In-House Counsel Conference
If you want to see what’s under the bonnet of in-house counsel concerns, this is it. Immerse yourself in this programme, customised for in-house counsel, & explore the legal and technological developments that will assist you in practice. Learn how to navigate workplace investigations and consolidate your contractual development. Steer clear of the pitfalls of competition law and get the latest update on cyber security and professional privilege considerations to bring success to your business. WEB233NZA22Z
Description
Attend and earn 7 CPD hours
Session 1
Current Risks Worrying In-House Lawyers
Chair: Sian Wingate, Legal Operations Consultant and Coach, Sian Wingate Advisory
9.00am to 10.00am Recent Developments Arising from Workplace Investigations
Workplace investigations have become a regular feature of the New Zealand legal landscape. This session will explore:
- When you should engage an independent investigator: when, and how, you can keep an investigation in-house
- Some common traps and tips: an overview of the basic legal fundamentals
- Developments in the law, including recent case law
Presented by Andrew Scott-Howman, Barrister
10.00am to 11.00am Key Updates in Contract Law and Strategies to Mitigate Contractual Risk
- Checking legal compliance
- Common pitfalls and how in-house counsel can minimise risk
- The risk clauses: liability and indemnity versus the operational clauses
- How to get your stakeholders to think about workarounds when dealing with a ‘non-negotiable contract’
Presented by Dr Maria A Pozza, Director and Principal Lawyer. Gravity Lawyers
11.00am to 11.15am Morning Break
11.15am to 12.15pm Competition and Consumer Law
- An update on key developments
- What to watch out for in 2023
Presented by Bradley Aburn, Partner, Russell McVeagh
12.15pm to 1.15pm Legal Professional Privilege for In-House Lawyers
- Legal advice privilege
- Litigation privilege
- Without prejudice communications
- Waiver of privilege
Presented by Jonathan Scragg, Partner, Duncan Cotterill
Learning Objectives:
- Stay updated on key developments from workplace investigations
- Benefit from practical guidance on managing contractual concerns and drafting tips
- Get the latest on changes to competition and consumer law, and consider the key concerns for 2023
- Examine key concerns about legal professional privilege
Session 2
Key Skills and Strategies for In-House Success in 2023
Chair: Sian Wingate, Legal Operations Consultant and Coach, Sian Wingate Advisory
2.00pm to 3.00pm INTERACTIVE WORKSHOP: 3 Ways to Delegate Using Data Not Drama
Many legal teams struggle with capacity and feel overwhelmed with the increasing volume of matters to handle. They know they want to outsource or create self-service tools such as templates but are not sure where to start.
Delivered in a workshop style Sian will share:
- How to get started on creating a legal services register to create a data set to drive your delegation decisions
- What delegation options are available to legal teams that are technology free
- Who to delegate your legal services to based on the data you have
Presented by Sian Wingate, Legal Operations Consultant and Coach, Sian Wingate Advisory
3.00pm to 4.00pm The Latest Technology Options for Legal Teams
While many “legal technology” solutions have emerged for legal teams in the past 5 years, broader automation technology is also an option. Low-code business software has advanced to the point where it can also be used for complex legal processes.
This session will cover:
- What low code software is, why your organisation is likely to be adopting it, and what that can mean for legal and compliance teams wanting to work with new technology
- How legal teams can use low code software for their legal work
- How legal and compliance requirements and best practices can be built directly into broader business processes
- New options for integrating technology solutions
Presented by Gene Turner, Managing Director, LawHawk Limited, and Paul Proctor, Business Development Manager, Experico
4.00pm to 4.15pm Afternoon Break
4.15pm to 5.15pm Cyber Security and Privacy
- Data and privacy breaches are at an all-time high. Learn some of the reasons why
- Step through the top cyber security tips for lawyers
- Listen to war stories from the field - ransomware, business email compromise, inadvertent data loss and more
- You've been breached: as legal counsel what are the incident response and privacy steps you need to consider?
Presented by Campbell McKenzie, Director, Incident Response Solutions
Learning Objectives:
- Gain insight into how to use data for professional success
- Explore key technological advancements to utilize in your legal team
- Analyse the significance of cyber security, privacy and data breaches to equip yourself the right tips for security in your practice
Presenters
Sian Wingate
Sian Wingate is a seasoned in-house counsel with a passion for legal operations. Through her advisory consulting firm sianwingate.com, she helps overstretched in-house legal functions to free up their capacity so they can focus on what they do best: serving their organisations with their high-risk, high-value matters. Sian has more than a decade of in-house experience in successfully implementing her tried and tested techniques using her signature Legal Operations Framework. Her consulting services specialise in training and coaching sole counsel through to larger legal teams to utilise the free resources already available to them to create a foundation for successful delivery of their legal services. Services include legal operations audits, legal guidance resource creation, template vault development, team intranet knowledge banks and legal compliance framework design.
Andrew Scott-Howman
Andrew Scott-Howman is a Wellington based barrister specialising in workplace investigations. He is a graduate of the Association of Workplace Investigator's Training Instititute, and is a member of that specialist interest organisation. He is also a co-author of the Thomson Reuters text "Workplace Bullying in New Zealand".He acts as investigator in both the public and private sectors, and has wide experience in investigating bullying, sexual harassment and sexual misconduct claims.
Dr Maria A Pozza
Dr Pozza is the Director and Principal lawyer of Gravity Lawyers. Her expertise includes: Commercial international space law, international military space law, domestic legislative frameworks over military and commercial uses in space as well as international law space law dealing with armed conflict and aggressive uses. She provides expertise in legal and technical frameworks concerning cybersecurity and IT, Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs), and technology laws. She has been the course coordinator for the University of Victoria’s Cyber Security and International Relations, as well as a lecturer for the International Relations course. As a prolific publisher, Dr Pozza has edited and published a book on Risk Management in Outer Space Activities – An Australian and New Zealand Perspective, as part of her Book Series titled Space Law and Policy. She has been involved in the development of numerous space law publications that range from academic articles, professional publications, guidance materials, and books. Dr Pozza has supervised at master’s level and is currently supervising at the PhD level with the University of Otago. Her expertise on international and national space law, is often called upon by a wide range of domestic and international clients and institutions.
Bradley Aburn
Bradley Aburn is a partner in Russell McVeagh's Competition/Antitrust and Consumer Law team. Bradley advises clients on the full range of competition and consumer law issues, including merger control issues, joint venture advice, cartel investigations, market power investigations, market studies, Fair Trading Act issues, and Commerce Commission prosecutions and appeals. Bradley returned to Russell McVeagh in 2019 after over five years working at Slaughter and May in both its London and Brussels offices. Bradley is a board member of the Competition Law & Policy Institute of New Zealand. Bradley is recognised by the Legal 500 as a "Next Generation Partner" in New Zealand competition law.
Jonathan Scragg
Jonathan Scragg's expertise is in civil, commercial & public law litigation and dispute resolution. Jonathan has particular experience managing large, complex disputes and is an experienced advocate in the Courts and in mediation. Jonathan’s public law practice involves advising public and private sector entities on the operation and enforcement of legislation and representing parties in judicial review. In insurance law, Jonathan's work predominantly involves advising on indemnity issues and defending professional liability claims, complaints/disciplinary processes and regulatory prosecutions for a range of advisory, financial and property professionals. Jonathan also acts for parties in contract, property and trust disputes. Jonathan is the first New Zealand member of the Presidential Council of the International Insurance Law Association (AIDA) and is a past president of the New Zealand Insurance Law Association Inc (NZILA). Jonathan is a member of the Australian and New Zealand Institute of Insurance and Finance (ANZIIF). Jonathan is a former chair of the Duncan Cotterill partnership. He is admitted in England and Wales and has worked previously in London as well as having started his career in New Zealand as a High Court judges’ clerk. He is a contributing author to various legal texts published by LexisNexis and Thomson Reuters and speaks regularly at industry events and conferences on dispute resolution, insurance law and public law. Jonathan is a recipient of the Cleary Memorial Prize.
Gene Turner
Gene is Managing Director of legal automation specialists LawHawk. LawHawk focus on helping lawyers and businesses to improve and automate their legal and business processes, to improve efficiency and quality. Prior to founding LawHawk in 2015, Gene was a corporate & finance partner of Buddle Findlay from 2009 until retiring from partnership in 2014. As well as acting on a number of complex transactions, Gene led a number of the firm’s knowledge management initiatives. Gene has been on the Advisory Board for the College of Law’s Centre for Legal Innovation since 2017 and is a regular contributor to the Centre’s programme. In addition to a Bcom/LLB (Hons), Gene has an MBA (Distinction) from Victoria University.
Paul Proctor
Paul has worked in the technology/automation space for more than 25 years, both in NZ and overseas. With experience in the public and private sectors, and with organisations of all shapes and sizes, Paul has watched the technology landscape change significantly over his career and relishes the opportunity to help businesses address their biggest challenges through the practical application of automation technology. Datacom focus on all things process - mapping, intelligence and optimisation and work with a number of global vendors including Microsoft, Nintex, UiPath, Pega and ABBYY to provide a comprehensive range of solutions for any requirement. Datacom and LawHawk have a productive collaboration designed to leverage appropriate automation technology to help make 'legal processes' more efficient, whether that be within legal practices, or the legal teams and departments within our client organisations.
Campbell McKenzie
Campbell is the Founder and Director of Incident Response Solutions Limited, providing forensic, cyber security and crisis management services. Campbell was previously a Director at PwC New Zealand (12 years) and led PwC's national "forensic technology" practice, and the Auckland "cyber security" practice, a combined team of 11 expert staff. Prior to PwC, Campbell was a founding member of NZ Police's Electronic Crime Laboratory (4.5 years) and as an expert witness, he specialises in electronic investigations, cybercrime incident response and eDiscovery matters. He is recognised by the District and High Courts of New Zealand as a forensic technology expert and has also been appointed as an independent expert by the High Court. Campbell understands how critical it is for law firms to mitigate the cyber risks they face. Therefore in 2020, Incident Response Solutions published the "Cyber Security Guide for NZ Law Firms", a contextual resource to assist lawyers and law firms manage their cyber security risk.