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Sue Kench, KWM’s global head, to step down

Sue Kench, who was the first woman to head up one of the “big six” law firms Down Under when she assumed the role of Australian managing partner at King & Wood Mallesons a decade ago, is set to step down from her current role as global chief executive for the BigLaw player at the end of this year.

user iconJerome Doraisamy 18 October 2024 Big Law
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Following media reporting earlier this week, a KWM spokesperson has confirmed with Lawyers Weekly that the global chief executive of the BigLaw firm, Sue Kench, will be stepping down at the end of her second term, in December 2024.

A statement on Kench’s departure from the role will be made “in due course”, the spokesperson added.

 
 

As reported by The Australian Financial Review, the firm’s global management committee is yet to decide when it will appoint a replacement.

Kench first became a partner in the real estate practice of legacy Mallesons Stephen Jaques in 1996 and has since held several management and leadership positions in the firm over the past two decades.

She became the first female managing partner of KWM back in mid-2013 (and the first woman to lead one of Australia’s so-called “big six” law firms) and then was appointed as the firm’s global head in mid-2017. Since then – in her current position as global chief executive – she has led the development and implementation of the firm’s international strategy and is responsible for integrating the firm’s international operations, according to KWM’s website.

In mid-2020, Kench appeared on The Lawyers Weekly Show to discuss the response of BigLaw firms to the global COVID-19 pandemic and reflected on how her mantra of “Not too soon, not too late” guided KWM into making timely, considered decisions in response to the pandemic and its broader impacts.

In the same episode, Kench argued that Australia has been a big beneficiary of globalisation, and firms at the big end of town must continue to look outward as the nation pivots in a post-pandemic world.

“It’s about taking opportunities. Know there’s no one person who’s the smartest person in the room, bring great teams together, make decisions and move on,” she said at the time.

“Each of the global law firms will have their different strategies and their priorities, but ours is certainly one which is very centred and grounded on growth, which is expected to come from Asia, and we feel we’re very well positioned for it.”

MORE TO COME.

Jerome Doraisamy

Jerome Doraisamy

Jerome Doraisamy is the editor of Lawyers Weekly. A former lawyer, he has worked at Momentum Media as a journalist on Lawyers Weekly since February 2018, and has served as editor since March 2022. He is also the host of all five shows under The Lawyers Weekly Podcast Network, and has overseen the brand's audio medium growth from 4,000 downloads per month to over 60,000 downloads per month, making The Lawyers Weekly Show the most popular industry-specific podcast in Australia. Jerome is also the author of The Wellness Doctrines book series, an admitted solicitor in NSW, and a board director of Minds Count.

You can email Jerome at: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.