Balancing competition and innovation in the Legal Sector

The Nobel Prize-winning theory of innovation-driven growth offers vital lessons for a fragmented UK legal market struggling to modernise.
The 2025 Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences recognised Joel Mokyr, Philippe Aghion and Peter Howitt for their pioneering research into innovation-driven growth. Their insights into how different levels of competition can encourage or stifle innovation offer a compelling lens through which to examine the current state of innovation in the UK legal sector.
Lawyers are known for being innately conservative, cautious and risk-averse, particularly when it comes to technology. One of the most provocative ideas from the Nobel laureates’ work is that too much competition can actually suppress innovation. In a sector like law, where tradition and precedent dominate, this counterintuitive insight deserves serious attention.
Even the largest full-service firms in the UK hold only a tiny fraction of the market share. No single player has sufficient clout to innovate effectively and drive meaningful, lasting change across the sector. The vast range of potential innovation areas, across diverse practice areas and industries, means even forward-thinking firms often innovate in only a small proportion of their work.
As clients rein in spending and law firms face growing pressure to reduce fees, those investing heavily in technology may find themselves undercut by competitors. There is now a widening chasm between traditional firms’ incremental approaches to innovation and the more agile, ambitious strategies of newer disruptors. Yet this divide has not created a competitive urgency for widespread transformation.
Despite the noise around innovation, an estimated 97% of the legal market remains traditional law firms and in-house teams. Alternative legal service providers (ALSPs) may be considered mainstream, but they still account for only around 3% of the global market.
By contrast, the “Big Four” have long dominated accountancy, a market dynamic that keeps them under continuous pressure to innovate. This dominance gives them the agency and scale to bring change, edging out smaller competitors snapping at their heels. The legal market, however, lacks any firm with comparable dominance or the incentives that drive sustained innovation.
Historically, attempts by the Big Four to gain significant footholds in the legal sector have largely failed. Legal functions have remained a minor part of their advisory practices, hampered by internal conflicts of interest that restrict their lawyers from key client work. These structural barriers have limited their ability to attract top talent or meaningfully reshape the market.
Much has changed since Coward Chance and Clifford Turner merged in 1987 to form the first UK “mega firm.” From A&O Shearman in 2024 to Herbert Smith Freehills Kramer earlier this year, international mega-mergers are now commonplace. Yet consolidation potential at the top end remains limited, with a relatively small number of elite firms serving the largest corporates.
Below this tier lies an abundance of national, regional, high-street and boutique firms—alongside sole practitioners—vying for smaller, niche client bases. Private equity-backed consolidation, led by groups such as Lawfront and Knights, is creating ripples across the market. Still, its impact is likely to remain localised to specific regions, sectors or client types.
Amid these dynamics, law firms must take a realistic view of how generative AI and other technologies will reshape their business models. Only by understanding the full implications can they leverage innovation to enhance efficiency and profitability. So far, most firms use generic AI tools merely for incremental efficiency gains—advantages that will diminish as adoption becomes universal. The real competitive edge will lie not in generic tools, but in how strategically they are applied.
Firms will also need to consider what work in-house legal teams will increasingly handle as a result of AI. This shift could determine whether firms remain full-service or refocus on specific sectors, potentially adopting different business models for different areas of legal work. Managed legal services may suit certain fields, but demand for high-quality, tailored advisory work remains strong elsewhere. The era of a one-size-fits-all delivery model is over.
There is, however, significant potential in the next generation of tech-savvy, digital-native lawyers rising through the ranks. They could be the driving force that finally turbocharges innovation across the legal sector. Yet, like AI itself, they can also be perceived as a threat by the old guard—creating internal tension within firms that lack unified strategic vision.
Regardless of age, firms led by those who truly understand AI’s potential, its impact on resourcing, and its implications for delivery models will be best placed to achieve radical, sustainable change. Enlightened leadership that balances tradition with boldness will be essential.
The Nobel laureates remind us that innovation is never automatic—it must be deliberate, strategic and continuous. For UK law firms, this means recognising that standing still is no longer an option. The challenge now is to find the right balance between stability and transformation—between the weight of precedent and the need to innovate. Only by walking this fine line can the sector achieve sustained growth in the decades to come.
