Like a local: International firms’ changing approach to Indonesia

A Jakarta-based foreign legal adviser shares insights into international firms’ changing approach to the Indonesian legal market.

Allens partner and Jakarta-based foreign legal advisor David Holme shares insights into international firms’ changing approach to the Indonesian legal market.
 
“One of the things that attracted me to working in Indonesia was the dynamic and developing nature of the legal market,” said Allens partner David Holme, who has been working in Jakarta since 2007.
 
Since he first arrived in Indonesia, Holme has seen a number of new entrants to the local market and watched firms’ emphasis shift from a fly-in-fly-out model to something more permanent. “There are a number of new entrants that have established relationships with existing Indonesian firms and even some who’ve helped sponsor or help set up new Indonesian firms that they cooperate with, particularly amongst the Magic Circle firms and even some of the big US firms,” he said.
 
“Where previously firms thought it was possible just to do it from offshore and fly-in-fly-out and work with a range of Indonesian firms, I think increasingly people are looking at providing really integrated service across the region and that includes people on the ground in Indonesia.”
 
From Holme’s perspective, it has become increasingly difficult for firms to say that they understand the Indonesian market when they are purely based offshore. However, he said that succeeding in Indonesia does not simply come down to a local presence.
 
“I think equally you need to be able to leverage the offshore resources and the specialist experience because the development of the legal market in Indonesia is such that there’s not yet specialist expertise in a number of areas,” he said.
 
“You need to be able to leverage that expertise that you have in the network offshore to bring the two together: the local knowledge and the local connections and the specialist expertise. Then you do need to have people offshore that have an eye to Indonesia, that have a focus and see it as part of their practice, but part of a broader practice because this market doesn’t demand full-time specialists in certain areas.”
 
 
 

Recent articles & video

Ashurst lends a hand to Envest on $2.3bn proposed pickup of PSC Insurance Group

Thomson Geer absorbs Perth boutique

Spencer West makes Australian debut

UK Solicitors Regulation Authority warns law firms against 'mis-selling' claims practices

California Bar Exam pass rate climbs despite challenging conditions at the testing site

Report reveals top US law schools for public interest and government jobs

Most Read Articles

Gender pay gap continues to persist: legal salary survey

Chamberlains calls for class-action participants against Isuzu, Mazda

A&O Shearman merger to strengthen cross-practice collaboration

Kain Lawyers assists My Care Solution on sale to Healthcare Australia