Category: CEELM PR

  • Dust Off the Tux: Important Deal of the Year Awards and Banquet Update

    Dust Off the Tux: Important Deal of the Year Awards and Banquet Update

    The deadline is now retreating into the past, and the Shortlist Panels are now reviewing and evaluating a record 207 submissions for Deal of the Year Awards. While they complete their assigned task, it’s time for you to do yours, and sign up for tickets to the 2019 CEE Legal Matters Annual Banquet and Deal of the Year Awards Ceremony, to be held this year on March 28, 2019, at the Marriott Hotel in Budapest.

    The submissions were made for 21 different CEE markets, with a remarkable 26 different submissions for the Czech Republic and 22 in Ukraine. A summary of all nominations will appear in the upcoming special Year Kick-Off issue of the CEE Legal Matters magazine.

    Winners of the prestigious DOTY awards will be announced at the annual banquet and award ceremony in March. Last year’s celebration, described in detail in the special issue of the CEE Legal Matters magazine that followed it, was a blast. To attend this year’s event, contact david.stuckey@ceelm.com or gintaute.neverauskaite@ceelm.com directly. Indeed, to reward those who are most eager to come, we have extended the Early Bird price for tickets for an extra two weeks, until January 18th, 2019. Until then, tickets can be bought for EUR 450 (+VAT, where applicable), and companion tickets for only EUR 250. After January 18th, the price will go up to EUR 550 (+VAT) and EUR 300. The price for a whole 8-person table is EUR 2000 until January 18, and EUR 3000 after. 

    Don’t wait. Buy your tickets now, and claim your spot at the 2019 CEE Legal Matters Annual Banquet and Deal of the Year Award Banquet — the biggest party in CEE.

  • Last Day for Deal of the Year Submissions

    Last Day for Deal of the Year Submissions

    One last reminder: Today, January 4, 2019, is the very last day to send in submissions for 2018 CEE Deal of the Year Awards in each CEE jurisdiction.

    As previously announced, all proper submissions made on the authorized and mandatory form available here that are received before the close of business on January 4, 2019, will be eligible for consideration and sent out to our juries next week. Once their votes are tabulated, the three-deal shortlists in each country will then be forwarded to the Final Selection Committee, responsible for choosing the final award winners, to be announced at the CEE Legal Matters Annual Banquet and Deal of the Year Awards Ceremony at the Marriott Hotel in Budapest on March 28, 2019.

    More information about the history of the awards and last year’s winners, the methodology by which winners are selected, and the way to make formal submissions can be found here.

    So if you haven’t yet submitted your deals for consideration, delay no longer, and send them in today. Today.

    Because tomorrow will be too late.

  • 2018 Deal of the Year Award Deadline is Almost Here

    2018 Deal of the Year Award Deadline is Almost Here

    The presents are unwrapped, the ribbons put away, and the trees are coming down, but the biggest present of 2018 — the CEE Legal Matters Deal of the Year Award — is still out there, still waiting to be claimed at the March 28, 2019 Deal of the Year Awards Banquet in Budapest. 

    But remember: The deadline for submissions is this Friday!

    As announced back on November 20, the deadline for submissions is COB on Friday, January 4th. All relevant details, including the mandatory submission form, can be found here

    We’re ready. The awards are ready. And the voters are ready. Don’t leave us hanging. Send us your submissions now!

    And don’t forget, the deadline for the table of deals submissions is coming up soon: January 18, 2019. Full information on how to make sure your deals are included in our annual deal list can be found here.

    Oh. And Happy New Year, from all of us at CEE Legal Matters.

  • A Look At 2018: Our Most Popular Articles

    A Look At 2018: Our Most Popular Articles

    With 2018 about to come to a close and we’re turning our attention to our plans for the next year, here’s a quick summary of the articles that you, our readers, turned to most often in this year. 

    Most Read About Deals and Cases

    1. LW, Schoenherr, W&C, K&N, BDK, Boyanov, DGKV, and Allen & Overy Advise on Telenor Sale and Financing
    2. Slaughter and May, Freshfields, LKT, and CMS Advise on the Sale of Liberty Global Operations to Vodafone
    3. Noerr, Nobles, and Ellex Advise Union Tank Eckstein in Acquisition of Majority Stake in Timex Card
    4. Paksoy Advises CS Wind on Acquisition of Ege Tower
    5. CMS and Wolf Theiss Advise on Largest Deal Ever in Bulgarian Automotive Industry
    6. Dentons Advises Skanska on Nowa Fabryczna Building Sale in Poland
    7. KSB, A&O, Paksoy, Boyanov & Co., and Tsvetkova Bebov Komarevski Among Firms Advising on Energo-Pro Eurobond Issue
    8. SMM Legal and Weil Advise on PKN Orlen and Lotos Group Merger
    9. Binder Groesswang, Clifford Chance, and Herbert Smith Freehills Advise on Emirates NBD Bank Acquisition of DenizBank
    10. Wolf Theiss Advises Hisense on Takeover of Gorenje

    Most Read About Moves

    1. Weil’s Budapest Office Flies to Bird & Bird
    2. D’Ornano and Team Leave Jeantet to Establish New CEE Firm
    3. Ece Gursoy Becomes New CLO at Global Ports Holding
    4. Former Birsel Lawyer to Head Istanbul Office of Diri Legal
    5. Serap Zuvin Law Offices Merges with Cakmak in Istanbul
    6. Three New Partners at Bener Law Office
    7. Russian Lawyer Alexander Rymko Joins Harneys in Cyprus
    8. Tolga Ismen Becomes Chief Legal Counsel at Sisecam Group
    9. Karanovic & Nikolic Promotes New Senior Partner And Six Partners
    10. Yelda Yasarturk Becomes Head of Legal, Middle East & Africa at GSK Consumer Healthcare

    Most Read Buzzes

    1. The Buzz in Turkey: Interview with Begum Incecam of Kolcuoglu Demirkan Kocakli
    2. The Buzz in Bulgaria: Interview with Diana Dimova of Kinstellar
    3. The Buzz in Croatia: Interview with Mario Krka of Divjak, Topic & Bahtijarevic
    4. The Buzz in Slovenia: Interview with Gregor Famira of CMS Ljubljana
    5. The Buzz in Ukraine: Interview with Mykola Stetsenko of Avellum
    6. The Buzz in Hungary: Interview with Szabolcs Mestyan of Lakatos, Koves and Partners
    7. The Buzz in Latvia: Interview with Eva Berlaus of Sorainen
    8. The Buzz in Lithuania: Interview with Dovile Burgiene of Ellex Valiunas
    9. The Buzz in Lithuania: Interview with Irmantas Norkus of Cobalt
    10. The Buzz in Montenegro: Interview with Luka Popovic of BDK Advokati

    Most Read Briefings

    Most Popular Other Articles

  • Christmas is Here, And So Is The December Issue!

    Christmas is Here, And So Is The December Issue!

    No, Santa hasn’t finished yet. In fact, just in time for Christmas, the December 2018 issue of the CEE Legal Matters magazine appears underneath your e-Christmas trees!

    Subscribers, who are able to access the electronic version of the issue, will discover that the issue contains:

    • Across the Wire: The Summary of Deals in CEE 
    • The Buzz Across CEE  
    • Summary of Lateral Moves and Appointments Across the Region  
    • Marketing Law Firm Marketing: Are You Being Treated Fairly?  
    • Strange Bedfellows: Austrian Law Firms Join Forces for Innovation Hub  
    • The Cyber Challenge in CEE  
    • Hugh Owen: One Year On  
    • Market Spotlight on Romania  
    • From Baby Steps to Full Sprint: Romanian Start-Ups Review the Process  
    • In Its DNA: An Interview with Head of Deloitte Legal in CEE  
    • Bending Reality and Scaling Up: Maravela ⎮Asociatii’s First Five Years  
    • Inside Out: Adina Calfa-Dudoiu of Rosa Montana Gold Corporation  
    • Inside Insight: Damen’s Take-Over of Participation in Daewoo Mangalia Shipyard  
    • Expat on the Market: Interview with Joerg Menzer of Noerr  
    • Experts Review: Tax

    The publication of the December 2018 issue of the magazine means that the special October 2018 issue on China has been moved from behind the paywall and made available to everyone (available here in e-reader format and here in pdf). As subscribers already know, the contents of that issue include:

    If you would like to sign up for a subscription to the CEE Legal Matters magazine yourself, you may do so here.

  • A Post-Thanksgiving Feast for the Senses: The November Issue of CEE Legal Matters Magazine is Here!

    A Post-Thanksgiving Feast for the Senses: The November Issue of CEE Legal Matters Magazine is Here!

    Thanksgiving is an American holiday, not a European one. Still, the concept is sound. So give thanks, for the November 2018 issue of the CEE Legal Matters magazine is out now!

    As a result, subscribers can access the electronic version of the issues on the CEE Legal Matters website (here), while they wait for the hard copies to make their way from the printer to their doorsteps. Either way, they will enjoy:

    • In Memoriam: Edward Johns
    • Guest Editorial by Roman Pecenka, Partner, PRK Partners
    • Across the Wire: The Summary of Deals in CEE
    • The Buzz Across CEE 
    • Summary of Lateral Moves and Appointments Across the Region 
    • Special Article: Five Years and Counting: Dentons Continues to Move Forward
    • Bajtárs: Comrades and Colleagues at Wolf Theiss Hungary
    • From Lawyer to Lawmaker: An Interview with Kosovo’s Korab Sejdiu
    • Inside Insight with Ivan Kravtsov of Carlsberg Ukraine
    • Market Spotlight on Ukraine
    • Guest Editorial by Armen Khachaturyan, Senior Partner, Asters
    • Ukrainian Round Table: A Market Coming Together 
    • Expat on the Market: Interview with Adam Mycyk of Dentons
    • Market Snapshots
    • Inside Out: Mriya Agro Restructuring and Sale
    • Experts Review: Dispute Resolution

    Of course, the publication of the November 2018 issue of the magazine means that September issue has been moved from behind the paywall and is now freely available to everyone (here in e-reader format and here in pdf). As subscribers already know, that issue contained:

    • Guest Editorial by Gjorgji Georgievski, Managing Partner, ODI Law Macedonia
    • Across the Wire: The Summary of Deals in CEE
    • The Buzz Across CEE 
    • Summary of Lateral Moves and Appointments Across the Region 
    • Special Article: Readiness is All: Schoenherr Romania Helps Companies Comply with Competition Authority Guidelines
    • Marketing Law Firm Marketing: The Biggest Difference
    • Inside Insight with Maxim Nikitin, Chief Legal Officer of Atol Group in Russia
    • Special Article: Chasing Czech Traces in Foreign Places: JSK Partner Roman Kramarik Makes Solo Flight Around the Globe
    • Market Spotlight on Poland
    • Guest Editorial by Jerzy Baehr, Managing Partner, Wiercinski, Kwiecinski, Baehr
    • Special Article: Saving the Snitch: Protecting Whistle-Blowers in Poland
    • Expat on the Market: Interview with Andrew Kozlowski of CMS
    • Market Snapshots
    • Inside Out: The Polish Development Fund’s Acquisition of PESA Bydgoszcs
    • Experts Review: Competition

    To stay ahead of the competition and register for a subscription to the CEE Legal Matters magazine yourself, you may do so here.

  • CEE Legal Matters Magazine’s 2019 Editorial Calendar is Here

    CEE Legal Matters Magazine’s 2019 Editorial Calendar is Here

    By now, our regular readers know that each issue of the CEE Legal Matters magazine has a special “Market Spotlight” section on a particular CEE jurisdiction, and each contains an “Experts Review” feature, presenting articles from one firm in each jurisdiction on a specific (and rotating) subject. So potential contributors to the CEE Legal Matters magazine wanting to plan their contributions can celebrate: The 2019 Editorial Calendar is out today!

    And there are a few elements of next year’s calendar worth particular attention. For instance, while  each regular issue of the magazine this year only had one Market Spotlight focus, issues next year will have two, doubling the opportunities for contribution and coverage. And whereas in past years Experts Review has focused on particular practice areas, in 2019 the feature will focus on particular industries. Finally, whereas in 2018 our Special Foreign Focus issue was dedicated to China, the 2019 Foreign Focus will fall on South Africa.

    • February: Special Issue: 2019 Kick-Off
    • March: Market Spotlight on Turkey and Bulgaria —  Experts Review: Automotive/Manufacturing
    • April: Special Issue: Corporate Counsel Handbook
    • May: Market Spotlight on Hungary and Slovenia — Experts Review: Energy
    • June: Market Spotlight on Romania and Moldova — Experts Review: Agriculture
    • July: Market Spotlight on Austria and Albania — Experts Review: Pharma/Life Science
    • August: Special Issue: GC Summit and Deal of the Year Awards
    • September: Market Spotlight on Ukraine and Greece — Experts Review: TMT
    • October: Market Spotlight on Czech Republic and Slovakia — Experts Review: Banking
    • November: Special Issue: South Africa 
    • December: Market Spotlight on the Balkans — Experts Review: Real Estate
    • January: Market Spotlight on Poland and Russia — Experts Review: Logistics/Transportation/Shipping

    Readers who want specific information about opportunities to contribute to 2019 issues of the CEE Legal Matters magazine can find it, and additional information about our readership, website visitors, and much more, on the 2019 CEE Legal Matters Rate Card, also released today and available here. Check it out.

    Finally, if you would like to join the many thousands of lawyers across Central and Eastern Europe who receive and eagerly devour each issue of the CEE Legal Matters magazine, information about subscribing can be found here

  • Checking In on China: Special October 2018 Issue of CEE Legal Matters Out Now

    Checking In on China: Special October 2018 Issue of CEE Legal Matters Out Now

    The Special October 2018 issue of the CEE Legal Matters magazine — online now for subscribers — is unique, as, for the first time, we direct our attention to the significance of investment and business coming from another part of the world: China.

    Yes, China: The Red Dragon. The Middle Kingdom. The most populous country in the world, and an ever-increasing source of investment and financing across Europe and around the world. 

    Thus, as subscribers will discover, the special issue of the magazine contains:

    • Across the Wire: The Summary of Deals in CEE
    • The Buzz Across CEE 
    • Summary of Lateral Moves and Appointments Across the Region 
    • The Lighter Side: Two Bar Associations Fight for Czechoslovakian Dominance on the Basketball Court
    • Interview with ECCE Founder Tomas Hulle
    • Smoothing the Silk Road: A China-CEE Round Table
    • Five Essays by Chinese Legal Experts
    • China-CEE Investment Since 2015: A Primer

    The publication of the October 2018 issue of the magazine means that the August 2018 issue has been moved from behind the paywall and is freely available to everyone (available here in e-reader format and here in pdf). As subscribers already know, the contents of that issue include:

    • Guest Editorial by Alexandra Doytchinova of Schoenherr Bulgaria
    • Across the Wire: The Summary of Deals in CEE
    • The Buzz Across CEE 
    • Summary of Lateral Moves and Appointments Across the Region 
    • Special Article: Tackling Turkey’s Credit Gap with Gender Bonds
    • The Corner Office: Mentors
    • Inside Insight with Ondrej Plesmid, Chief Legal Officer at King’s Casino, and Vera Kolesnik, Legal Director at Nestle
    • Special Article: Acting in Alliance: A Look at Act Legal’s Growing Footprint
    • Market Spotlight on Russia
    • Guest Editorial by Polina Lyadnova of Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton
    • Special Article: A Blessing and a Curse: Sanctions a Mixed Bag for Foreign and Domestic Firms in Russia
    • Expat on the Market: Interview with Thomas Mundry of Noerr
    • Market Snapshots
    • Inside Out: Uralkali’s 2018 Financing
    • Experts Review: Banking & Finance

    If you would like to sign up for a subscription to the CEE Legal Matters magazine yourself, you may do so here.

  • Cooler And Cooler: September Issue is Here!

    Cooler And Cooler: September Issue is Here!

    If our publication of the August issue of the CEE Legal Matters made a hot month hotter, the news that we have published the almost-impossibly hip September issue of the magazine will make a cool month even cooler. So be it. The tremendous September 2018 issue is already bringing a soothing breath of fresh air to our printer’s offices, and hard copies will soon by sliding their way to to our valued subscribers. 

    In the meantime, those subscribers who are unable to wait for those hard copies can access electronically on the CEE Legal Matters website (here). As for the rest of you … I’m afraid you’ll have to wait for room temperature to set in in late November. 

    As subscribers will discover, the issue contains:

    • Guest Editorial by Gjorgji Georgievski, Managing Partner, ODI Law Macedonia
    • Across the Wire: The Summary of Deals in CEE
    • The Buzz Across CEE 
    • Summary of Lateral Moves and Appointments Across the Region 
    • Special Article: Readiness is All: Schoenherr Romania Helps Companies Comply with Competition Authority Guidelines
    • Marketing Law Firm Marketing: The Biggest Difference
    • Inside Insight with Maxim Nikitin, Chief Legal Officer of Atol Group i Russia
    • Special Article: Chasing Czech Traces in Foreign Places: JSK Partner Roman Kramarik Makes Solo Flight Around the Globe
    • Market Spotlight on Poland
    • Guest Editorial by Jerzy Baehr, Managing Partner, Wiercinski, Kwiecinski, Baehr
    • Special Article: Saving the Snitch: Protecting Whistle-Blowers in Poland
    • Expat on the Market: Interview with Andrew Kozlowski of CMS
    • Market Snapshots
    • Inside Out: The Polish Development Fund’s Acquisition of PESA Bydgoszcs
    • Experts Review: Competition

    The publication of the September 2018 issue of the magazine means that the special July 2018 issue, focusing on the 2018 GC Summit, 2018 Dealer’s Choice Conference, and 2018 Deal of the Year Awards Banquet, has been moved from behind the paywall and is now freely available to everyone (available here in e-reader format and here in pdf). 

    If you would like to demonstrate your own coolness by signing up for a subscription to the CEE Legal Matters magazine yourself, you may do so here.

  • Scaling the Summit: The 4th Annual CEE GC Summit

    Scaling the Summit: On the 7th of June, less than eight hours after saying final good-byes to the private practitioners attending the Deal of the Year Awards Banquet, CEE Legal Matters greeted the hundred plus in-house counsel attending the fourth annual regional General Counsel Summit, located this year at the Congress Center of Prague’s Czech National Bank.

    The GC Summit provides a two-day forum for General Counsels across industries, sectors, and jurisdictions to exchange information about best practices, review strategies for effective time and personal management, consider methodologies for dealing with boards and external counsels, receive compliance updates, and much more. Of course, the event also provides an extremely valuable opportunity to meet with peers, and learn about shared challenges, frustrations, and responsibilities, while making valuable new connections and establishing new friendships. 

    The panels and presentations of the Summit covered a wide scale of topics, focusing on Day One around questions such as how to create greater efficiency for the in-house legal function, how to build up the in-house legal function from scratch, and how to build up a successful compliance culture.

    “I was honored to participate in the CEE GC Summit for the first time,” commented Tom Hammack, Chief Counsel at the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, who gave the Keynote Presentation on “Creating Greater Efficiencies in the In-House Legal Function” to lead off Day One of the event. “Given the ever-increasing tightening of belts in in-house legal functions, in my presentation, I attempted to shed some light on what our large legal department is doing to address efficiency drives in the area of outside counsel and knowledge management, and some of the initial results of such campaigns.  I hoped it was of interest and benefit to attendees.”

    “Building up a legal department from scratch is one of the most challenging tasks an in-house lawyer can face,” said Edit Rosta, General Legal Counsel for 3M. “The idea of having an in-house legal department usually means that the business of the company has reached such a level of complexity where such activity is badly needed, but at the same time employees who have perhaps never worked with an internal lawyer may consider it as an unfriendly step the company takes in order to restrain their previous freedom in making business decisions.” According to Rosta, learning the rules of a company is time consuming, but she thinks the real challenge in creating a new in-house function is establishing a cooperative relationship with colleagues so that, within a short period of time, they are able to realize the enormous added value of a legal professional who speaks their language and understands their business from inside out. “Once this is done, the war is won, all the daily battles will be relatively easy to win – or lose, as the case may be.”

    One important challenge that General Counsels must accept is building up a successful compliance culture. The panel discussing that challenge touched upon topics like what budget is necessary to create and implement such compliance programs, ensuring business ownership for compliance, and the extent of the compliance counsel’s responsibility for the program. “In my speech I specifically mentioned that Compliance Counsels and General Counsels assuming the role of Legal and Compliance should involve themselves in business processes and should know the business targets in order to be able to challenge how the company will be achieving these targets,” explained Olga Ivanchenko, Senior Compliance Counsel at Oracle, adding that in her opinion, Compliance Counsels are not responsible for setting the compliance culture, but instead for promoting and facilitating the programs, educating the company’s workforce, and engaging in compliance discussions. “They help business leads enforce the compliance initiatives and remediate conduct which is not in line with the company policies.”

    When it came to the topic of how General Counsels can maximize the value of input from external counsel, Balazs Kokeny, Head of Legal at Nokia in Hungary said that if he had to sum up in one sentence, “external lawyers should at all times become the trusted business advisors of a General Counsel and should deliver tailor-made solutions to complex issues.”

    After a busy but meaningful day with eight presentations and three panel discussions, participants gathered for a reception and gala dinner at the Convent of St. Agnes of Bohemia, located in the center of Prague. In a medieval atmosphere, with gentle live music, attendees were able to engage with each other in a social setting, and – while enjoying some Czech delicacies – to the discuss the challenges of their profession, while kicking back and unwinding after a full day of sessions with a glass (or, for some, more) of wine. 

    The second day of the Summit started on the morning of the 8th with a special presentation by Sasha Borovik, CFO & General Counsel at the CloudEO startup on the impact of blockchain and cryptocurrency on companies and the ways General Counsels can keep up with the pace of innovation. “A year ago, the World Economic Forum in its white-paper identified the Distributed Ledger Technology – aka blockchain – as the platform for the next industrial revolution,” he said. “Not surprisingly, the DLT and the related business models are attracting attention. This is the time for businesses to experiment with blockchain.” He added that the rapid development of these tools is creating many challenges for in-house counsels as, similar to the Internet in the early days, blockchain remains largely unregulated and not widely understood. “Business leaders will be increasingly looking at their counsel, who should be ready to answer their calls,” he insisted. 

    Ioana Regenbogen, Head of Legal & Corporate Affairs at ING, Romania, agreed that over the next few years innovation and technology could indeed have a disruptive effect on the legal sector, even if much of the technology appears at the moment to have a relatively low level of maturity and sophistication. “However, innovation, transformative or not, may lead to better or faster legal services, save costs, and free up time for more strategic, higher-added value legal work,” she emphasized, adding that as a result, it is important to build the necessary capacity to innovate in the legal function by transforming the culture towards experimentation, questioning of assumptions, and exerting smart risk control or mitigation. “The catalysts of an innovative culture are, in the first place, our senior leaders who need to give their staff the inspiration, the freedom, and the support they need to innovate,” she said. “Support means funding, dedicated staff or dedicated time for innovative projects, and a proper working environment. Legal staff also needs to be empowered to act autonomously, be exposed to work in small innovative communities to benefit from diverse areas of specialization, approaches and skills. And they need to develop new skills & competences like technical skills such as IT knowledge, coding understanding, data analysis, project management and further broaden their knowledge and expertise to be able to quickly understand the problems and the changing customer demands and find as fast as possible the best solution to it. And here I think we play an important role as coaches and as facilitators of this development.”

    Staying within the general subject of mechanization, subsequent panels touched upon specific topics like in-house robotization and the importance of technology in the legal function, as well as broader topics such as crisis and cross-border team management. 

    “Companies are sitting on tremendous amounts of inactive data which can be re-purposed to improve internal processes and save time and materials,” explained Vasile Tiple, General Counsel of Romanian software automation company UiPath. “These few considerations are generally applicable irrespective of the domain in which a company activates,” he explained, noting that, “although the variety of processes and amount of inactive data that can be used for the benefit of better internal efficiency and compliance may be different from company to company,” depending on the rules it is given, a robot can compare documents, flag changes, and replace provisions – with all actions being registered and kept for auditing purposes. “This is only an example of small tasks and review of low risk documents which can be given to a legal robot,” he added. 

    Jordan Ellison, Partner at Slaughter and May emphasized that the crisis management panel he moderated provided attendees with important information on how businesses should handle a corporate crisis. “Lawyers play an increasingly important role in dealing with crises and reputational issues and it was really valuable to share insights into how corporate legal counsel are tackling these challenges,” he said. “What emerged in particular was the need for lawyers to build a multi-disciplinary team which, depending on the type of crisis, could include legal, finance, communications, and IT.”

    Looking Back and Looking Ahead

    “Allowing for reflection on what you can do better as a GC is what these two days are all about” explained Vaida Stockunaite, Events Producer at CEE Legal Matters, who played a key role in organizing the Summit.“Knowing what the latest trends in your function in leading companies are, whom to turn to when you need business advice, or simply getting the assurance that your peers are facing similar challenges can be priceless sometimes, and I hope that the attendees will benefit from the new connections they made at our event.”

    “Of course, we would not be able to put this event together without the considerable input from our sponsors, who don’t just make it commercially possible, but also add a great deal of insight in terms of preparing the agenda and the content delivered on stage,” said CEE Legal Matters Executive Editor Radu Cotarcea. 

    “It’s important that we thank those firms who contributed so much to its success. We were honored to have Slaughter and May, Allen & Overy, Drooms, Stratulat Albulescu, Drakopoulos, and PONTES at our side in Prague,” he added.

    “This is the 4th edition of the GC Summit, and it was another success,” Cotarcea continued. “We’ve learned a great deal and we’re blessed with a hyper-involved network that is always keen to share their thoughts as to what the agenda of the Summit must include, and we work hard every year to improve and to grow both in reach and depth of the topics covered. That is our challenge, and we are eagerly looking to meeting it at the 2019 Summit – our fifth –  next summer in Vienna.”

    This Article was originally published in Issue 5.7 of the CEE Legal Matters Magazine. If you would like to receive a hard copy of the magazine, you can subscribe here.