Making Your Insight Report Work for You

Strategy

Insight offers a wide range of practice areas to choose from, enabling purchasers to create a report that suits their interests, budget, and strategic goals. However, not every area of interest will necessarily be value for money, so it is important to select chapters carefully and to know the scope of the product, as these should help set realistic expectations.

Let’s talk therefore today about tips for picking chapters and what the Insight report can and can’t do, to ensure you are getting the product you are expecting.

Tips for choosing chapters and practice areas

Focus on areas you have submitted to

You don’t have to be ranked in a table to buy Insight for it. However, you should really have submitted to it. Submissions and referee lists give Research extra information for their ranking decisions, which should enable a more detailed assessment of your performance compared with a report on an area you have not submitted to.

Consider regional before country/continent-wide

This is not a hard-and-fast rule, and any decisions will depend on the scale and scope of your practice. However, before settling on any country- or continent-wide chapters (e.g. Nationwide, Africa-wide, Europe-wide), it is important to know how these areas are researched and what content is included in them.

These chapters are standalone practice areas. Therefore, any analysis will be about a firm’s performance in that chapter rather than a detailed look at its local practices. References to regional practices will likely be in passing rather than in-depth.

Feedback could be minimal. Some, but not all, of these tables are based on existing research, and separate interviews are not therefore conducted. 

Tables could require extensive local footprints. Firms that are only in one jurisdiction or lack a prominent practice in one of the area’s major markets might struggle to break into these rankings.

In short, country- and continent-wide tables might not always be best for your circumstances, and a report into a local practice area might be more useful. However, each decision should always be handled on a case-by-case basis in conjunction with the Chambers Sales team.

Tips for a smooth experience

Be clear about which tables you want

Practice areas can be complicated at Chambers, with an array of parent and child tables to submit to. This helps Research capture the nuances of the market but can create uncertainty for Insight. Firms might therefore find it more straightforward to provide separate submissions whenever possible and to only order chapters that accept submissions.

An example of this might be submitting to and ordering TMT versus submitting to and ordering TMT: Data Protection, TMT: Media, and TMT: Telecommunications. If firms can’t be ranked in TMT, then there could be delays as Chambers gets in touch to determine which child table was meant. Additionally, Chambers might also request additional payment for the extra child tables, potentially souring the experience and resulting in a dislocation of expectations.

Submitting to and ordering each of the three child tables separately could avoid this, as the Insight team would know from the start which tables were expected, and firms would know what they have bought and will receive. Moreover, separate submissions allow firms to provide three sets of work highlights rather than splitting one set among three areas, enabling them to better showcase their activity.

Of course, not every parent-child split accepts separate submissions, but engaging when they do can help purchasers be clear about their order, providing certainty over expenditure, timeframes, and report makeup.

Understand the scope of the Insight report

Knowing what Insight does and does not offer can help set expectations and inform purchasing decisions before any contracts are signed, helping foster a more positive experience with the product.

Geographical scope. As touched upon earlier, chapters like Nationwide are standalone tables rather than cost-effective ways to gain analysis and feedback about all local practices. Feedback on and in-depth assessments of local practices will likely only be provided in local chapters.

Individual analyses. Firms unsurprisingly want to know how individuals can break into the tables. However, Research and Insight can often be limited in the amount of advice and detail they can give about unranked lawyers. First, the data might just not be there (if the lawyer wasn’t garnering much attention in interview or lacked evidence of work). Second, it is not always possible for Research to make detailed notes about all unranked lawyers, given the number of unranked names they process each year.

Therefore, when purchasing Insight, be aware that only lawyers who are ranked, who are considered internally as Potentials for a ranking, or who have lost their ranking or internal Potential designation this year will receive an analysis.

Nevertheless, there are steps you can take when submitting to increase the profile of other individuals whom you feel are deserving of consideration, which might in turn lead to progress within the Chambers ecosystem. Tier One Rankings is on hand to assist with this.

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