Private Equity & Law Firms: The MSO Guide

What We Learned From A Seat at the Table

Oriole Park at Camden Yards · Baltimore, MD · May 7, 2026
A Seat at the Table — A Vista Exclusive

What We Learned From A Seat at the Table

EventHosted by Vista Consulting Team & Tim McKey
Featuring6 Exclusive Interviews
TopicsMSOs · PE · Ethics · Growth · Operations

When Lunch Hour Legal Marketing was brought on to cover and promote A Seat at the Table as part of our paid conference coverage model, opinions were already forming about where we stood. Let’s be direct about it: we were paid to be here, and you deserve to know that.

What we weren’t, though, was bought. We didn’t walk into Baltimore as cheerleaders for private equity investment in law firms. We walked in as genuinely open-minded participants with one goal: to educate ourselves, our listeners, and anyone else paying attention by asking the questions that actually needed asking. No softballs. No predetermined conclusions.

We have deep admiration for Tim McKey and the Vista Consulting Team, and from our very first conversation with Tim on this topic, it was clear this was an event we needed to be part of. The people in that room (the deal lawyers, the operators, the investors, the firm owners) were not gathered for a theoretical discussion. They were there because something real is happening, and they wanted to understand it.

Private equity investment in law firm operations isn’t some distant hypothetical anymore. It’s here, it’s real, and after the Dudley DeBosier deal made national headlines, the questions started flooding in from every corner of the plaintiff bar. What does this actually mean? Is it good? Is it bad? Should I be paying attention? We did what we do: found the people with the real answers, pulled them aside, and started recording.

What you’ll find on this page is the unfiltered version of those conversations. We sat down with the M&A attorneys structuring these deals, the law firm operators evaluating them, the investment professionals funding them, and the people who have quietly been doing this for years before anyone was paying attention. We asked the uncomfortable questions. We pushed on the stuff that didn’t add up. And we let them talk.

This isn’t a sales pitch for private equity. It’s not a hit piece either. The MSO model won’t be right for every firm, and anybody telling you otherwise is selling something. But not understanding it is no longer a defensible position. Whether you’re a managing partner of a major regional firm, a solo thinking about what comes next, or a legal marketer trying to understand where the industry is headed, this resource was built for you.

The future has arrived. Pull up a chair.

What We Heard: The Pros & Cons of the MSO Model

The Case For It

  • Real equity creation. For the first time, firm owners can build and sell something beyond their annual distributions. MSO equity, especially for early movers, represents a fundamentally different kind of wealth than the traditional law firm model.
  • Operational horsepower. Marketing, HR, IT, finance, intake infrastructure: the MSO takes all of it off the law firm’s plate so attorneys can actually practice law.
  • Succession planning solved. For founders without a clear exit path, the MSO provides a structured, financially meaningful way to transition out or to stay on with a defined role and continued upside.
  • Talent that was never available before. High-caliber COOs, CTOs, and CMOs haven’t historically considered law firms because there was no equity to offer them. The MSO structure changes that entirely.
  • Economies of scale, for real. Best practices, technology, media buying, case management systems: what works at one firm gets applied across the portfolio. One playbook across 300 people beats five fragmented playbooks across 60.
  • Growth capital access. Firms that have been chasing their own growth can now access outside resources that simply weren’t available before.

What Gives Us Pause

  • The regulatory environment is still unsettled. California, Illinois, and Colorado are among the states pushing back. Rule 5.4 compliance requires careful, ongoing attention, and the line between what the MSO can and can’t control must be maintained in practice, not just on paper.
  • The MSO agreement is functionally permanent. Twenty-to-twenty-five year terms that reset with each transaction. Firms entering these agreements should understand that getting out is not really part of the plan.
  • PE has a five-to-seven year clock. These funds have return obligations to their own investors. The long-term vision for your firm may not perfectly align with a fund’s exit timeline.
  • Ego is the number one deal-killer. Firms that are number one in their market didn’t get there by deferring to others. The cultural fit requirement is real, and it cuts both ways.
  • Valuations are a negotiation, not a science. EBITDA multiples range from 2x for smaller firms to 5–8x for established platforms. Everyone thinks they’re a 7. The math doesn’t always agree.
  • Healthcare precedent is a mixed bag. PE in medical services hasn’t uniformly improved patient outcomes. The legal industry has a real responsibility to learn from that and build these structures with clients genuinely at the center.

Six Interviews. Six Perspectives.

We organized these conversations to walk you through the full picture, starting with the legal and ethical framework, moving through deal mechanics and the operator experience, and ending with the people already living inside this new model every day.

Interview 01Josh PorteCo-Lead, Legal Services Transactions · Holland & Knight · Nashville
Ethics & Deal Structure

Key Takeaways from This Conversation
01
Rule 5.4 is the guardrail, and it’s workable. The two-company MSO structure exists specifically to honor the prohibition on non-lawyer ownership and fee-splitting. The law firm stays owned by lawyers; the MSO owns everything else. This isn’t a loophole. It’s a carefully structured compliance framework borrowed directly from decades of healthcare M&A.
02
The line between MSO and law firm isn’t just legal, it’s operational. Investors can run marketing, HR, IT, and facilities. What they cannot do is touch case acceptance, litigation strategy, or attorney hiring and firing. That line has to be actively maintained in practice, not just on paper. If you’re not protecting it, you’re exposed.
03
Fee structure is where deals live or die ethically. The MSO gets paid a fixed monthly or cost-plus fee, never a percentage of law firm revenue or profits. Fair market value, validated by a transfer pricing analysis from firms like PwC, BDO, or Stout, is what makes this defensible. This methodology has been battle-tested in healthcare for 30 years.
04
Pre-sale preparation is the single biggest thing a seller can do. Clean financials, properly drafted engagement letters, and identifying any compliance gaps before the process starts will dramatically improve both your valuation and your likelihood of closing a deal. Don’t wait until you’re in the room to find the skeletons.
05
MSO equity is the real play, and the math is compelling. Early movers who roll equity into the MSO benefit from multiple arbitrage as the platform scales. A firm that enters at 5–8x EBITDA and exits later at 12x sees real, meaningful wealth creation. That’s a fundamentally different outcome than the traditional law firm distribution model that liquidates itself every year.

· · ·

Interview 02Rob BordonaroOperations Executive · Nager, Romaine & Schneiberg · Cleveland
Operations & Growth

Key Takeaways from This Conversation
01
Outside business experience is a competitive advantage in law. Rob came from Fortune 50 companies, banking, and the Cleveland Clinic. When he walked into a law firm, he saw years of operational lag almost immediately. The legal industry is behind on process, technology, and business fundamentals in ways most other industries solved a long time ago. That gap is also a massive opportunity.
02
The MSO thesis looks compelling through an operations lens. The economies of scale argument is hard to argue with: identify what works at one firm, then replicate it across five or ten. One unified system across 300 people beats five fragmented systems across 60. Every single time.
03
The referral network is the moat, but only if you maintain it. Rob’s firm drives the bulk of its business through professional referrals. Conversion rates are better, relationships are deeper, and the trust is already built. But a large referral network that isn’t being systematically nurtured is leaving serious money on the table every month.
04
Client experience is the scorecard for every operational decision. Rob frames every strategic choice around two questions: does it improve the client experience, and does it improve the employee experience? If both answers are yes, it’s worth doing. That’s a simple filter, and it holds up across every industry he’s worked in.
05
Technology adoption is overdue, but change is genuinely hard. The tools exist. Rob is actively moving toward implementation. But legacy systems, switching costs, and organizational inertia are real forces. The firms that figure out how to change without burning everything down will have a meaningful edge over the ones that wait.

Connect with Rob Bordonaro

· · ·

Interview 03Rilus DanaFounder · Rilus Law / Maat Legal AI · Tucson, AZ
Early Adopter · Estate Planning · AI

Key Takeaways from This Conversation
01
The MSO model isn’t new. It’s just new to most lawyers. Rilus built his estate planning practice around an MSO structure nine years ago, borrowing directly from how dental and medical practices had already solved this problem. The blueprint existed in other professional services. Most attorneys simply weren’t paying attention to it.
02
Law is a service business first. The internet commoditized legal information. Clients can Google anything. What they can’t get from a search result is someone who answers the phone, is easy to work with, and treats them like a human being. Rilus built his entire practice around that reality, and it remains his clearest competitive advantage.
03
The tech-enabled solo is a real and viable model. Pair the economic firepower of an MSO structure with modern AI and automation tools, and a single attorney can operate and scale in ways that would have required a large team just a decade ago. The barriers to entry have dropped dramatically, and most attorneys still haven’t caught up to what’s possible.
04
Content marketing works best when it’s actually you. Rilus creates video content in his own voice, repurposes it into blogs and short-form clips, and has built a long-term content relationship with someone who genuinely knows how he thinks and writes. Authentic, consistent content (not AI-pumped filler) is what builds the kind of trust that compounds into referrals over time.
05
The long game is a full-service client ecosystem. Rilus isn’t just building a law firm. He’s building a national estate planning company that naturally expands into tax planning, financial planning, and real estate, starting from the relationship attorneys already have with clients at their most honest and vulnerable moments. That’s a fundamentally different vision than most firms are even thinking about.

· · ·

Interview 04Jonathan HawkinsFounder · Law Firm GC · Host, Founding Partner Podcast
Deals · Mergers · Market Structure

Key Takeaways from This Conversation
01
We’re not even in the first inning yet. The Dudley DeBosier deal put this on the map, but the real inflection point comes when a major firm name transacts without regulatory pushback, or when a challenge gets tested in court and upheld. As the investment bankers at this event put it plainly: we’re still warming up.
02
PE isn’t really a growth capital play, at least not yet. The firms showing up to these deals already have scale. Private equity is buying established platforms and building from there. True growth capital is a different animal: outside money injected into a promising firm that isn’t there yet. That’s not what’s being deployed right now in this market.
03
The MSO structure finally solves one of law’s oldest talent problems. Law firms have never been able to offer equity to non-lawyer executives. That’s why recruiting a high-caliber COO or CTO into a law firm has always been a losing battle against every other industry that can hand out stock options. The MSO changes that equation, and the talent that follows will raise the ceiling on how these firms operate.
04
Law firm mergers look great on paper and fall apart in practice. The excitement about cross-referrals almost never materializes. Disparate practice areas, clashing compensation models, and plain old ego make these deals harder than they look. If you’re going to grow through combination, go deep in adjacent contingency practices, not sideways into completely different business models.
05
The MSO as a multidisciplinary platform is underexplored, especially for smaller firms. The MSO doesn’t have to be solely a vehicle for PE investment. It can house counseling, financial planning, or any services that meet a client’s real-world needs in context. Small local firms could use this structure to build something genuinely differentiated without needing institutional backing to do it.

Connect with Jonathan Hawkins

· · ·

Interview 05Chad DudleyCo-Founder · Dudley DeBosier Injury Lawyers · Founder, Uplift MSO · Baton Rouge, LA
The Trailblazer · Why It Started

Key Takeaways from This Conversation
01
The MSO isn’t a franchise. It’s a mastermind with financial skin in the game. Chad describes Uplift as a mastermind on steroids. In a normal mastermind, you share best practices because you like each other. Here, every firm in the group is financially incentivized to make every other firm better. Add a dedicated team that actually implements those best practices (not just talks about them) and you’ve built something that didn’t exist before.
02
Growth comes from two levers: more cases and better results, not cost-cutting. Chad is explicit that Uplift’s strategy is top-line focused. The question is always: what is your true cost per case, and what is your average closed fee? Understanding that relationship, not just the surface-level acquisition cost, is where real inefficiencies get exposed and real growth gets unlocked.
03
Brand is deeper than awareness numbers. When Chad talks about brand, he doesn’t mean billboards and unaided recall surveys. He means the relationship a firm has earned in its community, the kind where a past client doesn’t just remember the name, they tell a friend to call. That organic trust is what makes every other marketing channel more effective, and what makes a firm genuinely attractive to an MSO partner.
04
Diversified marketing is non-negotiable from a valuation standpoint. If 90% of a firm’s cases come from one lead generation source, that’s not a marketing strategy. It’s a single point of failure. Chad evaluates acquisition targets in part on whether their case flow is diversified across channels. Over-dependence on any one source, however well it’s performing today, is a liability smart buyers will discount.
05
The regulatory concern is real but being misread. The states pushing back aren’t declaring the MSO structure illegal. They’re emphasizing that the fundamental line cannot be crossed: the MSO cannot direct the law firm. Chad’s read is that most legislative noise is people reacting to something new and feeling like they should be alarmed. Firms and investors who understand the structure and genuinely respect that line have a clear path forward.

· · ·

Interview 06Jose Torres & Ira WisheLawbox (getlawbox.com) & Simple City Capital (simpleciti.com)
Operations · Investment · The Ground Floor

Key Takeaways from This Conversation
01
The “pre-MSO” is a real and practical on-ramp. Lawbox functions essentially as an MSO-as-a-service, embedding directly into a firm’s operations, managing the case lifecycle from sign to demand prep, and giving both the firm and prospective investors a clean, data-backed view of how the business actually runs. For firms not yet ready for a full PE transaction, this is a meaningful intermediate step toward getting the house in order.
02
Operations is the foundation everything else is built on. When asked point blank what separates well-run firms from struggling ones, the answer was immediate: operations. Defined workflows, consistent client communication cadence, and the right people in the right roles. Firms that neglect this, whether because they’re too focused on cases or too focused on growth, end up losing ground on both fronts simultaneously.
03
KPI blindness is still shockingly common. Firms across the board are spending real money on marketing without tracking where it’s going, what it’s producing, or what a signed case actually costs them. Intake data living in an Excel spreadsheet instead of a proper CRM is still a thing. You cannot optimize what you aren’t measuring, and most firms still aren’t measuring nearly enough.
04
Culture fit is the underrated variable in any partnership. From the investor side, the question isn’t just whether a firm has good numbers. It’s whether the people running it can let go of enough ego to accept help. Firms that are number one in their market have often gotten there by doing things their way, and that same confidence can make them resistant to the changes that actually make the model work.
05
The MSO concept is older than most people realize. Arizona just turned up the volume. The ethics attorney on stage noted he first encountered MSO structures in legal back in 2006, and again in 2013. This approach has been quietly operating in accounting, medical, and professional services for decades. What changed is that Arizona’s ABS experiment got everyone excited about outside investment in law. When states pushed back, sophisticated operators went back to the MSO playbook and started asking how to scale it nationally.

With Gratitude

Thank You, Vista Consulting Team

None of this happens without Tim McKey and the Vista Consulting Team having the vision to put this event together and the generosity to invite us into it. A Seat at the Table was a genuinely rare thing: a room full of people who knew what they were talking about, willing to talk openly about all of it. We’re grateful for the access, the conversations, and the trust.

The Vista Consulting Team at A Seat at the Table, Baltimore 2026

The Vista Consulting Team · A Seat at the Table · Baltimore, MD · May 2026

Lunch Hour Legal Marketing

This resource was compiled from live interviews recorded at A Seat at the Table, hosted by the Vista Consulting Team at Oriole Park at Camden Yards, Baltimore, MD, May 7, 2026. Content is provided for educational purposes. Lunch Hour Legal Marketing was compensated to cover and promote this event.