Gareth Lambe has joined Johnson Hana as a strategic advisor. He will also become a shareholder in the company.
Gareth is perhaps best known as the former head of Meta Ireland where he worked for eleven years, also holding the position of Vice President of International Business Planning and Operations at the company. Gareth was responsible for scaling revenue and driving the strategy and operations for the Facebook sales team. Meta’s employee base grew from 300 to 3,000 during his tenure, with an additional 6,000 people supporting its Irish services.
His expertise in guiding Meta through this phase of their growth will be invaluable for Johnson Hana as it scales its operations.
Gareth also spent six years with the American Chamber of Commerce, sitting on the board as well as taking on the role of President in 2021. Prior to joining Meta, Gareth was a director of PayPal, was part of the start–up team with Pigsback.com, and worked in brand marketing with Pernod Ricard.
Commenting on the announcement Gareth said:
“I am excited by the possibility of scaling the Johnson Hana model to meet the needs of both domestic and multinational clients. The legal needs of multinational clients largely ignore jurisdictions and are common across all sectors. Johnson Hana’s talent model, as well its insightful use of data, has already proven to be a compelling proposition for some of the biggest and best companies in the world and there is considerable potential to grow that reach further.”
Dan Fox, CEO and Co-Founder of Johnson Hana said:
“We’re at an exciting time for Johnson Hana. We’re expanding our already impressive client roster across a range of industries, including technology. So having Gareth’s input on how to most effectively communicate our services to our clients and prospective clients will help us to accelerate that growth.”
The announcement of Gareth joining Johnson Hana was reported in The Currency this morning:
Is Johnson Hana trying to take work from traditional law firms? “It is not competing with big firms on advisory, which is a huge part of what they do,” Lambe said. “It is very specialised, process, non-bespoke work like commercial contracting, data request work etc. I think big firms might see Johnson Hana as a threat as it might move into advisory but that is categorically not the plan. Forward-looking firms will see Johnson Hana as a potential partner, not a threat.”
Lambe said artificial intelligence was something Johnson Hana was embracing, not fearing. “It is a tailwind not a headwind to the business,” Lambe said. “Johnson Hana is already using AI technology. They are probably ahead of many legacy law firms. AI is something we are going to lean into more.”
Read the full article in The Currency here: https://thecurrency.news/articles/124119/forward-looking-firms-will-see-johnson-hana-as-a-potential-partner-not-a-threat/
Comments