd, there was practice bd, there was campaigns teams, there was, we were spoiled for resource, um, and that sort of um, that world. You know. I learned a lot and I learned a lot from people that really did specialize in their own individual thing. Um, but it did sort of really kind of bring to the forefront for me that I do like doing a bit of everything. I do like dipping in and out stuff and get, and getting really stuck in. Um, so that's sort of one thing that, that taught me and then, and then secondly, um, I've, I've always um, I've always enjoyed kind of managing people, working with teams. Again that started at the Judge when I managed a small team of brokers. And I've managed people in every role really, whether that's one or two people. Right up to where I was at Clyde and Co and led the global insurance BD team, managed uh, a team of 18 in, in the UK. I just uh, I enjoy learning about people, being around people, um, finding out what makes them tick, what motivates them. Don't get me wrong, it's, I know it's not for everyone. I've had that conversation many times with people and it is, it can be really challenging. You know, you have to have difficult conversations, make difficult decisions. You get kind of emotionally invested sometimes and it's, it can be really difficult actually. It's the kind of thing keeps you awake at night. Um, but it's also really rewarding to see somebody grow in confidence into their role or learn a new skill or get a promotion or just, you know, have, have job satisfaction or even if you can do something tiny to help them in their career. It's, it's a really great part of the role that I really enjoy. So that's, that's sort of what my experiences have taught me. Um, and then thirdly, sounds really cheesy and I know everyone says it, but the importance of a good culture. Um, you know, I'm ambitious and hard working and all of those things, but we all spend way too long at work frankly. And to be around people that you get on with, you can have a laugh with, are decent, respect one another and value what business development and other business services, um, functions can bring that makes such a big difference. And so, um, I suppose the role of Flaggate encompasses all of those things. It brings all of those things together. I can get my hands dirty. I, you know, work with a, with a great team. It's a great culture. So what that meant in terms of me hitting the ground running, it meant that I was comfortable that the role encompassed everything that I, you know, that I was looking for. Um, and it gave me the confidence to just sort of get stuck in and, and, and get things, drive things forward.
Speaker A: Yeah, that's some really interesting points you make that. I've heard that before where, uh, the grounding in a, in a smaller team that you can have the access, you know, because you do have to get in the trenches. You have to get your hands. If you have to do a bit of everything as you've described it, that ground, that grounding is brilliant, isn't it? Because then, you know, what makes it, what makes a successful team otherwise. You can sometimes be a bit siloed, can't you, in, in certain roles and then you don't, you don't get to experience the other bits. Yeah, I totally get that. And also the culture, uh, again, it's such a massive thing sometimes difficult to know what it's like until you actually arrive, I suppose.
Speaker B: Yeah, I think that's right. And I think, you know, earlier on in my career, I probably thought the culture was something that, you know, it was quite nebulous. It was the business was responsible for the culture. Uh, actually, you know, the, The. The longer I've been around and funny enough, the. The managing partner at Flag, in my. My interview, you know, I asked about the culture and he said to me, well, we're all responsible for the culture. It's not something that happens to you when you join a firm. It's something that you have to bring as well. Hearing it sort of said like that, I was like, yeah, absolutely. I really buy into that. I think that's exactly right. Everyone's got a responsibility to bring that culture and it can be, you know, it can be sort of damaged or broken quite quickly. And so, um, yeah, I think that's really important and I think everybody has a role to play in that.
Speaker A: Invited straight in. Second question, Helen, for you, is what if you could tell us a bit about when you arrived at Flaggate? What. What did the business development side of things look like in 2024 and what after you, I suppose, did an audit and review of that, uh, what were your immediate priorities, um, that you found to get started with?
Speaker B: Well, I suppose at the team level, um, there'd been some recent investment in the team and growth in the business development team and, uh, business services more generally. And so that meant that we had a mix of, um, new joiners who were completely new to the firm and had only been there, you know, a matter of weeks before me. And there were some people that have been there longer than that, but maybe were in different roles to what they joined, um, either because they'd been promoted, um, or because, I think short. Shortly before I joined, there'd been a bit of a kind of realignment, um, to departments to make sure that each of the departments had dedicated BD resource in terms of a manager and an executive level. Um, so some people were doing slightly different things and they were kind of learning about a new department. And as I say, some people were. Were just. Just new. So I think for me, the priority was getting to know the team, getting to know what to, uh, sort of understand what they felt they needed, what was working well, what they felt that where they felt the gaps were and maybe where they thought I could help with that a little bit and sort of going through that process and chatting to them, it became quite clear quite quickly that particularly given the team had grown and there were sort of, you know, different. Different levels, as you would expect, there was a bit of a lack of clarity around the expectations of, of some of the roles within the team. And, um, what did it mean to be a BD executive versus a senior BD executive? What did a senior executive do versus a manager, et cetera, et cetera. Um, um, and how could you develop from um, one role to the next? So, um, working with Kim, the cmo, we put together, um, what we called our career development framework. And that literally sets out all of the different levels within the team, all of the different roles, um, and what the requirements are in terms of experience, types of things that we expect them to be getting involved in, where we expect them to be supporting or taking the lead, um, what expectations there are around behaviors, all of those kinds of things. And it clearly set out from one role to the next where that jump is, what the difference is between those, those roles. And it, you know, it went down well. I think the team, the team appreciated that sort of transparency and that structure and it meant that when I was having those conversations with them, you know, we rolled it out and I sat down with each of the people in team and spoke about where they feel on that, on that structure they sit currently, where do they feel in their current roles they are doing really well, where do they feel that there are gaps? Likewise, if they're looking to move to the next role, um, where do they feel that the business could help them in identifying some opportunities for them to upskill a bit? That then resulted in um, some commonalities around training needs across the team. Um, and there was definitely a desire for a bit more structure around training. Um, and given that the firm had just invested in growing the team, we weren't, you know, I think it's fair to say that we weren't overwhelmed with budget for training. Um, so I worked very closely with um, the wonderful Gail at uh, uh, psmg and we came up with a flaggate PSMG collaboration training program. We had five or six sessions where PSMG members would come, but we would host in floodgate and um, my team would be invited, um, to train the team on those themes that had come out of those discussions. So we had, as I say, five or six sessions inviting in some really fantastic speakers. Um, and we've only just actually in the last couple of weeks had um, our last session of the programme. So yeah, that was definitely one of the bigger priorities around the team. Um, and then on the sort of approach to business development side, as I say, the team had grown significantly quite recently before I joined um, and also the firm, you know, the firm's Very fast growing. It's got a really, really good growth story. So it meant that the infrastructure was sort of slightly playing catch up, as it were. Um, and, um, one of the, sort of the biggest things I think that we've put in place or we've put in place as a team since, since I joined and M. One of the biggest differences I can see is the approach to BD planning. Historically, there were plans. There were plans in place. Was there a plan for every department? Probably not. Was there a consistent approach? Probably not. Not sure how much the plans were sort of looked at after they were put in place. So working with all of the managers and the execs in the team, um, we, we now have a very clear, robust set of BD plans for each department. Um, and, and even within that, each of the sort of practice groups within the departments around, what do they want to achieve for this financial year? How are we going to do it, who's going to do that, who's going to take that forward? Um, and you know, even just sort of looking at those in comparison to a couple of years ago, there's so much more detail. The level of activity that the team is suggesting and working on is elevated. I think, um, our CMO has the mantra fewer, bigger, better, which we all try and live by a little bit, which is, you know, let's not do loads of stuff, let's do some really targeted things, let's do them really well, let's do them, let's get the most impact from them and let's bring in others across the firm. So it's, it's sort of more, um, collaborative and impactful. Um, so the BD plans, yeah, big priority. And then lastly, something that's still sort of ongoing for me and probably will be for some time, is bringing in something which I think underpins success across, you know, success or not across all of these things is a meaningful approach to CRM. So of course that means the system that you use, but also the, the processes and the procedures that you have within firm around client data. So, um, I think if you do it right, you know, you can be really targeted. You can understand clients and their preferences, you can join the dots across the firm on who knows who and you can just be a lot more strategic and impactful about the, the stuff that you're putting out there. Like all these things. Obviously that's, that's a, it's a bit of a slow project, but we're getting there. Um, and I'm a firm believer that you don't you know, you shouldn't wait for perfection, um, before doing anything. So it's a big project though, and it will take time, but I think it will make a big difference to how we do things and the success that we have.
Speaker A: Wow. So there's a lot, there's a lot of things in there. If I, I'm going to try and summarize. Well, so it sounds like you sort of reset if you like, the hierarchy, which would have all the framework within the BD team. So I mean that I'm, I'm imagining made things like appraisals a lot easier because then people know exactly what they need to do to move up the next level. So that's, that's the first thing. Then it was more around, um, sort of the training side of things and upskilling everyone, which I haven't seen Gail Jaffa for a while. I do need to get in touch with the lovely girl Jaffa. She's brilliant at psmg. So then that's that part. And then it was around building those BD plans. Super important at firms getting those in. And then it was really all around making client data more meaningful, I. E. Getting the CRM and getting people to use it. So there sort of four key pillars, if you like, that you've. That you've implemented, so on. On that there must have been, I mean, I imagine how people would have embraced certain elements of it and most of it, hopefully. But was there any internal resistance? And if there was, where. Where was it in those four different things? And, and how did you navigate the resistance?
Speaker B: Well, we're still very much at the start of the CRM journey, so ask me that question in a year and I'm sure there will be plenty of resistance, but I hope not. I hope if we can do it right, then we, uh, then, then. Then we won't get as much resistance and they'll see the sort of bigger picture. It's funny, I think only when you look back, you know, and I sort of have these types of conversations, do you see like the change that there's been, um, there. It wasn't a sort of. Right, you know, where these are the big changes that we're going to make across bd, it was more of a kind of natural, organic evolution of things. I certainly think that the, I mean, certainly from, from the Fiana perspective, resistance, uh, I feel like actually we've had, for the most part, we've actually had the, the opposite. People have been hungry for an improved approach to business development. Um, some of them have come from other firms where they've seen other things, they've got different ideas, they want to bring those to the table. Um, they, they, they, they really value the team. We've, we've got a great business development team and the, the Fiona's really value them and they respect their opinions and you know, for, for the most part when we suggest something they'll, they'll really listen. Are they, you know, are they super excited about filling in a business case when they want to spend some money? No. Do they try and get around that and not do that? Yes, of course they do. Um, I suppose it's my job and the team's job to make that as easy as possible and to keep sort of holding them to account and doing those, those kind of annoying admin processes that sit behind things but you know, where we've had to push back on things or say we can't do that or we want to do it in a different way. For the most part they've been quite receptive to that. And we've got um, a marketing partner structure as well that I think really helps. Um, and it goes back to the culture point as well. Right. You know it's a, it's a really, it's a really decent firm. The people there are really decent people and they, you know, they understand what we're trying to achieve. But we do have uh, a marketing partner in each of the, or one or two marketing partners in each of the departments. And what that means is um, that my team can have somebody to work alongside at that partner level that is the champion for what we're trying to achieve within each of the departments. Um, and they can help us with that messaging. It's a peer for the other partners to um, to sort of listen to and to kind of help galvanize things and equally if, if they think actually that's not going to work for, for the department, they can talk to us about that. We can change things and make it, make it fit. So I think that that's, that's been really, um, really helpful to navigate any resistance that we have come across as well. Brilliant.
Speaker A: Uh, you mentioned it, uh, and I'm going to maybe put some numbers to it that hopefully are correct. But Flatgate has and um, has been growing quite rapidly in, in the market. Um, I was looking at the figures and you hit over 100 million in terms of turnover, um, which I believe is nearly double in five years, isn't it? So it's, it's a brilliant growth trajectory.
Speaker B: Um, yeah.
Speaker A: And up year on year, maybe 16, 17. I saw the figures, if that's about right. So. So brilliant results. How are you sort of measuring? I mean, are you taking all the glory for that, Helen, since you joined, or.
Speaker B: Oh, yeah, it's all down to me. Yeah, yeah. Even pre my joining.
Speaker A: Yeah, you set the scene previously.
Speaker B: Exactly.
Speaker A: Can you share any examples? I know it's probably hard to do, but can you share success examples over the time that you've been there of where BD's really helped with that and how you can measure that?
Speaker B: Yeah, yeah, absolutely.
Speaker A: Yeah.
Speaker B: I mean, um, yeah, the firm's like, you know, it was part of the appeal, you know. Absolutely. Undoubtedly part of the appeal for joining for me was how ambitious Flaggate is, how well they're doing. Um, we're doing and it's, you know, it's fantastic to be part of that and, you know, it's not showing any, any signs of slowing down, that's for sure. So, um, I think for us, you know, obviously we've had quite a lot of, um, lateral hires, um, both in terms of individual partners, but also we hired, you know, a big group of partners from Memory Crystal this time last year. So I think the BD team on, uh, the ground within the departments that crucial to the success is that integration of those, of those lateral hires, understanding their capabilities. You know, they've brought, we've had some, um, some fantastic, you know, additional skill sets, amazing clients that they've brought across. Um, so, you know, my team kind of working with them to understand that, to get them involved in BD initiatives, to hear what works for them, to build things around them, to involve them in the BD planning, all of those kinds of things. I think that's really, really important to make sure that we integrate them successfully. Um, I think, you know, there always has been and always will be a difficulty around measuring the impact of marketing and business development activity. You know, that will always be the case and there's no kind of magic, um, answer to that. But certainly, you know, going back to the BD planning point, if you've got clear BD plans in place and you stick to them, that that's where, that's where, that's the road to success, in my opinion. And being quite, um, strict and rigorous around debriefs and analyzing return on investment to the extent that you can of the activities that you've done. And again, you know, coming back to the resistance point, this is the point that, you know, it's, it's not the Most fun part of the process for anyone when, you know, you've, you've just spent a load of money sending some partners overseas or to a conference or hosting something here, whatever it might be, you know, you've worked, you've all worked really hard to get that done. Um, the partners are exhausted from doing it. The last thing anyone wants to do is to get into a room and be like, right, let's really go through in detail how that went, what we could have done better, who you spoke to, people. Everyone's just like, oh, you know, enough. Let's move on to the next. But it's really important to do that. And, um, my team are really great at doing that, you know, and that's something that, you know, I'd love to say that I've introduced, but they've always been really good at doing that and really understanding what, what worked. Well, what didn't.
Speaker A: Who.
Speaker B: Who you. Who did you see? How are you going to follow up, holding people to account and looking at that next time, you know, next time that that event comes up or that activity comes up or something similar comes up, you know, referring to that and being like, right, last time you said you were going to do A, B and C, have you done it? Um, we also said that this didn't go so well, so why are we suggesting that we do it again? You know, just constantly kind of challenging those, those, those things and, and, you know, pushing to, to be better every time. Not, not overly kind of specific examples, but that's. They're the kinds of things that I think are where BD can really add value. You know, you can get BD that, that just sort of do, you know, do what, what we've always done, um, and just go along with things. But are you going to move the dial, hate that phrase. Are you going to, um, change things? Are you going to improve things? Probably not if you adopt that approach. So I firmly believe, like, constantly pushing ourselves to be better and challenging what we've done before and how we can be better next time. I think that's, that's key to it. And as I say, integration of those, those brilliant lateral hires that we've had on.
Speaker A: You mentioned it there, uh, in terms of, you know, analyzing activities and what does work, what doesn't. Have you got examples of things that, you know, that haven't worked, that you have now fallen by the wayside because they don't fit into the strategy anymore? They're not, they're not worth doing for you guys?
Speaker B: Yeah, yeah, we have Ah, actually there's been a few of those. Um, and sometimes that's been, sometimes that's been partners saying, do you know what, that was great. But I'm not sure that it really, you know, achieves what we need it to. So next time, actually I'm not going to put that forward or let's, let's do it, but let's not sponsor or let's do it, but let's do it in a different way. Let's go light on it. Let's, you know, sometimes it comes from them and sometimes it comes from us when we say, actually, do you know what? This is costing too much money and it doesn't fit in with, you know, with our strategic goals. Um, and you know, again, having those BD plans in place helps you be able to have those conversations. Um, and bringing in the marketing partner as needed to sort of back us on those conversations is always helpful. Yeah, we've had to say no to various things and that's, you know, that's never welcomed. That's never, that's not what people want to hear, obviously. But I think again, coming back to the culture, uh, coming back to the trust that the firm has in the BD team and the individuals within it, people do tend to, they know that where we're coming from on it, they know that we're trying to improve things and spending money on things and time on things that don't really bring results. It's not, you know, it's not, it's not where success is. So yeah, we have, we have had to say no to certain things. Um, and, but for the most part I think, you know, yeah, it's a difficult conversation initially, but people, people move on. People, you know, people are grown ups, they move on. And um, you know, not always. Sometimes we've had to capitulate and say, right, okay, well we'll do it. But we'll do it differently this year and we'll, we're really going to, you know, scrutinize it next year. But of course, you know, part of the role is, is saying no to certain things. And that's just, that's just how it is.
Speaker A: Good stuff. And then I mean you mentioned, I think off camera previously, you don't wait for perfection in terms of technology. You talked about the CRM. I mean it's, are you able to share a bit more about what's on the roadmap on that side of things?
Speaker B: Yeah, yeah. Um, yeah, I mean, I think if you're waiting for perfection in anything, actually you know, we'll never do anything which way. But um, yeah for CRM specifically we're, we're on a very old um, system um, so we use it for the basics, we use it for event mailing lists, um, but not anything more than that. We don't analyze any of the data that comes out of it particularly other than you know, the typical kind of bounce backs and all that sort of stuff. We're not the best at you know, adding in activities that happen. Uh, we don't use automation really so there's lots of things that the, what you know, the world's moved on certainly quite significantly since this was, since this was put in place. And it's certainly not my background uh, CRM, but I know you know from the various conferences and the conversations that, conferences that I go to and the conversations that I have and just you know, being a human that lives in the modern world, you know that things exist that are far more sophisticated than that. So we put together a project team across um, business development and it and we looked at um, various and this, this sort of started before I joined but we've sort of um, we've expanded it and ramped it up a little bit in the last year or so. We, we spent a long time going out to the market, having conversations with different vendors about different products, seeing different things, having demos, all those kinds of things. As you would expect. We've decided to stay with our current provider but upgrade to the latest version of the system uh, which I think will be far more sophisticated, far more automated and um, we're also going to invest in an additional system that will help with uh, cleansing and also sort of ongoing ensuring of data quality, data integrity. So not just a kind of one cleanse approach but a constant automated cleansing of data and improvement of data. We're still very much in the early stages but I think I'm, I think it will really transform our approach frankly. Um, yeah, so I'm m excited about what it will bring. I think it will be, it will help us be more intelligent around our uh, client targeting. It will help us track relationship strength, engagement. Um, it will help us be more joined up around who knows who, who's targeting who so we can avoid duplication, be a bit more strategic and just understand our client and our intermediaries preferences, what do they want to hear about from us and how can we make sure that we're you know, we're, we're sticking to that, we're aligning to that rather than you know, them, them Never hearing about anything from us. So. And I think that the, where, where I think CRM has fallen down in the past in law firms and I don't, I don't know what it's like in other industries, but for me there's an over reliance on partners and fee earners generally manually entering information. And as much as we can all, you know, moan about how engaged they are or otherwise in that process, they're busy people. The reality is they're busy people. They, you know, that they're not going to spend time, you know, thinking, I've just got back from a client meeting, I must go in and log into that system and update the notes. And you know, some will, but, but some won't. So for me it's about automating that process and asking for as little as possible from the fee earners. Um, and that's what we're trying to achieve with it. Make, make it as kind of as slick as possible and hopefully have somebody join us that can, that can run that and look after that for us and can be a specialist in CRM. Uh, so as I say, early days, but if it goes even a bit like how I'm hoping it will, then I think it will be transformative for us.
Speaker A: A live job description application. Straight to Helen, please. Cool. Yeah. And CRM, yeah, is ongoing, isn't it really? There is behavioral change going on without, um, them, hopefully if you automate it all without them knowing too much from a partner perspective. So good luck with that. Thank you very much, Helen. Amazingly, we're down to the quick fire question. So first of all, what are you currently listening to?
Speaker B: I'm currently listening to the Rest Is Entertainment podcast, but addicted to that at the moment. Um, I like the news agents as well, but at the moment it's all just a bit heavy and so I like a little bit of light relief with, um, Mr. M. Osman, uh, on the Rest is Entertainment. I love it. Yeah, really interesting kind of behind the scenes look at the world of TV and media and yes, I find it fascinating.
Speaker A: Yeah, a bit of escapism.
Speaker B: Exactly, exactly. Yeah. A bit like relief. Although sometimes when you hear about the things that go on behind the scenes in entertainment, actually that's pretty, that's pretty awful and pretty heavy going as well. But, um, still very interesting.
Speaker A: Yeah, we won't get into that. No, no, this is quite a hard one, I always think straight off the bat. Um, what's the best piece of advice that you have ever received?
Speaker B: Yeah, I thought about this long and hard because I suppose from a professional perspective, it is probably I will, it's, it was said much more succinctly, um, to me. But it, it's, the meaning is essentially you don't, you, you won't develop in your career and climb up the ladder by just doing more. You, you can't just take more stuff on. Um, you have to sort of choose what's going to get your time and what isn't. Where you've been hired to do a specific role. What of the countless things that will land in your inbox and land on your to do list? What is really going to help you deliver that thing that the business has asked you to do and what isn't and what you're going to say no to? What are you going to give, you know, a bit of your time to, but not, not invest in it heavily? And what's really going to take your time? I still massively struggle with that. I like to get my hands dirty and get involved in stuff, but that's something that I try and kind of keep at the forefront of my mind is you can't just keep taking on more. You have to sort of have boundaries with your time and be strict with yourself as well.
Speaker A: Yeah, it's almost like that list, isn't it, where you have, okay, I could put 20 things on the list, but actually you're never going to do all 20. You just got to focus on maybe the top three or five. Get. Nail those instead.
Speaker B: Yeah, yeah. You're setting yourself up to fail, aren't you? If you try and do all 20, you're always going to log off for the day feeling like you haven't achieved anything. Whereas if you're a bit more, a bit more realistic about the top one or two things that, that day, that week, that month, that quarter, whatever, that's a bit more achievable.
Speaker A: Brilliant. For our listeners. What book or resource would you recommend to other BD leaders in, in the field?
Speaker B: To be honest, I can't say I've ever been a fan of kind of business or leadership books. I've bought a ton of them. I've spent too much money on them. I've read bits of some of them. For me, I get my kind of, my information, my advice from my network, from a network of people that I trust and that I respect, that do similar jobs, but will, you know, have different perspectives, will challenge me. So it's not necessarily a resource you can kind of go and buy off a shelf. I think it's, you know, way more Impactful. Way more valuable than, than any kind of business. Business book, frankly.
Speaker A: Well, it's a resource, isn't it? And actually it's a clever one to lean on. Trust, trusted advisors, peers.
Speaker B: Yeah, yeah. Uh, people that know you, people that know the world that you're in. You know, you can, you can read a book from a kind of, you know, a big name in business. But, you know, how do you relate that to the world that we're in? It's quite difficult.
Speaker A: You're super busy. What is your favorite way to unwind after a super busy day?
Speaker B: Um, I do love to go to the gym, but I tend to do that sort of in the mornings and that's my kind of focus. But unwinding after a busy day, it's a glass of wine. It's a glass of wine every time. It's not the healthiest, but it helps me. And you know, sitting with a nice crisp, cold glass of white wine. Yeah, that's what does it for me.
Speaker A: Especially now the sun's out. We can.
Speaker B: Absolutely. Well, it might move to rose now that the sun's down.
Speaker A: Good. I like the transparency and honestly, because.
Speaker B: Yeah, you got to be honest, haven't you?
Speaker A: Yeah. Mine would be a beer. Where's your favorite place to stay and visit and why?
Speaker B: So definitely a place called Milford on Sea in the New Forest. It brings together all of my favorite things. So it's sort of, it's, it's part of the forest and you could drive, you know, not very far to be in the heart of the forest. But it's also, as the name would suggest, um, on the beach. And so you've got the best of both worlds when from that perspective. And as I say, it's, I mean it's. Or it brings together everything that I love. So animals, the beach, great walks, nice pubs, you know, all that kind of stuff. So come rain or shine, that's my favorite place. My, um, my in laws had a place down there for a long time and so we would go there and stay there and visit it, you know, three or four times a year. It's super relaxed, it's slow paced, everyone's really friendly. Most of the time you can't get phone reception, which is just bliss. Um, and I've got very, like very, very many happy memories down there. My happy place.
Speaker A: Cool. Okay, thank you very much. The last question really is for. Aimed at the listeners, specifically for people listening that are in your role or trying to step up into ahead of BD role. Trying to build a plan that works in practice. What if it was nailed down to one piece of advice? What. What advice would you give them?
Speaker B: Keep it simple. It's probably my advice. Um, I've seen a lot of BD plans over the years, and some of them have been so overly complicated that, you know, I can't get my head around them, let alone a time. Poor Fiona, who, um, you know, who. Who doesn't look at these things day in, day out. So keep it simple. Set out, uh, three things that you want to achieve, how you'll do it, and crucially, who is going to take it forward. And if I could have a sort of bonus piece of advice, it would be use that plan, uh, at every opportunity. Don't sort of, you know, spend, you know, weeks at the beginning of the year working on it and then, you know, few. That's done. Let's move on and go back to business as usual. That plan should guide everything that you do. Take it to every meeting that you go to, refer to it in every conversations that you have, all the conversations that you have with the team. Make it transparent. Make sure everyone in the department knows what, what the plan is, and make sure that the actions you know are driven forward. Take it with you. Drive them forward in every meeting. Question people on where they've got to with certain things. It's. It's your roadmap for the whole year. Uh, so it should come with you to everything. Uh, and that means that when you work on it next year, it shouldn't be too difficult. It should just be an evolution of what you're already doing. Obviously, don't be afraid to review it and tweak it as you need to. But there's a reason that you identified these priorities with the partners at the beginning of the year. Stick to them. Um, so, yeah, so I know it's not one. I like to break the rules a little bit. Um, but keep it simple and use it at every opportunity.
Speaker A: Thank you very much, Helen, um, for giving us your time. And, um, have a brilliant day.
Speaker B: No problem. Thank you so much. You can follow the Pastel CMO series podcast on your preferred podcast platform. Thanks for listening and we'll see you next time.
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