Capital Thinking Magazine  BUSINESS, FINANCE, POLITICS—AND THE LAW


www.capitalthinkingmagazine.com

Search:   

Print This IssuePRINT PDF     SUBSCRIBE

 

Q&ABERT CORNELISON  HALLIBURTON


Bret Cornelison - HalliburtonA SENSE OF BALANCE

For more and more executives, globalization is a fact of life—but as general counsel at Halliburton, the international energy company, Bert Cornelison Jr. has probably had more experience with it than most. Here, Cornelison discusses the legal and business challenges of doing business worldwide and offers some insights into how companies and executives can contend with it.


“There was a time when things could wait until tomorrow. Now it’s always tomorrow somewhere, and things won’t wait.”


How has globalization changed day-to-day life for you?

Globalization makes things more complicated, and in my area it has increased complexity in a couple of ways. One, we simply have more lawyers in more jurisdictions. Halliburton operates in about 70 countries, and in each country, we’re basically operating under two legal regimes at once—the local laws and U.S. laws, because we are a U.S. company. Second, there’s increasing regulation, especially with Sarbanes-Oxley and all the compliance procedures we have to go through across the company worldwide.

How do you balance things across that complicated patchwork?

For U.S. multinationals, the makeup of the law department used to be fairly U.S.- centric. Now, we tend to have what we refer to as a nationalized workforce, which means we try to have people local
to the area that we operate in. That way, we have lawyers who know their own work environments, their own laws and the nuances of local customs. But we also have to make sure that we instill in them an appreciation of the U.S. regulatory structure. So we communicate a lot— everyone is connected via computer. We also bring all our lawyers from around the world to the U.S. on a regular basis for symposia on the latest global and U.S. legal issues. And we send lawyers from the U.S. overseas to conduct training sessions for our people in various aspects of U.S. law, such as antitrust and FCPA [Foreign Corrupt Practices Act] issues. So you have to work actively to balance the global and local perspectives.

How has globalization affected the way you work with the business side?

Speed and complexity have increased, so today, our legal department is highly decentralized. Most of my lawyers are out with business groups, where they can provide immediate feedback. For example, we put our intellectual property lawyers right with our inventors, where they participate in brainstorming sessions about new products. The lawyers can help the inventors fine-tune their ideas to make the patent more valuable. This helps make sure the innovation has the strongest possible legal protection and is useful to the business, and it saves time. In a global business, time-to-market is key.

What can business executives do to make the best use of the legal team in this environment?

The business folks need to get their issues to the legal team as early as they can. Things work out most efficiently, most cost-effectively, and with the least disruption when you get legal input as early as possible. To some extent, Sarbanes-Oxley has helped here because companies have become accustomed to having issues vetted early on for compliance. For their part, law departments need to make sure they are being proactive and getting feedback to the business in a timely fashion.

You mentioned balancing global and local considerations? How about work-life balance?

That’s a real issue for executives in a global company because there is a temptation to stay plugged in on a continual basis. It could be 11 at night and you get a BlackBerry message from Jakarta with a problem. That is a temptation you have to fight— but I can’t hold myself out as a standard in this regard. I would usually decide that if I respond, I’ll lose 30 minutes of sleep. But if I don’t, they’ll have eight hours of lost time. So it can be difficult to draw those lines. There was a time when things could usually wait until tomorrow. Now it’s always tomorrow somewhere, and things won’t wait. CT

 - top of page -

Patton Boggs LLP


Home    |   COVER STORY  |  FEATURE STORY  |   Privacy Policy    |    Feedback    |    Subscribe    |    Back Issues   

Copyright ©2007 Patton Boggs LLP   All rights reserved.  Capital Thinking Magazine