
For GRSM, growth has come through a unique 50-state strategy, providing advantages and challenges
In growing a law business, there are milestones, and then there are milestones. For one firm, it’s evident in their tagline: “Your 50-State Law Firm.”
Gordon Rees Scully Mansukhani, or GRSM, is the only firm in the U.S. with offices in every state, and reaching that 50-state milestone in 2019 has led not only to a unique distinction, but to faster growth.
It continues to grow and add new offices, especially in Southern California – where there is a need to service clients in its large cities – but also in the Central Valley and Inland Empire. It opened offices in Ontario in 2021 and Ventura County in 2024.
Revenue has more than doubled at the San Francisco-based firm since it opened in Hawaii in 2019, the last state needed to achieve its goal. This year, it’s on pace to surpass $900 million in revenue this year and could surpass $1 billion in the near future. That’s compared to $351 million in revenue in 2019, when the Hawaii office opened.
“We keep getting more – and bigger – work from the largest companies in America,” said Miles Scully, a name partner with the firm who is credited as the architect of its growth strategy. “We hit a need that most people didn’t know existed for one firm to cover all 50 states. It means that a general counsel could call one attorney for all of their legal problems.”
Scully
and firm chief executive Dion Cominos started working with the firm
when it had a single office in San Francisco with 40 attorneys and have
been integral leaders of the firm’s expansion. GRSM’s total attorney
headcount has grown to 1,682 attorneys as of March 1, which makes it one
of the 15 largest firms in the country. There are an additional 1,443
staff employed across its 82 offices firmwide.
Moreover,
growth has come organically through hiring rather than by merger or
acquisition. Firm leadership traveled to many different states to
recruit attorneys to join the firm. In some instances, it has added
groups of attorneys, but it has refrained from making wholesale
acquisitions, which could be problematic and come with unknown
liabilities.
“We have
very motivated, educated, ambitious people and we haven’t had a problem
with allowing people to work remotely or part-time to fit their
lifestyle,” said Cominos.
With offices in every
state, the firm can offer consistent pricing while handling litigation
and transactions anywhere rather than needing to partner with a local or
regional firm for cases or transactions where it doesn’t have a
location. Clients know that they can call the firm and it can handle
work in all locales.
For
employees, a collateral advantage has been the ability to stay with the
firm without sacrificing a job should a spouse need to relocate. Plus,
during the pandemic, employees were able to relocate and still remain
with the firm as it has offices nationwide.
These
regional offices can accommodate employees by shortening commute times
and aid remote employees who don’t need to be in an office every day. By
meeting the needs of its employees with flexible work arrangements when
needed, offering regional offices and by utilizing technology to keep
employees connected, it has built a diverse workforce with low attrition
rate, including 25% female ownership, among the upper tier of large
firms.
“We and our
clients believe that having a diverse law firm is a symbol of strength.
At the same time, that can be accomplished in a lawful way without
quotas and discrimination. We promote the best people. There doesn’t
have
to be this feeling that firms can’t be diverse, they just need to use
legal means to get there,” said Cominos.
Running
a firm as large as GRSM, let alone one with locations in every state,
can present challenges. Cominos explained that each state has a separate
bar association that regulates lawyers. Employment laws vary
state-by-state, but those challenges are similar for all large
companies. There are also complexities with filing tax returns in every
state, but he said that the benefits of aggregation have far outweighed
any of the challenges.
“We
would have regressed,” Cominos said, if it were not for the growth.
Instead, “we’re taking business from regional firms. It’s been well
worth it.”
-David Nusbaum

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