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PRIVACY
Professional Services

Law firm's turnover takes lockdown knock as workforce's agile performance praised

10pc drop in turnover for Wilkin Chapman but improved profitability underlined after recent restructure

Robin Simmonds, new chief executive of Wilkin Chapman.(Image: Wilkin Chapman)

Leading regional law firm Wilkin Chapman was hit with a near 10 per cent drop in revenues through the coronavirus pandemic.

Turnover slipped from £27.4 million to £24.7 million for the Grimsby headquartered firm in the year to March 31.

Staff numbers reduced from 411 to 343 in the period - not including the 46 partners - with the firm having restructured in the early stages of the pandemic.

Read more: E-Factor business hub proposal for prominent Grimsby town centre building backed

It lost a third of non fee-earning employees as processes were modernised and ‘future-proofed’ following a start-of-decade review - a wider strategic move that collided head-on into the enforced economic lockdown as the financial period began.

An operating profit of £9.2 million was up eight per cent on the £8.5 million in 2020.

The bottom line was aided by a government grant of £923,427, drawn down through the furlough scheme.

New chief executive Robin Simmonds, who joined from global law firm Baker McKenzie, said: “The impact of Covid over the last 12 months has been unprecedented across the legal sector.