About William H.
William H. Bromfield earned both a J.D. and an M.B.A. from Southern Methodist University in 1995, after completing his undergraduate degree at Westminster College in 1990. The unusual alignment of a law degree and a business degree in the same year shaped an early professional profile that blends legal analysis with commercial awareness. Those credentials set the stage for a career that moves between legal doctrine and practical business concerns.
He is admitted in Washington and his resume includes work at Fenwick & West LLP. Public records list Fenwick & West as part of his professional experience. He has spent time in private practice and in roles that required translating complex legal issues into actionable advice for clients. Colleagues describe him as methodical; he favors clear reasoning over rhetorical flourish.
Bromfield's dual training in law and business has informed the kinds of matters he accepts. He approaches problems with an eye for organizational impact and financial realities. That perspective is useful when legal questions intersect with corporate decision-making, contract structures, or regulatory compliance. He often works through disputes by breaking them into discrete legal and commercial components, then addressing each on its own terms.
Throughout his career he has worked on transactional and advisory matters. He handles document drafting, negotiation and client counseling in contexts that require both legal precision and attention to business outcomes. His practice emphasizes steady, practical problem-solving rather than headline-grabbing litigation. Where disputes arise, he focuses on resolving them efficiently and on terms that make sense for clients' longer-term interests.
Bromfield also places importance on mentoring junior lawyers and on the practices of careful legal writing and disciplined analysis. Those habits show up in the way he prepares for matters and in the materials he produces for clients. He prefers clear, well-organized work product that executives and other lawyers can use without extensive interpretation.
Outside the office he keeps a low public profile. He does not regularly appear in media or public-facing directories under his own name. His professional presence is most evident in the work he does for clients and the roles he has held at firms like Fenwick & West LLP. He currently practices in Washington, concentrating his efforts on matters that lie at the intersection of law and business.