Jesus, topping out at 160 working for the feds? sign me up

are your hours 9-5 or close to it? during my 1L summer, i worked with a fed agency with a similar pay grade (though the attorneys in the office started lower); each morning, they started at 9-ish and left everyday at 5-6 with extremely rare instances of weekend work. seemed like a pretty sweet deal to me; i think it's a better situation on the whole than biglaw, but if you want dat cash money + exit options or you don't like your current job, then i can see why you would consider moving on.Anonymous User wrote:Would appreciate advice on my current situation
Currently working for the Feds. I graduated debt free. Current take home is just over $90k. I can probably top out at 160 or so, but that will take about 5 years. Would I be stupid to give this up and try to move into Big Law? I graduated #2 in my class from a school ranked around 50 or so (it bounces around in the rankings). Not sure if it is even a possibility. I would like to make more money, but it sounds like those who are making the bigger dollars generally do not think it is worth it.
Other info - I took and passed the Patent Bar - but I have never actually worked in Patent law. Currently I do a lot of litigation.
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Meh, law is a field dominated by the same anti-social, aspie grinders who got good grades in law school. The only way to escape them is to leave law altogether.kenji wrote:I like how the only ways to respond to Objection are "LOL you are stoopid" or completely distort what he is saying.
Good to know that retarded TLS personalities continue even when you're an associate.
Even more ironic is that when he makes that defense, he accuses the person of having Stockholms syndrome. Talk about fighting fallacies with fallacies.kenji wrote:I like how the only ways to respond to Objection are "LOL you are stoopid" or completely distort what he is saying.
Good to know that retarded TLS personalities continue even when you're an associate.
Good point. Everyone's take on what big law life is like will cater to his/her individual bias. None the less, I still love hearing personal experiences and I think the main reason is because we all hope to find what differentiates those who hate, love, and are indifferent towards big law life so that we can try to project into which camp we will likely fall.Fresh Prince wrote:kenji wrote:I like how the only ways to respond to Objection are "LOL you are stoopid" or completely distort what he is saying.
Good to know that retarded TLS personalities continue even when you're an associate.
Ultimately, whether or not you will like biglaw depends on whether you can be happy doing it. We can all tell you our experiences, but you can only know when you do it yourself.
Some people have a high tolerance for bring unhappy too. If you're that person (and you need to be honest with yourself), you don't need to read this thread.
CareerBliss compiled a list of the 10 happiest jobs based on analysis from more than 65,000 employee-generated reviews in 2012. Employees all over the country were asked to evaluate ten factors that affect workplace happiness. Those include one’s relationship with the boss and co-workers, work environment, job resources, compensation, growth opportunities, company culture, company reputation, daily tasks, and control over the work one does on a daily basis.
...
If you happen to be a customer service associate, marketing coordinator or legal assistant and you’re constantly down in the dumps—you’re not alone.
These are three of the nation’s unhappiest professions, according to CareerBliss.
But associate attorney is the unhappiest of all, with an index score of 2.89 out of 5.
Objection explaining how this is bullshit in 3...2..UndecidedMN wrote:Figured I would share this as I have concerns about BigLaw as well. I went today and talked to a professor who left biglaw within the past few years but also still has friends there as well. The law firm he worked for is an extremely big one.
First, NY/DC is a different animal than everywhere else. The reason is that you are expected to be there 8 AM - 9/10PM on weekdays and atleast one weekend day. Those horror stories about getting a call at 6PM that a partner needs something for tomorrow morning are true. Especially if you are on the transactional side. But he also noticed that associates were very inefficient about doing work during the day. The reason is that they knew everyday they were there very late, so they spent more time on the internet and whatever compared to other places he had seen (Chicago, Texas).
Regardless of what market you are in, you are there 10 hours a day and also bringing work home on the weekend. Transactional law had the really big swings of going insane hours and deadlines, then for a few weeks nothing. For some people that is very good. But for others, you might be worrying about making billable hours when times are slow. For litigation, you have deadlines but they are not sprung at you. Yes you will have the occasional 6PM call from a partner to get something for the morning. But, they are far less than in transactional. He is a very structured guy that averages about 8 billable hours for every ten worked. Most people average about 7-7.5 hours for every ten. Big difference with litigation is that there is pressure, slow and constant. While transaction can hit you hard for a week or two, then nothing for another week or two. He averaged about 1950 hrs a year.
A great point he made about biglaw is that if you don't like working with someone you don't have to. Yes, there are assholes in every BigLaw firm. But if you are making your hours and have work to do, you can refuse work from jerks you don't want to work for. You can't do that in a small/mid size firm generally. Another great point is that yeah the work is tough, but you are getting paid 2-3 times what others are working for at the 9-5 gov't job. He basically said that you need to value 10-15 hrs work a week for that great pay. Yeah its stressful and it can be nerve racking but the benefits are unsubstantial.
My own two cents, I owned a business before that hired alot of attorneys. I worked with big law firms, small law firms and sole props. One day while at a closing in NYC, I was talking to the attorney from an old prestigious law firm that banks love to hire because of the name and the office. He was a young nice guy doing transactional stuff (In NY, you are required to have a bank attorney to close a loan). He lived in Greenwich in a really nice house, with a wife you stayed at home with a young daughter. He left on a train to NYC at 6 AM and got home at 10. He saw his family on Sundays and wife for an hour each night to watch the late show if he didn't bring work home. He took the train to do work on the train. But he lived in a million dollar house in Greenwich, had a rolex with a really nice suit and car. One sole prop I worked with was home almost every night for dinner. He had an ok office in Mt. Vernon (not the best town in new york), one secretary, drove a kia and had a decent house. But there were times I knew he was hurting. He had to try and collect from clients on a weekly basis to make payroll or pay his rent. He would have worked harder and longer, but clients are tough to come by. He had been an attorney for 25 years. When he didn't bring home money, his wife would freakout about the mortgage. That kind of pressure is just as hard as BigLaw if not worse.
In the end of all this rambling, I am hoping to make biglaw. I have a family of my own and I need to make the mortgage payment. I have prepared my wife for it and hopefully I will get a job (never know but grades are very good with good softs). But we both know it is not going to be ideal. Nothing is. There is a great Cosby show scene (yeah I know I am old). Probably illustrates the benefits of biglaw better than anything I have ever said. Link is below:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=pl ... ivU#t=145s
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Yeah. I usually actually appreciate your opinion ITT. It's a little annoying when you discount others experiences, but for an internet message board the quality is pretty high, your included.Objection wrote:The poster who posted that isn't in big law. And if his professor just left big law into a professorship, I'd bet he was a partner.
Not that that discounts his experiences, but I don't think I've ever disputed that some people can be happy in big law. I've said most won't be.
If he left biglaw in the past few years, I wonder if he was pushed out? Maybe he was a service partner of some kind? I can't think of a single partner that I could envision voluntarily giving up biglaw to be a professor. They are just too hardcore, making too much money and too much in love with their work.Objection wrote:The poster who posted that isn't in big law. And if his professor just left big law into a professorship, I'd bet he was a partner.
Not that that discounts his experiences, but I don't think I've ever disputed that some people can be happy in big law. I've said most won't be.
Honestly, the way academia is these days, I highly doubt the professor was a partner - I'd be surprised if the prof had more than 4 years at a firm, tops.NYstate wrote:If he left biglaw in the past few years, I wonder if he was pushed out? Maybe he was a service partner of some kind? I can't think of a single partner that I could envision voluntarily giving up biglaw to be a professor. They are just too hardcore, making too much money and too much in love with their work.Objection wrote:The poster who posted that isn't in big law. And if his professor just left big law into a professorship, I'd bet he was a partner.
Not that that discounts his experiences, but I don't think I've ever disputed that some people can be happy in big law. I've said most won't be.
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I'm not so sure. I know several professors whose resume was basically law school -> clerk -> 1 or 2 years at a firm -> professorship.Objection wrote:And if his professor just left big law into a professorship, I'd bet he was a partner.
Concurring that transactional does not get weeks off... I'd be worried if I did. I will get slow periods where I work 50-55 hours a week... most people would not consider that as "off", though it will (and does) feel like a cakewalk after a hard stretch.NYstate wrote:If he left biglaw in the past few years, I wonder if he was pushed out? Maybe he was a service partner of some kind? I can't think of a single partner that I could envision voluntarily giving up biglaw to be a professor. They are just too hardcore, making too much money and too much in love with their work.Objection wrote:The poster who posted that isn't in big law. And if his professor just left big law into a professorship, I'd bet he was a partner.
Not that that discounts his experiences, but I don't think I've ever disputed that some people can be happy in big law. I've said most won't be.
Anyway, FWIW, I have never known transactional work to have "a few weeks off," that is unheard of. Also, I have never known an associate to successfully turn down work over an extended period of time. You don't get to pick what you want to work on or who you want to work with, not if you plan to stay very long.
I know people who are happy in biglaw but I know more who are miserable. If having a house in the suburbs, commuting on the train so you can work, and expensive watch is what you want, I'm not going to judge you. I think law is a risky and uncertain field for making money and career longevity- but it does work out for some people.
My only concern is that people have some idea what biglaw practice means before they borrow a couple of hundred thousand dollars to get there.
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September - November are typical start dates. A small handful of firms have January start dates. Some firms give you a choice of start dates, others don't.ph5354a wrote:Noob question: when do you normally start at a big law job after your 3L?
Is September the earliest possible given when most people get bar results?Cavalier wrote:September - November are typical start dates. A small handful of firms have January start dates. Some firms give you a choice of start dates, others don't.ph5354a wrote:Noob question: when do you normally start at a big law job after your 3L?
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