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The Commercial Awareness Compass by AllAboutLaw
The Commercial Awareness Compass by AllAboutLaw
Author: AllAboutLaw
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The Commercial Awareness Compass by AllAboutLaw helps you build your commercial awareness every week with a beginners, intermediate and advanced breakdown of a story from an expert lawyer and trainee solicitor host.
This story was taken from a live conversation a few months ago. If you don't want to wait for these conversations, head over to the Commercial Awareness Compass to get them straight to your inbox each week.
🚀 Boost your commercial awareness: https://www.allaboutlaw.co.uk/commercial-awareness-compass
66 Episodes
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The UK energy sector is undergoing a massive shift as battery energy storage systems become vital for a greener grid. The problem is that building these demands millions in capital. This is where project finance comes in, working with lenders, construction companies and the project sponsors. But what happens when a battery starts to wear out faster than expected? How do lawyers protect lenders when a project faces political instability or construction delays? Behind the scenes, legal e...
Student loans, the seemingly innocuous funding for England’s university students, are a source of constant debate in social policy and finance. For many graduates the system feels like a lifelong burden while for the government it remains a complex balancing act of public spending. We have been joined by Dentons to explore whether these arrangements are unfair or simply misunderstood. How does the unique write off feature differ from commercial debt? Why can a government change loan te...
Children’s online privacy is colliding with a growing political push for age gating content. Recently, Australia has implemented a restriction on under 16s using social media and in the UK the House of Lords voted against the government in favour of a similar ban which will be discussed in the Commons. Now, platforms are being pressed to prove they can manage children’s access in a regulatory landscape that is narrowing. The UK regulator, the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) has made ...
The Data Use and Access Act 2025 is the UK’s first major post Brexit reform of data protection law. It reshapes how organisations can use personal data while keeping the UK aligned with European standards. For businesses, it promises fewer friction points, clearer permissions, and new flexibility in how data supports commercial decision making. This is not a wholesale rewrite of the GDPR framework. Instead, it subtly adjusts how companies justify data use, respond to complaints, and deploy te...
The Swedish oat-drink manufacturer Oatly has been forced to relabel its products following its dispute with Dairy UK. This began with Oatly’s attempted trademark on their slogan ‘The Post Milk Generation’ being refused and was followed by a legal challenge that went all the way to the UK Supreme Court. Now, Oatly are unable to protect their slogan and must rebrand their ‘oat milk’ products to ‘oat drink’ as the UK dairy farmers reclaim exclusivity over the word ‘milk’ for dairy products. Is ...
Secret recordings. Viral videos. Millions of views but no consent. A growing number of women are being filmed by men wearing smart glasses, with the footage then posted online for views. The rise of camera-equipped wearables like Ray-Ban Meta glasses is pushing the boundaries of privacy, technology, and law. At the centre of this problem, the platforms host the content while tech giants sell the hardware. There’s money to be made and reputations to protect. Is filming in public always ...
This episode is part two of a two-part podcast series examining the commercial realities of a law firm from the client perspective, how firms are chosen, how relationships are built, and what drives long-term client loyalty. Clients aren’t hiring logos, they’re hiring people and teams they can trust. This episode follows a real client–firm pairing and lifts the lid on how legal relationships are fostered and maintained. In an industry as competitive as law, technical excellence is assumed, w...
This episode is part one of a two-part podcast series exploring the commercial realities of a law firm, focusing on how firms operate internally, from billables and expectations at each career stage to progression through to partnership. Today, progression as a commercial lawyer is shaped by far more than technical skill. From your first seat as a trainee to leading major client relationships as a partner, the firm expects its lawyers to grow commercially, understand how work is won and reta...
X (formerly known as Twitter) has come under government scrutiny over Grok, its integrated AI chat and image generation bot, after users generated indecent images of real people, including sexualised images of children. Ofcom and the UK government are investigating, with talk of restrictions and even a UK ban if safeguards are not put in place. The story exposes the tension between fast moving AI development and slower regulation, with platforms accused of building tools that can be misused a...
Warner Bros has agreed a binding merger deal with Netflix for its film and streaming business, offering a deal worth $72bn. Shortly after, Paramount returned with a higher bid to acquire the entire Warner Bros group at over $108bn. On paper, the numbers look compelling. In practice, the deal structure, funding, and risk profile tell a very different story. So far, the Warner Bros board has rejected Paramount’s, pointing to debt heavy financing, execution risk, and the high cost of walki...
Heathrow wants a third runway and says it has a shovel ready plan to expand the airfield for around £21 billion, with extra capacity arriving in roughly a decade if it gets the green light. The airport argues that more slots mean more routes, more passengers and upgraded facilities. Airlines are less convinced. They worry that higher airport charges will pay for the project and leave them flying from an expensive hub that passengers avoid. The Commercial Awareness Compass by AllAboutLaw, help...
The Digital Markets Competition and Consumers Act (DMCC 2024) has come into force with powers that reshape how online businesses operate in the UK. The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) can now act faster and more decisively, targeting practices that have quietly shaped the way people shop. Drip pricing and fake reviews are no longer grey areas. They sit firmly within the CMA’s sights, backed by the threat of significant fines and direct enforcement. Consumers will feel the difference i...
President Trump has proposed a one hundred per cent tariff on branded and patented pharmaceutical imports, due to take effect unless manufacturers shift production to the United States by October 2025. The measure is part of a wider plan to rebuild domestic manufacturing and reduce the US trade deficit. Officials say it will strengthen national security, but the pharmaceutical industry has warned of major disruption to global supply chains and rising drug prices across Europe and beyond. ...
Across Europe, data centres are consuming power on a staggering scale. By 2030, they could require as much electricity as 100 million homes—about half of all households in Europe. A far cry from the anonymous concrete monoliths on industrial estates, data centres have become a major part of commercial conversation and evolved into critical infrastructure powering everything from streaming and cloud storage to artificial intelligence. But to build these, there are new challenges over power, l...
The UK’s insurance sector is facing one of its most significant regulatory shifts since the 2008 financial crisis. The Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) and Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) are consulting on proposals to simplify rules, speed up approvals, and free up capital to make the UK a more competitive financial hub. But these changes come with risks. The regulators are juggling conflicting priorities: protect consumers or unlock growth? If capital requirements are eased, insurer...
Electric vehicles (EVs) are shifting from curiosity to inevitability. With a planned ban on new petrol and diesel sales from 2030 and hybrids in 2035, consumer appetite is coming to terms with policy. In 2024, the UK was the largest EV market in Europe, and interest is rising as drivers weigh running costs, convenience, and the promise of cleaner travel. Yet access is uneven. Inner city infrastructure allows for the large-scale rollout of chargers and shorter journeys favour EV’s range, while...
The United States has announced a deal in principle to move TikTok’s American operations under majority US ownership as part of a wider trade agreement with China. Officials say it’s about national security and controlling where data from US users is stored and accessed. But Beijing has stayed vague, promising only to “properly resolve” the issue while avoiding details of any confirmed ownership change. This isn’t a normal corporate acquisition. It’s a geopolitical chess match disguised as a...
A single court case has redrawn the line between supporting and conducting litigation. In Mazur v Charles Russell Speechlys, the High Court confirmed that only authorised individuals can conduct litigation, a term that stretches from issuing proceedings to managing related tasks and crucially, supervision by a solicitor does not create authorisation. This ruling has shaken up the profession massively. Firms are rethinking delegation, trainees are questioning what they can sign, and clients ma...
High-profile allegations of sexual harassment and inappropriate workplace relationships have dominated the headlines, from the Greg Wallace investigation at the BBC to the Coldplay kiss-cam scandal involving Andy Byron and Kristen Cabot. These cases expose the messy intersection of reputation, compliance, and culture, while also underscoring the legal risks that employers face. In the UK, a statutory duty to prevent harassment in the workplace means employers must prove they have taken all r...
Ticketmaster and its parent company, Live Nation, are in the crosshairs of US regulators, accused of colluding with ticket resellers to inflate prices and profit from fans eager to see their favourite artists live. The Federal Trade Commission (FTC), joined by multiple US states, claims they helped brokers make billions through artificial scarcity and sky-high resale fees. This isn’t just about a few overpriced gigs. It’s a challenge to Ticketmaster’s grip on an industry it dominates, raising...






















