Between companies and employee in the deep of difficult economic


In the midst of economic difficulty many united states compaies decide that the working relationship with employees.

Management increasingly difficult to get the company funds, which make company reduce staff and to be able to survive in the midst of a crisis other the world.

So for the sake of efficiency reduction of employees can not be avoided pending the company's improvf financial crisis.

Is not only a crisis big companies, small businesses are also affectf, with additional funds to borrow from a bank might be the solution, to improve the performance company.

But also not so easy because the banks maybe provide batar loan crisis in the mieddle of a global, large and small must pay attention to management can survive.

With the united states continuing to face severe econmic challenges, law firms are slashing costs and reducing headcount.

Since january of 2009 law firms have laid off more than 9,900 employees including both attorneys and staff. The flurry of pink slips has been a wake up call to a once recession proof industry.

The legal profession is under a confluence of pressures that are causing law firms to change the way they do business in order to bring more value to their client.

Pressures include clients demanding lower legal fess and better results, the unbundling of legal services to reduce costs, alternatives to billing by the hour, and the use of process control and techology to help reduce the most expensive costs of litigation.

Companies can no longer afford to pay $250 - $500 an hour to white-shoe law firms. One way GC's and CFO's look to cut legal expenses without compromising quality is to turn to smaller boutique firms that deliver specialized, unbendled legal services in a cost effective manner.

Small businesses can also save additional dollars on legal expenses by asking their outside counsel to outsouarce routine document review and utilize new technology to manage electronic discovery.
Firms that offer key cost saving methods are leveling the playing field for smaller business.

Outsourcing document review is one of the most efficient ways to signifcantly decrease the cost of litigation. Law firms traditionally assign junior associates to conduct document review at the rate of $250 per hou, or more, compared to offshore document review which runs approximately $25 per hour. Significant profits are the key reason many law firms do not outsource document review.

Today with terabytes of data from e-mails, texting, computer files and instant massages under scrutiny, document review is now the costliest aspect of litigation. According to KPMG, approximately 58% -90% of legal fess are spent on document review.