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Explore legal accounting essentials: compliance, financial management, tech tools, taxation, and strategic insights for attorneys' financial success.
There comes a season in every business where the numbers feel a little tighter.
The calls slow. The invoices linger unpaid a little longer. The rhythm of the firm, once steady as a courthouse clock, begins to waver. And in those moments, even the most seasoned attorneys find themselves asking:
What now?
Financial strain is not a sign of failure. It is a natural part of running a law firm in a world that ebbs and flows. What matters is not avoiding these moments, but knowing how to navigate them with clarity, composure, and intention.
Let’s walk through how to do exactly that.
When uncertainty creeps in, the instinct is often to look away and hope things correct themselves.
But strong firms do not operate on hope. They operate on visibility.
Start by reviewing:
Your current cash position
Monthly expenses
Revenue trends over the past 3 to 6 months
Outstanding receivables
This is not about judgment. It is about...
For many attorneys, cash flow feels like one of those business concepts that should be simple, but somehow never is.
You may know your firm is bringing in revenue. You may even know your firm is profitable on paper. But then the same question keeps showing up:
Where did the money go?
That question is more common than you think.
Cash flow can be confusing because it is not just about profit. It is about timing, liquidity, obligations, and how money actually moves through your firm. Understanding it clearly can make the difference between running a law firm that feels stable and one that constantly feels like it is bracing for impact.
At its core, cash flow is exactly what it sounds like: the movement of cash in and out of your business.
That means looking at:
money coming in from client payments
money going out for payroll, rent, taxes, software, debt payments, and overhead
the timing of those inflows and outflows
how much liquid
...
Law firms are built on legal skill, client service, and hard work. But growth does not happen on effort alone.
If you want to build a stronger, more profitable law firm, you need more than a general sense that things are “going well.” You need financial clarity. You need operational visibility. And you need metrics that help you make decisions before problems become expensive.
That does not mean you need to become an accountant. It does mean your firm needs to understand what the numbers are saying.
The law firms that grow well tend to have one thing in common: they stop managing by instinct alone and start paying attention to the right financial and operational metrics.
Many attorneys are trained to practice law, not run a business. That is perfectly normal. Law school does not typically teach how to manage cash flow, evaluate staffing capacity, measure profitability, or build a financial strategy for growth.
But your law firm is still a busi...
Running a law firm requires more than legal skill. It also demands a clear understanding of how your firm operates financially, and that is where many attorneys run into trouble.
For most law firm owners, the focus naturally stays on client service, casework, deadlines, and business development. That makes sense. But behind every healthy law firm is a financial structure that supports growth, protects cash flow, and helps leadership make smarter decisions. When that structure is weak, even a busy firm can find itself under pressure.
At The Proper Trust, we work closely with law firms to help them understand what their numbers are actually saying. One truth comes up again and again: financial challenges look different across legal specialties, but strong bookkeeping and sound financial management matter in every practice area.
One of the most common financial pressures law firms face is cash flow.
A firm may be busy. Attorneys may be billing. Cases may be mo...
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