Best firm to be an associate in restructuring Forum
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Best firm to be an associate in restructuring
I have heard that the two biggest debtor shops (kirk/weil) are brutal in terms of work intensity and hours. I was wondering if there were any restructuring associates here that can comment on their experience of being associates at either these firms or others and whether it has been positive or not in terms of good experience and less brutal hours? Mostly interested in New York, but also just in general. Vault is kind of useless in my opinion because it ranks mostly based on industry success which is focused on partners. Since being a partner at one of these is nearly impossible, i am more focused on the associate experience.
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Re: Best firm to be an associate in restructuring
Current associate at one of these firms. If you want to do restructuring work these are the places you want to be at. The most interesting work, lean staffing, tons of early responsibility, lots of opportunities to work directly with senior management/outside professionals, etc. The hours though, at least right now, are absolutely brutal (I'm on pace for ~3500 hours this year and it's getting busier).
Happy to answer more specific questions if you would like.
Happy to answer more specific questions if you would like.
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Re: Best firm to be an associate in restructuring
I'm sure it's been discussed to death, but in this environment (and prior, I guess) what kind of exits and at what years have you seen from your firm?Anonymous User wrote:Current associate at one of these firms. If you want to do restructuring work these are the places you want to be at. The most interesting work, lean staffing, tons of early responsibility, lots of opportunities to work directly with senior management/outside professionals, etc. The hours though, at least right now, are absolutely brutal (I'm on pace for ~3500 hours this year and it's getting busier).
Happy to answer more specific questions if you would like.
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Re: Best firm to be an associate in restructuring
Anonymous User wrote:Current associate at one of these firms. If you want to do restructuring work these are the places you want to be at. The most interesting work, lean staffing, tons of early responsibility, lots of opportunities to work directly with senior management/outside professionals, etc. The hours though, at least right now, are absolutely brutal (I'm on pace for ~3500 hours this year and it's getting busier).
Happy to answer more specific questions if you would like.
3500!!! HOLY MOLY
- sublime
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Re: Best firm to be an associate in restructuring
Yea. Fuck that under any circumstances. I will quit before I bill that much.redsox550 wrote:Anonymous User wrote:Current associate at one of these firms. If you want to do restructuring work these are the places you want to be at. The most interesting work, lean staffing, tons of early responsibility, lots of opportunities to work directly with senior management/outside professionals, etc. The hours though, at least right now, are absolutely brutal (I'm on pace for ~3500 hours this year and it's getting busier).
Happy to answer more specific questions if you would like.
3500!!! HOLY MOLY
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Re: Best firm to be an associate in restructuring
I Dont even get how that is possible and i am assuming its an exaggeration. That would be 300 hours a month consistently. nobody hits that for one month at my firm EVERsublime wrote:Yea. Fuck that under any circumstances. I will quit before I bill that much.redsox550 wrote:Anonymous User wrote:Current associate at one of these firms. If you want to do restructuring work these are the places you want to be at. The most interesting work, lean staffing, tons of early responsibility, lots of opportunities to work directly with senior management/outside professionals, etc. The hours though, at least right now, are absolutely brutal (I'm on pace for ~3500 hours this year and it's getting busier).
Happy to answer more specific questions if you would like.
3500!!! HOLY MOLY
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Re: Best firm to be an associate in restructuring
Did you qualify for a bonus?Anonymous User wrote:Current associate at one of these firms. If you want to do restructuring work these are the places you want to be at. The most interesting work, lean staffing, tons of early responsibility, lots of opportunities to work directly with senior management/outside professionals, etc. The hours though, at least right now, are absolutely brutal (I'm on pace for ~3500 hours this year and it's getting busier).
Happy to answer more specific questions if you would like.
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Re: Best firm to be an associate in restructuring
Idk. Some partners at my firm say they do it, and I'm sure associates at mine have done it, but I work at a place with a sweatshop reputation, and nothing even close to that is expected.
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Re: Best firm to be an associate in restructuring
My understanding of restructuring is that if you really want to go into that kind of work, you are going to need to come to terms with a very difficult schedule. Restructuring and Bankruptcy, by their natures, are incredibly time sensitive; when an issue is live, you're working -- A LOT.
Bearing that in mind, your options are going somewhere where you'll have a lot of down time punctuated by insane weeks/months -- as in, a place that doesn't get the "best" work, but does get work -- and a place like the firms mentioned above where you'll get s LOT of work ALL the time.
What I'm trying to say is, restructuring is not, from my understanding, the "work/life balance" practice group. Go in eyes open.
Bearing that in mind, your options are going somewhere where you'll have a lot of down time punctuated by insane weeks/months -- as in, a place that doesn't get the "best" work, but does get work -- and a place like the firms mentioned above where you'll get s LOT of work ALL the time.
What I'm trying to say is, restructuring is not, from my understanding, the "work/life balance" practice group. Go in eyes open.
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Re: Best firm to be an associate in restructuring
+1sublime wrote:Yea. Fuck that under any circumstances. I will quit before I bill that much.redsox550 wrote:Anonymous User wrote:Current associate at one of these firms. If you want to do restructuring work these are the places you want to be at. The most interesting work, lean staffing, tons of early responsibility, lots of opportunities to work directly with senior management/outside professionals, etc. The hours though, at least right now, are absolutely brutal (I'm on pace for ~3500 hours this year and it's getting busier).
Happy to answer more specific questions if you would like.
3500!!! HOLY MOLY
180k loses its value once you have to bill that much; that's $51 an hour. (Assuming no bonus)
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Re: Best firm to be an associate in restructuring
3500 is crazy and imo not sustainable.
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Re: Best firm to be an associate in restructuring
Associate from above.zhenders wrote:My understanding of restructuring is that if you really want to go into that kind of work, you are going to need to come to terms with a very difficult schedule. Restructuring and Bankruptcy, by their natures, are incredibly time sensitive; when an issue is live, you're working -- A LOT.
Bearing that in mind, your options are going somewhere where you'll have a lot of down time punctuated by insane weeks/months -- as in, a place that doesn't get the "best" work, but does get work -- and a place like the firms mentioned above where you'll get s LOT of work ALL the time.
What I'm trying to say is, restructuring is not, from my understanding, the "work/life balance" practice group. Go in eyes open.
This sums it up pretty well. There are a number of good firms out there that do solid restructuring work, but you have to understand that the large majority of the big debtor side cases go to KE/Weil and this puts a lot of very time sensitive work on small practice groups.
The hours really aren't an exaggeration, they're crazy and totally unsustainable. It's basically 70+ hour weeks punctuated by the occasional series of all nighters around filing/other major events. Bankruptcy in general is pretty crazy right now for a variety of reasons (e.g. the implosion of the retail industry) but we're getting it disproportionately. Having said that when bankruptcy is slow (it's a cyclical practice) we're basically dead.
I genuinely enjoy my work, and the training is great, but if you're thinking about this area I think you should be aware that you're going to work a lot and make your decision accordingly.
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Re: Best firm to be an associate in restructuring
I've heard that Weil is pretty much the busiest it has ever been.
Also I know they are heavily trying to recruit laterals. They have about 3 junior openings right now.
Also I know they are heavily trying to recruit laterals. They have about 3 junior openings right now.
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Re: Best firm to be an associate in restructuring
Does this 3,500 include periods of lull or does it assume that you will be working at your current, frenetic pace until the end of your firm's fiscal year?Anonymous User wrote:(I'm on pace for ~3500 hours this year and it's getting busier).
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Re: Best firm to be an associate in restructuring
I'm not expecting any significant lulls given what I know is coming down the pipe for us. I do fully intend to take the max amount of vacation I can though so end of year hours won't be this high.Anonymous User wrote:Does this 3,500 include periods of lull or does it assume that you will be working at your current, frenetic pace until the end of your firm's fiscal year?Anonymous User wrote:(I'm on pace for ~3500 hours this year and it's getting busier).
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Re: Best firm to be an associate in restructuring
Anyone have thoughts on Cleary Gottlieb, Paul Weiss, or Milbank for restructuring?
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Re: Best firm to be an associate in restructuring
Anonymous User wrote:Current associate at one of these firms. If you want to do restructuring work these are the places you want to be at. The most interesting work, lean staffing, tons of early responsibility, lots of opportunities to work directly with senior management/outside professionals, etc. The hours though, at least right now, are absolutely brutal (I'm on pace for ~3500 hours this year and it's getting busier).
Happy to answer more specific questions if you would like.
Does this include travel time? If so, how much? Also, is that average for your group? You say it is unsustainable, so what do you do when you burn out? are other firms hiring? Also, are there decent mid size or small firms to do restructuring at or is it only big law? Obvously the big cases are big law, but does mid market go to smaller firms?
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Re: Best firm to be an associate in restructuring
Weil and Kirkland are traditionally the best debtor-side firms. Davis Polk and Milbank are traditionally the best creditor-side firms.Anonymous User wrote:Anyone have thoughts on Cleary Gottlieb, Paul Weiss, or Milbank for restructuring?
Cleary does a lot of sovereign debt work internationally, and Paul Weiss does a lot of creditor-side work. Other firms like Akin, Jones Day, Latham, and Skadden come up in the mix too as top restructuring practices.
All firms mentioned are elite firms in restructuring, and you will have a chance to do a mix of debtor/creditor work at any of these firms, but firms will generally work primarily one side over the other.
For your reference:
http://www.thedeal.com/out-of-court/
Last edited by Anonymous User on Sun Apr 16, 2017 7:32 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Best firm to be an associate in restructuring
Can you pm? I'd love to ask some more specificsAnonymous User wrote:Associate from above.zhenders wrote:My understanding of restructuring is that if you really want to go into that kind of work, you are going to need to come to terms with a very difficult schedule. Restructuring and Bankruptcy, by their natures, are incredibly time sensitive; when an issue is live, you're working -- A LOT.
Bearing that in mind, your options are going somewhere where you'll have a lot of down time punctuated by insane weeks/months -- as in, a place that doesn't get the "best" work, but does get work -- and a place like the firms mentioned above where you'll get s LOT of work ALL the time.
What I'm trying to say is, restructuring is not, from my understanding, the "work/life balance" practice group. Go in eyes open.
This sums it up pretty well. There are a number of good firms out there that do solid restructuring work, but you have to understand that the large majority of the big debtor side cases go to KE/Weil and this puts a lot of very time sensitive work on small practice groups.
The hours really aren't an exaggeration, they're crazy and totally unsustainable. It's basically 70+ hour weeks punctuated by the occasional series of all nighters around filing/other major events. Bankruptcy in general is pretty crazy right now for a variety of reasons (e.g. the implosion of the retail industry) but we're getting it disproportionately. Having said that when bankruptcy is slow (it's a cyclical practice) we're basically dead.
I genuinely enjoy my work, and the training is great, but if you're thinking about this area I think you should be aware that you're going to work a lot and make your decision accordingly.
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Re: Best firm to be an associate in restructuring
Thanks for this list. Latham #1 on one side and #2 on the other, didn't realize it was such a player there. I'm sure these things are to be taken with a grain of salt, though.Anonymous User wrote:Weil and Kirkland are traditionally the best debtor-side firms. Davis Polk and Milbank are traditionally the best creditor-side firms.Anonymous User wrote:Anyone have thoughts on Cleary Gottlieb, Paul Weiss, or Milbank for restructuring?
Cleary does a lot of sovereign debt work internationally, and Paul Weiss does a lot of creditor-side work. Other firms like Akin, Jones Day, Latham, and Skadden come up in the mix too as top restructuring practices.
All firms mentioned are elite firms in restructuring, and you will have a chance to do a mix of debtor/creditor work at any of these firms, but firms will generally work primarily one side over the other.
For your reference:
http://www.thedeal.com/out-of-court/
Last edited by Anonymous User on Mon Apr 17, 2017 10:07 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Best firm to be an associate in restructuring
I was an associate at one of these firms, although not in restructuring. Restructuring associates have TERRIBLE hours, on par with top tier investment banking. The hours are just really, really bad, even for biglaw. Everything is a fire drill.
Also, the exit options are not that great. You'd have better exit ops doing pure transactional work/tax/employee benefits. I knew a bunch of restructuring associates who ended up lateraling into another practice area like finance, etc.
I'm not sure why anyone would do restructuring. If you're going to work those hours for $200k, might as well just work 3 jobs - a full time 9 to 5, a part time night job and a part time weekend job. It'd probably be much less stressful, too.
Also, the exit options are not that great. You'd have better exit ops doing pure transactional work/tax/employee benefits. I knew a bunch of restructuring associates who ended up lateraling into another practice area like finance, etc.
I'm not sure why anyone would do restructuring. If you're going to work those hours for $200k, might as well just work 3 jobs - a full time 9 to 5, a part time night job and a part time weekend job. It'd probably be much less stressful, too.
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Re: Best firm to be an associate in restructuring
I'd rather just leave the law forever. Biglaw doesn't pay that much money, not enough to bill 3500 hours a year.sublime wrote:Yea. Fuck that under any circumstances. I will quit before I bill that much.redsox550 wrote:Anonymous User wrote:Current associate at one of these firms. If you want to do restructuring work these are the places you want to be at. The most interesting work, lean staffing, tons of early responsibility, lots of opportunities to work directly with senior management/outside professionals, etc. The hours though, at least right now, are absolutely brutal (I'm on pace for ~3500 hours this year and it's getting busier).
Happy to answer more specific questions if you would like.
3500!!! HOLY MOLY
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Re: Best firm to be an associate in restructuring
I'm a restructuring associate, although not at K&E or Weil. I am actively trying to switch practice groups, and as fast as possible. As another poster said, the hours are brutal even by biglaw standards, fire drills all the time, and exit options suck if you're looking for a better lifestyle.
You have to decide what's right for you. But I wouldn't pick restructuring if I was given the opportunity to start over. It sucks from the top firms down to the bottom.
You have to decide what's right for you. But I wouldn't pick restructuring if I was given the opportunity to start over. It sucks from the top firms down to the bottom.
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Re: Best firm to be an associate in restructuring
Anonymous User wrote:I'm a restructuring associate, although not at K&E or Weil. I am actively trying to switch practice groups, and as fast as possible. As another poster said, the hours are brutal even by biglaw standards, fire drills all the time, and exit options suck if you're looking for a better lifestyle.
You have to decide what's right for you. But I wouldn't pick restructuring if I was given the opportunity to start over. It sucks from the top firms down to the bottom.
If you don't mind me asking, what year are you? Which practice are u trying to switch to and how is he attempt going?
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Re: Best firm to be an associate in restructuring
I'm an associate at a top creditor-side firm. The head of the firm gives a talk every year on our performance, and restructuring always tops the list when it comes to billable hours. From what I know of the group, it seems like a miserable life.
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