BMI, Bench Press, and Law Firm KPIs: Tracking the Metrics That Actually Matter
Watch the YouTube version of this episode HERE This Morning Meeting episode uses Tyson’s fitness journey and a “slightly high” BMI score as a metaphor for how easily law firm owners can obsess over the wrong numbers and miss the ones that actually drive freedom and profitability. Tyson walks through the gap between vanity metrics and meaningful metrics, from BMI vs body fat to revenue vs profit, and shows why some of the most celebrated law firm numbers actually tell you almost nothing about the health of your practice. You’ll hear how his firm used one primary metric, average fee, to dramatically increase case value over 15 years, and why lead volume, signed cases, and employee headcount often create the illusion of progress while hiding serious problems underneath. Tyson then reframes success around better questions: What if “growth” meant less chaos, fewer fires, and fewer hours at the office, while the right numbers still go up? He shares practical metrics to consider, like profit per case or team, qualified leads, and owner work hours per week, and challenges you to build a simple scoreboard that fits your firm instead of copying someone else’s dashboard. If you’ve ever felt proud of your top-line revenue but unsure whether your firm is actually working for your life, this episode will help you sort the numbers that really matter from the ones that just look good on paper. Highlights 00:00 – Tyson shares his “cutting phase” story and how a “slightly high” BMI score sparked this conversation about tracking the right numbers in your firm. 01:45 – BMI vs body fat: why one metric labels him “overweight” while another shows he’s in great shape, and how that mirrors misleading metrics in law firms. 02:20 – Revenue vs profit: why a firm making one million in revenue might still be in trouble, and why profit tells a much clearer story 03:30 – “Not everything that is measured matters…” Tyson unpacks the famous quote and applies it to the mountains of data most firms track but never use. 04:10 – Average fee as the “main number”: how tracking this one metric took his firm from $7,400 to about $25,000 per case over 15 years. 07:10 – The illusion of progress: Tyson explains how revenue, lead volume, signed cases, and employee headcount can become pure vanity metrics. 08:55 – Redefining growth as less chaos: exploring hours worked per week as a more honest signal of whether your firm is truly serving your life. 09:35 – The MaxLawCon Jason Selk challenge: rethinking success as leaving later, arriving earlier, and rejecting “first in, last out” as your main value metric. 11:15 – Metrics that actually matter: profit per case, profit per team, qualified leads, and ideal-client cases as better levers for high-performing firms. 12:25 – Keeping the main thing the main thing: why every firm needs one core number to focus the team and filter out the noise of vanity metrics. Resources: Join the Guild Membership Subscribe to the Maximum Lawyer Youtube Channel Follow us on Instagram Join the Facebook Group Follow the Facebook Page Follow us on LinkedIn