2014 Gilead Sciences Large Company Emerging Company Palo Alto Networks 2 | NOVEMBER 17, 2014 DAILY AT WWW.THERECORDER.COM Get ready for Litigation Departments of the Year OPEN TO ALL FIRMS NOMINATIONS OPEN DECEMEBER 1 | CLOSE JANUARY 16 WINNERS ANNOUNCED FEBRUARY 27 More info: James Cronin jcronin@alm.com 415.490.9934 DAILY AT WWW.THERECORDER.COM NOVEMBER 17, 2014 RECORDER ESTABLISHED IN 1877 MAIN OFFICE AND EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT 1035 Market Street, Suite 500 San Francisco, California 94103 415.490.9990 E-mail: recorder-editor@alm.com www.therecorder.com CLASSIFIED 855.852.9562 EXT 6 | DISPLAY ADVERTISING 415.490.1048 CIRCULATION 877.256.2472 | PUBLIC NOTICES ADVERTISING 415.490.9991 VP/PUBLISHER: MOLLY MILLER MMILLER@ALM.COM 415-490-1041 EDITOR IN CHIEF: GREG MITCHELL GMITCHELL@ALM.COM 415-490-1060 MANAGING EDITOR: VANESSA BLUM VBLUM@ALM.COM 415-490-1061 ASSOCIATE EDITOR: JAMES CRONIN JCRONIN@ALM.COM 415-490-9934 SENIOR WRITERS: SCOTT GRAHAM SGRAHAM@ALM.COM 415-490-1032 CHERYL MILLER CMILLER@ALM.COM 916-448-2935 ROSS TODD RTODD@ALM.COM 415-490-9967 PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR: JASON DOIY REPORTERS: PATIENCE HAGGIN PHAGGIN@ALM.COM MARISA KENDALL MKENDALL@ALM.COM DAVID RUIZ DRUIZ@ALM.COM CONTRIBUTING WRITERS: WILLIAM W. BEDSWORTH, LISA HOLTON, TERESA WALL-CYB, RICHARD ZITRIN PRODUCTION MANAGER: DAVID PALMER OPINION SERVICES DIRECTOR: JACK WALKER ACCOUNTANT: REYNALDO MARA VILLARIN MARKETING MANAGER: SURAJ PATEL, JD SPATEL@ALM.COM 415-490-1059 ADVERTISING: CHARLIE SHIVELY, SR. ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE CSHIVELY@ALM.COM 415-490-1054 PETER SAILSBERY, SALES REPRESENTATIVE PSAILSBERY@ALM.COM 415-490-9962 C orporate legal departments are being asked to do more than ever today. Companies are asking their lawyers to manage major deals, navigate emerging regulatory regimes, manage complex and strategically critical patent portfolios, fend off or initiate bet-the-company competitor suits. They’re also being asked to find efficient and effective solutions for recurring and routine legal questions, leading them on a never-ending quest to prune budgets and tune processes. The Recorder is recognizing the emerging company and large company legal departments that have answered the call and demonstrated they can produce superior outcomes. We sifted through more than 70 nominations in choosing the stand-out departments in eight key areas as well as the overall Legal Department of the Year. We’ve profiled the winning departments in the pages that follow. Please join us in congratulating them. REPRINTS: REPRINTS@ALM.COM OR 887-257-3382 HELP WANTED ADVERTISING: CAROL ROBERTSON 347-227-3148 PUBLIC NOTICES ADVERTISING MANAGER: ROBERT SALAPUDDIN 415-490-9965 ADVERTISING SALES COORDINATOR: LAM TRUONG SUBSCRIPTION SERVICE: 877-256-2472 Emerging companies (less than $1 billion revenue) Patent Strategy: Rambus Deals & Acquisitions: Palo Alto Networks Outside Counsel Partnering: NetSuite Governmental Affairs: Rambus Major Litigation Results: Palo Alto Networks Employment: Palo Alto Networks ALM SENIOR MANAGEMENT BILL CARTER: PRESIDENT & CEO KEVIN H. MICHIELSEN: PRESIDENT/LEGAL MEDIA Global Compliance: Palo Alto Networks Employer of Choice: SugarCRM Legal Department of the Year: Palo Alto Networks JEFF LITVACK: PRESIDENT/LEGAL INTELLIGENCE & ADVISORY/CHIEF DIGITAL OFFICER ERIC F. LUNDBERG: SVP/CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER LENNY IZZO: SVP/CHIEF MARKETING OFFICER Large companies Patent Strategy: eBay ARIC PRESS: VP/EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Deals & Acquisitions: Salesforce.com MICHAEL DESIATO: VP/REAL ESTATE MEDIA Outside Counsel Partnering: NetApp MOLLY MILLER: CHIEF PRODUCT & CONTENT OFFICER Governmental Affairs: eBay Major Litigation Results: Gilead Sciences ESTABLlSHED IN 1877 AS THE SAN FRANCISCO LAW JOURNAL. A NEWSPAPER OF GENERAL CIRCULATION BY RULES OF COURT, OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER: U.S. DISTRICT COURT (N.C.) SUPERIOR COURT, SAN FRANCISCO Employment: NetApp Global Compliance: Gilead Sciences Employer of Choice: Salesforce.com © Copyright 2014. All rights reserved. Further duplication without permission is prohibited. For permission to reprint articles that appear in The Recorder or to use material electronically please email or call reprints@alm.com or 887-257-3382. For permission to photocopy articles that appear in The Recorder please contact Copyright Clearance Center, Inc (CCC). (978) 750-8400, http://www. copyright.com. Legal Department of the Year: Gilead Sciences |3 4 | NOVEMBER 17, 2014 DAILY AT WWW.THERECORDER.COM PAT E N T S T R AT E G Y Rambus Emerging Company I n a 12-month span ending in June, Rambus obtained more than 150 patents. Considering the process can take anywhere from three to five years, that reflects a mountain of work. The Sunnyvale-based company runs on its patent portfolio, said General Counsel Jae Kim. To not pay full attention to the portfolio is to ignore its core engine, so the legal department is structured around that fact. A team of in-house attorneys, paralegals and one patent agent work closely with the company’s scientists and engineers, helping the research and development team decide what is most valuable and what products should go up for patent prosecution. “We have a very comprehensive patent committee and a handful of outside counsel firms that work with the [U.S. Patent and Trademark Office],” Kim said. “There’s a constant back and forth dialogue, and hopefully we get to the prosecution process, and hopefully we end up with a patent.” With patent reform on the horizon for much of the past year, Rambus has emphasized licensing over litigation. The compa- ny resolved cases against Micron Technology Inc. and Nanya Technology Corp. that had dragged on for more than a decade, reducing litigation expenses and securing a reliable revenue stream. In May, in what the company calls a water- Left to right: Christoper Kosh, senior patent counsel; Jae Kim, senior vice president, general counsel; Michael Moore, shed moment, Rambus deputy general counsel, IP; Judy Shie, senior patent counsel; Joseph Moniz, senior manager, patent operations. joined the standardsetting organization JEDEC Committee 40. The committee looks participating companies must license their right message to investors and the technolto set standards and criteria for integrated patents to the other companies in the orga- ogy community. “It shows we want to collaborate, and with circuits in semiconductor creation, increas- nization. “If you have patents, to the extent that the strong IP position we have, we’re willing ing interoperability between parts. Microchips, circuits, processors and more all need they are essential to the practicing standard, to make a commitment to disclose our patto work with similar equipment made by you agree to commit to license those pat- ent position,” Kim said. “It also shows we competing companies. Think of it as a mod- ents to anyone practicing that standard,” want to license with respect to the commitern-day take on Eli Whitney’s interchange- Kim said. He said the agreement prevents tee and the folks inside it.” able parts or the standard railroad gauge for one company from hijacking the standardsetting process. train tracks. —David Ruiz Kim said joining the committee sends the But membership comes with a catch: all Large Company JASON DOIY Portfolio Focus eBay JASON DOIY Balancing Act suits a year. The stakes can be high, with the cost to defend a case all the way through trial averaging $5 million to $10 million. In 2006, eBay fought its famous patent case against MercExchange all the way up to the U.S. Supreme Court, resulting in a ruling that draClockwise from top left: Mark Yuan, director of patents; Rory Bens, associate general counsel technology patents; Anup matically changed the Tikku, senior director patents and litigation; Emily Ward, vice president, deputy general counsel technology and patents; landscape of patent litiSandy Godsey, senior director technology and patents. gation. Recently, the company has been taking advantage of less costly nline commerce giant eBay takes ly granted patents, not the system itself. “In any large system where there are mil- alternatives to litigation. In the last three an approach to patent strategy that is a little like a “balancing lions of patents being issued, there are of years, eBay filed for reexamination or inter act”, says Deputy General Coun- course going to be some weak patents that partes review against 43 patents. It brought get granted,” Ward said. “Like many other covered business method challenges sel Emily Ward. On the one hand, the company is com- technology companies, we often find our- against 13 patents in the same timespan, mitted to building and enforcing a strong selves defending against non-practicing en- and invalidated several patents in the propatent portfolio. On the other, it’s on the re- tities, and we fight hard to invalidate weak cess. Ward praised the U.S. Patent and Tradeceiving end of a lot of patent litigation from patents and have had a lot of success stopmark Office for knowing when to invalidate ping licensing campaigns.” non-practicing entities. The company faces about 65 patent law- poor quality patents in these disputes. The problem, according to Ward, is poor- O The company also won court orders dismissing infringement suits brought by UbiComm LLC and Clear With Computers LLC. The two NPEs have sued companies across many industries, including Ace Hardware Corp., ModusLink Recovery LLC, Forty Niners Football Co. LLC, Tesla Motors Inc., Urban Outfitters Inc. and Fishing Holding LLC. “When we’re fighting patent cases, we care about the ‘what’ more than the ‘who,’” Ward said. “It’s less about the case being brought against us by an NPE, or ‘patent troll,’ than it is about the quality of the claims being brought.” EBay boasts more than 4,500 patents and patent applications. Earlier this year, Intellectual Asset Management magazine ranked eBay No. 2 on a list of companies producing the highest quality patents. Ward said she hopes the company’s results can create a healthier, more sound patent environment in the future. “At the end of the day we don’t stand for innovation used as weapons to extract settlements.” —David Ruiz DAILY AT WWW.THERECORDER.COM NOVEMBER 17, 2014 |5 DEALS & ACQUISITIONS F Growing Strong ounded in 2005, network security company Palo Alto Networks waited roughly eight years before making its first purchase. Three months later, it made another. In December, the Santa Clara-based company purchased Morta Security, followed closely in March by its purchase of Israeli endpoint security startup Cyvera. “Cyvera was a strategic acquisition for us and it helped us set up what we joke about as the ‘holy trinity,’” said Associate General Counsel Melinda Thompson, explaining Emerging Company JASON DOIY Palo Alto Networks Melinda Thompson, vice president, legal affairs; Jeff True, senior vice president and general counsel. three important specialties for the company: network security, cloud capabilities and endpoint security. “The acquisition catapulted us from wanting to enter the space with probably a two-year lead time, if done organically, to adding the leader in endpoint security this year.” The $200 million Cyvera purchase was a “significant jump” from the first, in terms of value and distance, Thompson said. The deal was completed in just 60 days, she added. During those two months, General Counsel Jeff True was also in Delaware helping the company in its suit against Sunnyvale’s Juniper Networks for patent infringement. “We were a busy little department,” Thompson said. The company used Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati for both deals, and Israeli law firm Gross, Kleinhendler, Hodak, Halevy, Greenberg & Co. for its purchase of Cyvera. Thompson said the Morta Security JASON DOIY Large Company —David Ruiz Salesforce Tower of Power grate easily into Salesforce’s software. The Left to right: Zach Dunn, corporate counsel; Wei Chen, assistant general counsel; Pamela Van Stavern, senior corporate company has an investcounsel; Michael Kovaleski, corporate counsel. ment portfolio of more than 100 companies. As its ranks have grown, Salesforce alesforce.com has set itself up as a streamline each incoming transaction, she leased more than 700,000 square feet of ofmajor dealmaker in the past two added. In June 2013, the company purchased fice space in what will be San Francisco’s years, backed by a legal team that is ready for the increased workload. cloud marketing platform ExactTarget Inc. tallest building, and with the lease, effec“The attorneys on our M&A team for $2.6 billion. This July, Salesforce bought tively changed the name of the project are seasoned, having completed more than big data company RelateIQ Inc., which au- from the Transbay Tower to the Salesforce 200 acquisitions and hundreds of strategic tomates data entry for customer service Tower. As it began to gobble up more space, investments over the course of their careers management, for $390 million. Then, just here at Salesforce and elsewhere,” said Amy two months ago, the company announced Salesforce also sold much of its land in MisWeaver, general counsel. The company’s in- its Salesforce1 Fund—more than $100 mil- sion Bay to the Regents of the University of house team can take on all aspects and lev- lion meant to be invested in mobile app de- California, the Golden State Warriors and els of a deal, and have set up a process to velopers building products that can inte- Alexandria Real Estate Equities Inc. S deal, though much smaller, was just as important because of the talent it brought in. It was closer to an “acqui-hire” than anything else, she said. The two deals were so close to one another only because the opportunities presented themselves. The legal department also inked a joint agreement with VMWare to provide its security solutions to that company’s evolving cloud platform services. Salesforce has an in-house real estate attorney who worked with the company as outside counsel before joining the legal department, Weaver said. She said the wide breadth of knowledge and experience allows the team to tackle deals quickly and efficiently. “We not only advise on legal issues, but also identify potential risks in all aspects of a deal, including products, security, accounting, tax, employment, public relations, government affairs and operations,” Weaver said. “Our attorneys understand that our roles go much beyond drafters of legal documents.” —David Ruiz 6 | NOVEMBER 17, 2014 DAILY AT WWW.THERECORDER.COM O U T S I D E C O U N S E L PA R T N E R I N G JASON DOIY Emerging Company NetSuite Hands Off “We have someone that works as our global systems integrator, someone on outbound Left to right: Emi Chuang, senior director legal; Michael Lee, vice president, legal; Douglas Solomon, senior vice presi- channels partner prodent, general counsel and secretary; Christina Robinson, senior vice president and associate general counsel; Scott grams, another on deMarcus, senior director, legal. veloper platform programs, on licensing, and etSuite’s General Counsel Doug and others,” Solomon said. “I became a lit- we have a team that works on acquisitions,” Solomon says what a lot of other tle disappointed in that because sometimes Robinson said. Solomon said the approach leads to a top in-house lawyers do: hire the those specialists are working for our comattorney, not the law firm. Solo- pany for the first time and they don’t know smaller bill, too, as many of their outside relationships are with solo practitioners or mon goes a step beyond, the business at all.” That led to a lot of time wasted on repet- attorneys at smaller shops. though—sometimes he’ll split up a team of “Sometimes our outside counsel are attorneys because he already has preferred itive training, Solomon said. Instead, he and Associate General Counsel Chris Robinson working out of their houses,” Solomon said. specialists at small, boutique firms. “When you have a sizable acquisition, it’s will pick from their outside team of special- By trusting outside attorneys with niche regular that outside counsel throw all their ists. They have outside counsel for almost practice areas, Solomon and Robinson can trust their outside counsel to gain expertise bodies at us, with IP counsel, employment everything. N as the company grows. Robinson said outside counsel need to be treated as insiders. “If outside counsel are given some ownership over the lead, they can learn the business and be able to make judgment calls,” she said. The key to running an efficient legal team is losing the idea that “one size fits all,” Solomon said. He said in-house departments have to fit the right attorney to the right matter and keep them abreast of the business at all times. “Even though they come from small firms, medium ones or big ones, we think of everyone as individual lawyers, not their firm name.” Trial Lawyers Litigating Complex Civil and Criminal Cases for More Than 30 Years 633 Battery Street, San Francisco, CA 94111-1809 | 415 391 5400 | kvn.com —David Ruiz DAILY AT WWW.THERECORDER.COM NOVEMBER 17, 2014 |7 O U T S I D E C O U N S E L PA R T N E R I N G NetApp Playing Fair ired of wasting time and energy on negotiating rates for outside counsel? Enter the “Further, Faster Rate Wizard,” used at NetApp. “Before, you would work with a 100-person law firm where you might know half of the people; now, general counsel are working with 2,000-person firms, and those firms find it convenient to send the annual ‘Our rates are going up 15 percent’ letter,” said General Counsel Matt Fawcett. “It’s incredibly difficult for an internal law department to have an objective way of gauging the fairness and the rightness of these prices across such a huge number of people.” Connie Brenton, chief of staff and director of legal operations, took on the task of solving the problem. Working with a legal consulting firm and a data analytics company, NetApp created a database of average rates for various legal work through different levels of expertise. NetApp uses this data to set a benchmark rate and compare it to quoted rates from outside counsel. If the quoted rate falls into the “fair” range, NetApp approves the quote. If not, NetApp suggests what its data deems a fair rate and it educates outside counsel on how it reached its numbers. When presented with invoices, the legal department will pay what its Rate Wizard claims is fair, even if that’s less than what was billed. How’s that going over? “It has been overwhelmingly accepted,” Fawcett said. “Across hundreds of invoices, we’ve only been questioned once or twice on the amount we pay versus what’s charged.” Fawcett said he expects to see more companies taking a similar approach, but he believes NetApp is the only company to use such a system. Brenton said the technology and data supporting the rate-planning procedure are so new that many companies have yet to build anything similar. “It takes time to lay the infrastructure to actually arrive at a fair rate, and then the implementation is next, and then the execution is next on that,” Brenton said. “We haven’t had such good data available to us in the legal industry until recently.” —David Ruiz JASON DOIY T Large Company Left to right: Connie Brenton, head of legal operations; Michael Haven, senior counsel, legal operations and litigation; Matthew Fawcett, senior vice president, general counsel and secretary; Kunoor Chopra, vice president of strategic accounts with Elevate Services; Emily Teuben, legal operations manager. 8 | NOVEMBER 17, 2014 DAILY AT WWW.THERECORDER.COM G OV E R N M E N TA L A F FA I R S Rambus Patent Perspective n May 2013, Rambus Chief Technology Officer Martin Scott testified before the International Trade Commission about the importance of the U.S. patent system in the digital trade economy. Without protection and incentives to develop innovative technology, whole economic models could falter, Scott said. Without the anticounterfeiting and security technologies developed at Rambus, he said buyers and sellers won’t trust the Internet as a secure platform for commerce. General Counsel Jae Kim said Rambus is constantly watching the patent debate in Congress and working to keep patent protections as strong as possible. JASON DOIY I Emerging Company “Patents and innova- Left to right: Judy Shie, senior patent counsel; Jae Kim, senior vice president, general counsel; Michael Moore, deputy tion go hand in hand,” general counsel, IP; Burch Harper, deputy general counsel for IP licensing and technology transactions. Kim said. “We don’t want legislation to go in such a direction that weakens the U.S. pat- intellectual property, is a member of the In- who files a suit to disclose parties that would ent system, so we’ve really been watching tellectual Property Owners Association pat- benefit financially from the litigation. It also lambasts the misuse of bad faith demand and indirectly participating in a lot of orga- ent law committee. Kim said the company is concerned letters. nizations.” Rambus also works to maintain close ties Rambus has coordinated visits by the U.S. about the Patent Transparency and ImPatent and Trademark Office and the Inter- provements Act of 2013 introduced by Sen- with the USPTO. “The Patent and Trademark Office is critnational Trade Commission to its offices for ate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick firsthand looks at the company’s research Leahy (D-Vt.) and committee member Sen- ically important to us because it is generatand development and to provide training. ator Mike Lee (R-Utah) last November. The ing the assets that we monetize,” Kim said. Rambus executives regularly meet with ex- bill, aimed at lessening frivolous patent in- “We need to make sure that we have a strong aminers and speak to patent reform groups. fringement suits against small businesses working relationship with them.” Michael Moore, deputy general counsel of by patent trolls, would require everyone —David Ruiz 2014 See you at the Event! AWARDS RECEPTION & DINNER Four Seasons San Francisco 757 Market Street 6:30—9 P.M. For More Information Contact — Molly Miller, Publisher mmiller@alm.com | 415.490.1041 DAILY AT WWW.THERECORDER.COM NOVEMBER 17, 2014 |9 G OV E R N M E N TA L A F FA I R S Large Company eBay JASON DOIY Leveling the Field based company has also spent the past few years working feverishly in support of its strategy on Internet sales tax legislation. The company has argued that efforts to “level the playing field” for large online and offline reLeft to right: David London, senior director United States government relations; Jack Christin, associate general counsel tailers could hurt global asset protection; Tod Cohen, vice president, deputy general counsel; Kathy Free, chief of staff. smaller eBay sellers by forcing them to adhere Bay’s approach to governmental af- to be able to do that,” said Tod Cohen, to complex tax remittance rules. “If a seller is based in Connecticut, they fairs is about advancing the inter- eBay deputy general counsel and vice ests of the buyers and sellers who president, referring to a patchwork of shouldn’t be under the same tax policy for use its global online marketplace. rules preventing resales of some products sales tax as Walmart in Arizona, just beIt advocates on everything from in some markets. “Those practices drive cause they sell a good into Arizona,” Cohen when and where sellers must collect sales prices up, which means consumers have said. “Yes, buyers have obligations to pay taxes in their own state, but we should not taxes to what goods can and can’t be resold less choices.” To combat these and other activities that put small businesses at a disadvantage in different places. “Whenever you have small sellers that may infringe on sellers rights, eBay has tak- against massive entities.” The company relied on its users in have an opportunity to sell globally, there en on the job of educating regulators around are large sellers who may not want them the world on resale laws. The San Jose- launching a digital grassroots campaign to E press their position with policymakers. EBay also identified more than 2,000 “ambassadors” inside the company’s seller network and found more than 400 case studies with information on how the proposed legislation would hurt business. The ambassadors met with congressional staff and gave interviews to the media. The multipronged campaigns resulted in 1.5 million letters sent to members of Congress. Though the Senate has passed versions of the legislation, most recently the Marketplace Fairness Act in May 2013, that’s as far as it’s gotten. The company also has its eBay Policy Lab, a team focused on identifying emerging technology policy challenges that could affect its operations and strategizing to best address them. The lab is currently looking at efforts to regulate online payments—a big issue for its soon to be spun off PayPal business. Findlay Craft PC extends our congratulations to on their recognition as 2014 Legal Department of the Year. 903.534.1100 | www.findlaycraft.com —David Ruiz 10 | NOVEMBER 17, 2014 DAILY AT WWW.THERECORDER.COM EMPLOYMENT Emerging Company Built to Scale P alo Alto Networks is hiring in Tokyo, Hong Kong, Amsterdam, Tel Aviv and Singapore. It currently has more than 200 employee openings across its almost 40 offices in 28 countries. Founded in 2005, the company has more than 1,700 employees worldwide. Before Erica Kelley came to the company, much of that hiring was done piece by piece, often without the help of the legal department. As the company’s associate general counsel and director of global employment, Kelley worked with the human resources department on streamlining many employee matters. “There were certain foundations and pro- cesses that were not quite in place,” Kelley Left to right: Jeff True, senior vice president and general counsel; Erica Kelley, associate general counsel, director, said. To solve the prob- employment and compliance. lem, she created a database with standardized employment documents and tem- problems across departments that are not Networks at the time. The new approach has increased the efficiency and speed at which plates. The drive can be accessed only by visible to others. “I can help spot potential issues that are the human resources department moves certain teams from the legal and HR departments. It includes employment agreements, either not HR-related, or may not be an is- and approves employee matters. Palo Alto Networks has also created a termination letters and procedures for pro- sue that HR can recognize yet,” Kelley said. “Being able to see the risk in the bigger pic- “termination playbook” for its global entimotion. Before the database, HR was far less in- ture, I can kind of jump in and say ‘Stop, ties. The playbook includes policies and volved with the legal department, which everybody, stop. Let’s figure this out first procedures for terminating employees worldwide. Kelley said can be a risk. She said she hopes and then everyone can move on.’” When Kelley made the database, she was HR will reach out to her as early as possible on any decision making, as she can find the only employment attorney at Palo Alto —David Ruiz Arent Fox is Smart in Your World Strategic, Diversified & Innovative Attorneys at Law Automotive | Complex Litigation | Corporate | Health Care | Intellectual Property | International Trade | Real Estate | Sports | White Collar & Investigations | arentfox.com JASON DOIY Palo Alto Networks DAILY AT WWW.THERECORDER.COM NOVEMBER 17, 2014 | 11 EMPLOYMENT NetApp Putting a Template in Place omputer storage and data management company NetApp has roughly 150 offices across the world housing 12,300 employees. There are software engineers in Vancouver, sales representatives in Beijing, consultants in Dusseldorf and manufacturing managers back home in Sunnyvale. Whenever a candidate joins the multibillion-dollar company—whether in Moscow, Bangalore, Sydney or Tokyo—every employee should feel like they’re a part of the same experience, said Senior Director of Worldwide Compliance and Employment Lisa Borgeson. For that, NetApp created a plan to streamline employment. But that proved tricky. “We wanted a template that made you feel like you were joining Netapp no matter where you were in the world, but also accounted for any specific local laws,” Borgeson said. “Laws around vacation are different in Turkey than in France.” The project, which is completed but has yet to roll out, was split into two parts: human resources and legal. “Human resources took point on the processes—how offers get extended, signed and stored, and who has the authority to make revisions,” Borgeson said. “Legal took point on the document that represents the offer— what’s it going to look like, what order will items be in?” Though NetApp originally attempted to create just one template, it resorted to making several and now has what Borgeson calls a “matrix” to rely on. The matrix of similar documents helps the human resources department efficiently deal with new hires around the world, and makes new hires feel they’re appreciated at the company. That employee experience is important, Borgeson said. “NetApp has been recognized over and over again as being a great place to work, and culture is something we think is a real differentiator for us,” Borgeson said. It’s important for people to feel unified when they start working for NetApp, and it’s the company’s responsibility to accurately project that, she said. “It’s our first impression on a candidate and we want to be able to do that well.” —David Ruiz JASON DOIY C Large Company Left to right: Michele Babb, senior corporate counsel employment and compliance; Matthew Fawcett, senior vice president, general counsel and secretary; Elizabeth O’Callahan, vice president, corporate compliance and employment; Lisa Borgeson, senior director worldwide employment and compliance. www.kasowitz.com 12 | NOVEMBER 17, 2014 DAILY AT WWW.THERECORDER.COM M A J O R L I T I G AT I O N R E S U LT S Emerging Company Palo Alto Networks JASON DOIY Heat of Battle before the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, sued Juniper in the Northern District of California, and launched a collateral attack in state court against the patent law doctrine of assigner estoppel. The principle prevented Palo Alto Networks from challenging the validity of Left to right: Jeff True, senior vice president and general counsel; Michael Ritter, associate general counsel, senior the asserted patents, director of IP strategy. because Zuk was listed as an inventor, exf litigation is a game of leverage, Palo Irell & Manella team that included veteran plained Michael Ritter, the company’s diAlto Networks made sure it always had litigator Morgan Chu. The threat to Palo Alto rector of intellectual property. “It’s an antiquated doctrine that allows something to brandish during two-and- Networks was so severe that in 2013, the a-half years of ferocious patent litigation company spent two full pages of its annual our competitors to be able to challenge vaagainst one of its biggest network secu- report to stockholders addressing the case. lidity, but not us, ” Ritter said. Though the gambit fell short, Palo Alto But lawyers at Palo Alto Networks refused rity rivals. Juniper Networks sued Palo Alto Net- to be cornered. The company tapped its Networks eked out a mistrial in the Delaworks for patent infringement in 2011 in own litigation dream team led by Morrison ware case in early 2014. The stalemate set U.S. District Court in Delaware. The suit & Foerster partners Harold McElhinny and the stage for a settlement, under which the claimed PAN’s founder, Nir Zuk, had Michael Jacobs and brought the fight to Ju- two companies agreed to cross-license the disputed patents and to refrain from suing launched the company using technology he niper. The company took full advantage of new one another for eight years. Palo Alto Nethad worked on as an employee at Juniper. Juniper was represented by a fearsome proceedings to challenge Juniper’s patents works paid Juniper $175 million in cash and I Gilead Sciences —David Ruiz Large Company Drug Defenders n April, Gilead Sciences beat back one of the largest pharmaceutical companies in the world on its claims Gilead did not own a newly released drug that was proving wildly successful. Roche AG said it was the rightful owner of sofosbuvir—Gilead’s hepatitis C treatment, Sovaldi—under a decade-old contract it entered with Princeton, N.J.based Pharmasset Inc., which Gilead had bought in 2011 for $11 billion. Roche’s infringement claim hadn’t caught Gilead off guard. “Before we bought Pharmasset, we spent many months doing detailed research into any potential claim that could be made against us,” said Gilead General Counsel Brett Pletcher. “We said that if Roche made a claim, it would be without merit.” With the help of Cooley’s Palo Alto-based chairman and partner Stephen Neal, Gilead’s team persuaded a panel of three arbitrators to rule in the company’s favor. It was a big win: Sovaldi is one of Gilead’s most successful drugs, generating $5.8 billion in sales in its first two quarters. Pletcher spoke highly of his team and the e-discovery attorneys necessary to provide a solid argument. Gilead received other favorable judgments around the world in the past year, including a decision in December 2013 before the Canadian Federal Court over a patent for several products. Gilead obtained two favorable judgments against Idenix Pharmaceuticals Inc. before the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and in Oslo, Norway, for its patent rights to Sovaldi. The company reached beneficial settlements with multiple generics companies for several of its products, as well. “Sometimes, a settlement is a victory,” Pletcher said. “It felt very good to get those.” — David Ruiz JASON DOIY I equity. The resolution was applauded by investors. Palo Alto Networks scored a more decisive victory this year against a sole inventor who claimed the company stole his trade secrets for firewall technology. Plaintiff Qiang Wang based his suit on discussions he had with a Palo Alto Networks executive almost 10 years ago but waited until after the company’s initial public offering to file the claim. “There’s a statute of limitations of three years, and yet Wang waited six or seven years, which was soon after we went public, to come in asking for money and to be recognized as an inventor of our technology,” Ritter said. Wang, represented by Niro, Haller & Niro, was never an employee, he added. Palo Alto Networks, with the help of Durie Tangri, won summary judgment in April based on the expired state of limitations and negotiated a full settlement in which the company paid nothing and Wang dropped all claims with a zero dollar settlement in April. Clockwise from top left: Lorie Ann Morgan, vice president, intellectual property; Katharine Rice, counsel III, intellectual property; Brett Pletcher, senior vice president, general counsel; Keeley Wettan, counsel III; Jamison Lynch, senior counsel, intellectual property DAILY AT WWW.THERECORDER.COM NOVEMBER 17, 2014 Be safe, not sorry. J. RANDOLPH EVANS MCKENNA LONG & ALDRIDGE SHARI L. KLEVENS MCKENNA LONG & ALDRIDGE Defending a malpractice case requires not only understanding of legal malpractice law, but the substantive law of the underlying lawsuit or transaction. SUZANNE Y. BADAWI SHEPPARD MULLIN Unlike other treatises that cover all 50 states, this practical guide focuses on what California practitioners need to know to be prepared. PRACTICAL ADVICE FROM THE EXPERTS. Includes digital eBook (EPUB) format with hyperlinks to full text of cases, statutes and other authoritative content. We recommend Apple® iPad® or iPhone®, SONY® Reader, or Adobe® Digital Editions (for PC or Mac users). Also comes with a print guide. The authors of this publication are donating all royalities to the California Bar Foundation to help fund a diversity scholarship for a student facing hardship. Learn more and order at: http://at.law.com/legalmalpractice $140.00 | 13 14 | NOVEMBER 17, 2014 DAILY AT WWW.THERECORDER.COM GLOBAL COMPLIANCE Emerging Company Palo Alto Networks JASON DOIY Conquering the Code the company,” Kelley said. The new code of conduct was issued to internal employees and third-party channel partners. Palo Alto Networks also made an online training module for employees, guiding workers through the company’s policies, including its new code of conduct. At the end of the training, workers take a test to show they’ve learned and retained the information. The online training educates worldwide employees about anti-corruption and avoiding and identifying insider training. Kelley led the charge on all the content Left to right: Erica Kelley, associate general counsel, director, employment and compliance; Melinda Thompson, vice president, legal affairs. director of global employment and compliance. “This is all from when we were preIPO, and it’s very common for a company at that stage to have, well, U.S.-based policies.” So Palo Alto Networks embarked on the revision project with Baker & McKenzie. The revamped and globally applicable code of conduct contains information on the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, harassment, discrimination and basic treatment and respect guidelines. “It’s part of the fabric of Gilead G Staying Fed-Ready ilead Sciences has a perfect score in deflecting Department of Justice investigations around the False Claims Act. Three times now, the company has effectively provided accurate documentation and record-keeping to stop potential civil and criminal penalties. The process can be nerve-wracking for even the most capable of in-house attorneys. “You’re stressed not because you think the company has done anything wrong, but because you have to give everything —David Ruiz Large Company JASON DOIY A mid rapid company growth, Palo Alto Networks had to address its increasingly obsolete and narrow code of conduct. The company was partnering with companies outside the U.S. and hiring beyond state borders, so the document needed serious revision. “The laws are very different globally, and we had some hot spots within our code of conduct that were very U.S.-centric,” said Erica Kelley, associate general counsel and created for the employee training portal— its questions, scenarios and topics of interest. The company previously relied on an outside company for its training program. By customizing the training to Palo Alto Networks specifically, Kelley said the program is far more useful and memorable. “I could incorporate actual terms of our own Code of Conduct, not the broad stuff that comes from the shelves of a third-party vendor,” Kelley said. “I had to educate myself, too, on writing scenarios that are engaging and realistic.” Left to right: Andy Rittenberg, associate general counsel; David Ralston, senior director business conduct; Stephen over to the DOJ in the Chien, senior counsel. timeframe they want, and sometimes that can be thousands and thousands of docu- its products. If the DOJ finds that a company ments,” said the Foster City-based com- has been marketing, say, a treatment solely pany’s General Counsel Brett Pletcher. He for cataracts as a treatment for astigmatism said pharmaceutical companies have to and macular degeneration, the U.S. governexpect receiving a subpoena at any time ment can come in, review marketing materifrom the DOJ, and the best way to avoid a als, call files, appointments with local doctors lawsuit is to emphasize global compliance and sales plans. Based on what it finds, it can to the entire company, not just the legal advance its investigation and prosecute against the company. Depending on how the department. Common pitfalls for drug developers in- investigation goes, the DOJ can also resort clude how a company informs doctors about to using search warrants. Gilead has lawyers in the U.S. and Europe who partner directly with the sales team and inform them about what they can and can’t say when educating doctors about their products. The lawyers make business planning decisions that protect the company, and just this year, the lawyers had to learn about two new products in Gilead’s pipeline: its hepatitis C and oncology drugs. —David Ruiz DAILY AT WWW.THERECORDER.COM NOVEMBER 17, 2014 | 15 EMPLOYER OF CHOICE SugarCRM It’s a Culture Thing ugarCRM’s General Counsel Patricia Timm believes her company’s unique work is enough to pull lawyers in. But the lifestyle it offers can help seal the deal. “You can leave at 3 p.m. to catch the Little League game, but then get back online at night to finish up work,” she said. “We respect the individual and their choices to have flexibility in their schedules outside the office, but I still have a very high expectation for myself and my team.” Competing with giants like Salesforce.com, customer relations management software company SugarCRM has to differentiate itself in the market by having a different business model. Part of that model includes offering the product’s source code to all its licensing customers, allowing licensees to customize the software to their needs. That means each license is a little different, and that means the legal work for the Cupertino-based company is always nuanced. “It’s not a very straightforward model, and it takes a really sophisticated IP lawyer to take these issues and understand them and articulate them to our sales team, our customers and to outside counsel,” Timm said. “There is a layer of finesse that might not necessarily exist at another company.” Timm is immensely proud of her team of four lawyers and one paralegal, and she said she trains them to eventually become leaders themselves, hopefully taking general counsel roles when ready. She said the internal organization allows for rapid skill development and frequent interaction with key executives inside the company. “We’re a small enough team to have a lot of diversity to our work, so no one is working in only one area but instead filling their basket with legal issues on products, on human resources, on litigation,” Timm said. “You’ll never get that kind of experience if you’re just pigeonholed in one department.” Timm trusts that empowering her team with both a fulfilling work environment and a fulfilling life outside the office produces better work. It’s not one or the other, she said. “Who says you can’t have both?” JASON DOIY Left to right: Rachel Courtney, assistant general counsel, global labor and employment; April Oliver, global compliance attorney; Amy Weaver, senior vice president and general counsel; Todd Machtmes, vice president and assistant general counsel; Daniel Reed, vice president, litigation. I gal issues outside of their normal scope on a regular basis,” said General Counsel Amy Weaver. “I also encourage and support cross-functional training and many team members have moved to different roles within the legal team.” Salesforce offers summer internship programs for law students and internal CLE training events in multiple practice areas. The company holds quarterly teleconferencing meetings in which Weaver updates Clockwise from top left: Guadalupe Garcia-Pham, director, legal (corporate); Patricia Timm, senior vice president and general counsel; Heather Yohn, director, legal (products); Auddrena Mauga, senior paralegal; Emily Chiang, attorney. —David Ruiz Large Company t doesn’t take a hard sell to get lawyers to join cloud-based customer service management giant Salesforce.com. The fastgrowing company has challenging, sometimes cutting-edge work, across a wide spectrum of practice areas. It encourages employees to give back with paid time off for volunteer work. And there’s never a dull moment. “Even with our large size, members of every specialty are called upon to address le- JASON DOIY S Emerging Company Salesforce Workplace Nirvana the legal department on any business developments, welcomes new members and recognizes employees for their efforts. Two semi-annual global company conferences also occur each year in the company’s San Francisco headquarters. The department meets for two to three days, learning about upcoming legal matters and listening to visiting business leaders share their thoughts and ideas. “All of these meetings are excellent opportunities for the entire team to collaborate, as well as to socialize and get to know one another personally,” Weaver said. As part of the company’s “1-1-1” pledge, employees are encouraged to take paid time off to work with the Salesforce Foundation on a number of volunteer opportunities both in the U.S. and abroad. The company has partnered with the American Red Cross, UC-Berkeley, Girl Scouts of the USA, Invisible Children and the Grameen Foundation as part of its philosophy to donate 1 percent of its time, equity and product to nonprofits, schools and social organizations. —David Ruiz 16 | NOVEMBER 17, 2014 DAILY AT WWW.THERECORDER.COM JASON DOIY L E G A L D E PA R T M E N T O F T H E Y E A R Clockwise from top left: Mariam Craver, paralegal/contracts administrator; Katherine Hall, contracts coordinator; Melinda Thompson, vice president, legal affairs; Jeff True, senior vice president and general counsel; Michael Ritter, associate general counsel, director of IP strategy; Erica Kelley, associate general counsel, director, employment and compliance; Roxanne Farahmand, senior contracts manager; Sean Toth, corporate counsel. Expansion Mode Palo Alto Networks Emerging Company P alo Alto Networks spent the past year growing through acquisition, defending a bet-the-company patent suit and expanding its human resources policies to cover more than 40 countries. That’s a lot for a legal department with just six full-time attorneys to handle. In December, Palo Alto Networks made its first purchase—a small “acqui-hire,” as Associate General Counsel Melinda Thompson called it. Three months later, the company aimed for a much bigger target—a $200 million purchase of Israeli endpoint security startup Cyvera. The deal took less than 60 days. At the time, General Counsel Jeffrey True was in Delaware, helping the company defend patent infringement claims made by network equipment company Juniper Networks. After a hung jury led to a mistrial, the parties settled. Palo Alto Networks agreed to pay $175 million in cash and equity to Juniper. Both companies agreed to cross-license the patents in dispute and avoid further litigation for eight years. In that decidedly busy time for the department, Thompson also worked with Associate General Counsel and Director of Global Employment and Compliance Erica Kelley to rewrite the company’s code of conduct for its employees and third-party partners. The problem? The code was too focused on the U.S. Understandably so; it was written before Palo Alto Networks filed for its initial public offering. The code now needed to be modified to cover overseas hires and international partner businesses. Beyond that, Kelley created a database for employment documents, making the information accessible to the legal and human resources departments. She also helped create an online training module testing employees on the company’s revamped conduct code, which was rolled out this summer. —David Ruiz DAILY AT WWW.THERECORDER.COM NOVEMBER 17, 2014 | 17 JASON DOIY L E G A L D E PA R T M E N T O F T H E Y E A R Clockwise from top left: Jamison Lynch, senior counsel, IP; Marissa Song, associate general counsel; Lorie Ann Morgan, vice president, IP; Andy Rittenberg, associate general counsel; Jason Okazaki, vice president, legal; Keeley Wettan, counsel III; Erica Chien, director, business conduct; Brett Pletcher, senior vice president, general counsel; Elin Hartrum, associate general counsel, IP; Katharine Rice, counsel III, IP. Bases Covered Gilead Large Company G ilead Sciences’ successful legal battle over its hepatitis C treatment, combined with the ability to deflect potential Department of Justice investigations while maintaining a dialogue with government officials to avoid infractions, has earned the company the honor of top legal department among large companies. Gilead faced off against the world’s fifthlargest pharmaceutical company this year to defend its rights to license and sell a successful hepatitis C treatment. Before that, Gilead had remained rather untouched by litigation. “Until about 2008, we really didn’t have any litigation, so we didn’t have a litigation team,” said general counsel Brett Pletcher. That changed with the company’s purchase of Princeton, N.J.-based Pharmasset Inc. in 2011 for $11 billion. One of the companies that eyed Gilead after the purchase was Roche AG, which claimed it had exclusive rights to sofosbuvir, alleging the drug was partially developed under a decade-old contract agreement. An arbitration panel disagreed and ruled in favor of Gilead. Pletcher credits his in-house team and Stephen Neal, Cooley chairman and Palo Alto- based partner, for the victory. Along the litigation line, Gilead accrued several favorable settlements against generics companies. Gilead asserted its right to patent its hepatitis C treatment, Sovaldi, against Idenix Pharmaceuticals Inc., before the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and in Oslo, Norway. While defeating large suits and reaching beneficial settlements, Gilead also keeps up with Food and Drug Administration rules and regulations, maintaining a consistent dialogue with the government to avoid problems. Gilead has an enviable perfect record defending against possible Department of Justice investigations under the False Claims Act. The company has deflected three out of three potential fraud investigations by the DOJ. Pletcher said the company must be compliant on all levels, not just legal. The legal department’s 150 members—half of whom are attorneys—pair closely with various sectors inside the company. In the U.S. and Europe, Gilead has attorneys working directly with its sales teams to educate employees about what they can and can’t say when marketing its drugs to doctors. —David Ruiz 18 | NOVEMBER 17, 2014 DAILY AT WWW.THERECORDER.COM AN RECOGNITION EVENT CONGRATULATIONS California is a breeding ground for innovation in the delivery of legal services, with lawyers here creating everything from moneysaving software and processes to new ways of reaching underserved communities. Recorder editors have named 25 of the most interesting legal innovators, and will feature their work in a Dec. 8 special section and recognize their achievements at a Dec. 8 awards reception. DECEMBER 8 | 6-9pm | THE CITY CLUB | SAN FRANCISCO JULIO AVALOS - GitHub ROGER ROYSE - Royse Law Firm The GC’s legal department is open-sourcing its legalese. The founder’s online document system provides for automated, DIY documents, but requires attorney sign-off to release the docs. ITAI GURARI / ADAM HAHN - Judicata CRAIG JACOBY / MATT BARTUS / PETER WERNER Cooley Judicata’s founders have created a tool that turns unstructured case law into highly organized data. Championed by the three Bay Area partners, the Cooley GO site lets some-day clients get free advice, and generate basic business documents, on the fly. BRYON BRATCHER - Reed Smith Bratcher’s brain-child, Periscope, analyzes data to improve results and reduce document review costs. MARK RADCLIFFE - DLA Piper MICHAEL WARD - Morrison & Foerster The partner has been at the forefront of helping clients create corporate venture programs and drive innovation. The MoFo partner figures out new ways to protect valuable vegetables. SCOTT RECHTSCHAFFEN - Littler Mendelson ALLEN RODRIGUEZ / EVA HIBNICK - One400 The Littler chief knowledge officer has rolled out a series of tools that help employment clients flatten and predict compliance and litigation expenses. The co-founders boost legal tech startups with help in marketing, growth and client acquisition. RAY GALLO - Gallo LLP NOREEN FARRELL / JOELLE EMERSON / MONALI SHETH Equal Rights Advocates The firm founder developed software to ease the mass handling of claims in a post-Dukes world. ERA staff and attorneys are bringing scale to sexual harassment legal help, training more than 700 people at 21 organizations to aid would-be claimants. RON DOLIN - Stanford Law School He’s leading a movement to use legal technology and design to improve access to justice in underserved communities. JENNIFER HAGLE - Sidley Austin The Sidley Austin partner mentors female attorneys on social media use, co-authoring papers and developing the building blocks of their practices. JOSH BECKER - Lex Machina The legal tech CEO is leading the way in leveraging data in litigation. DAVID FAIGMAN / MARSHA COHEN Lawyers for America / UC-Hastings College of the Law GERARD VON HOFFMANN / BRYAN WAHL Knobbe Martens Olson & Bear These professors have created a new fellowship platform for law students. The partners collaborate on KnobbeMedical, a portal to launch new medical device technologies. GREG NITZKOWSKI - Paul Hastings The managing partner helped institute Matter Management, which guides lawyers down the most efficient paths and has helped improve realization rates. ROBIN FELDMAN - UC-Hastings College of the Law The Institute for Innovation Law director’s Startup Legal Garage offers free legal services while providing law students real world experience. JANELLE ORSI - Sustainable Economies Law Center The nonprofit chief’s Resilient Communities Legal Cafe offers pro bono legal advice to small businesses at the heart of the sharing economy. DANIEL LEWIS - Ravel Law Inc. More than 5,000 attorneys use the founder’s technology to reduce time spent searching for cases. E. JULIE LEE - eBay Inc. The legal program manager streamlined eBay’s RFP process for more transparency and cost predictability. EUGENE BLACKARD - Archer Norris PLC The managing partner launched a client-service makeover that all but did away with the billable hour. GARRY MATHIASON - Littler Mendelson The employment partner is building a robotics and artificial intelligence group for the not-so-far-off future. KEVIN JAKEL - Unified Patents The CEO has put a new spin on the old patent-pool plan. CARRIE LEROY - Skadden Arps More than 2,000 high school students have participated in the Skadden counsel’s program to prevent damaging social media practices. DAILY AT WWW.THERECORDER.COM NOVEMBER 17, 2014 CALIFORNIA CHAPTER The Academy is pleased to recognize 40 professionals in Northern California for Excellence in the field of Alternative Dispute Resolution, including... John B. Bates, Jr. San Francisco (415) 774-2614 Norman Brand San Francisco (415) 982-7172 Ernest C. Brown San Francisco (800) 832-6946 Barbara S. Bryant Oakland (510) 558-0600 Dana Curtis Sausalito (415) 331-5158 Paul J. Dubow San Francisco (415) 495-6308 Katherine L. Gallo Foster City (650) 571-1011 Ruth V. Glick Burlingame (650) 344-2144 Urs M. Laeuchli San Francisco (415) 670-9602 Chris P. Lavdiotis Oakland (510) 433-2600 James R. Madison Menlo Park (650) 614-0160 Kenneth M. Malovos Sacramento/Bay Area (916) 974-8600 Douglas E. Noll Clovis (800) 785-4487 Susan H. Nycum Portola Valley (650) 851-3304 Richard Phelps Oakland (510) 612-0989 Malcolm Sher Danville (925) 906-0990 Robert M. Smith San Francisco (415) 242-9800 Maurice L. Zilber San Anselmo (415) 713-1914 Please visit our complete statewide California Chapter roster of members at SmartPhone Link www.CaliforniaNeutrals.org To access our FREE National Directory of over 900 Top-Rated Mediators & Arbitrators in all 50 states, visit www.NADN.org The National Academy of Distinguished Neutrals is an invite only association of over 900 mediators and arbitrators who have substantial experience in the resolution of commercial and civil disputes. Membership is limited to only the most experienced and in-demand neutrals within each state, as approved by local defense (DRI) & plaintiff (AAJ) bar assocs. For more info, please visit www.NADN.org/about | 19 12th Annual 20 | NOVEMBER 17, 2014 DAILY AT WWW.THERECORDER.COM Las t Ch t o R anc Ca l l: eg e 415 is .49 ter 0. GENERAL COUNSEL CONFERENCE WEST COAST November 18, 2014 1 04 1 Four Seasons San Francisco, CA The General Counsel West Conference will take place on November 18, 2014, at the Four Seasons Hotel in San Francisco. This one-day event is designed to provide GCs with cutting edge information regarding key general counsel functions including legal department management, intellectual property strategies and proactive options to data protection. These ongoing corporate and legal challenges will be analyzed in light of how to identify and apply solutions that foster efficiency, compliance, and brand protection. THIS ISN’T YOUR TYPICAL CLE EVENT This full day of substantive content is broken down into three different pods addressing corporate counsel’s most pressing questions about legal department leadership and daily management. Each topic will include breakout roundtables for attendees from emerging and large companies so audience members will be able to discuss relevant issues with those in similar stages of the business life cycle. KEYNOTE SPEAKER KEYNOTE SPEAKER Eleanor Lacey General Counsel The 8am-6pm schedule includes breakfast, lunch, & cocktail reception. Complimentary Registration for In-House Counsel http://at.law.com/gcwest CONTACT US • For sponsorship opportunities contact Al Liberty at 212-457-9486 • For programming inquiries, or if you would like to be considered as a discussion group lead at an emerging or large company breakout, contact Molly Miller at mmiller@alm.com or Krishna Patel at kpatel@alm.com SPONSORS PRESENTED BY ASSOCIATION PARTNER
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