Best Phoenix firm?
Posted: Thu Oct 21, 2010 12:45 pm
I'm curious which firm is best in Phoenix - not which is the best firm who happens to be in Phoenix, but which firm has the best Phoenix office?
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Not anymore, though. OM and G&B have had some truly TTT-level summer classes over the last 2-3 years. Yes, OM and G&B traditionally get people with the best paper credentials, but over the last few years they've basically only hired judicial clerks.Anonymous User wrote:I think the difference is that OM and G & B tend to focus on recruiting top national talent while also recruiting some local while Snell tends to do the opposite.
Advantages and disadvantage of going with a local branch of a national firm?Anonymous User wrote:Not anymore, though. OM and G&B have had some truly TTT-level summer classes over the last 2-3 years. Yes, OM and G&B traditionally get people with the best paper credentials, but over the last few years they've basically only hired judicial clerks.Anonymous User wrote:I think the difference is that OM and G & B tend to focus on recruiting top national talent while also recruiting some local while Snell tends to do the opposite.
If you're a 2L the best you can do in Phoenix is probably Snell, Fennemore, or Lewis & Roca. I would go Snell for corp/tax/BK, Fennemore for environmental/RE, Lewis & Roca for general lit. Snell probably has the best breadth of practice (and lay prestige, FWIW). They're also doing remarkably well given the terrible state of the Arizona economy and the state of other Phoenix firms. Fennemore is doing well and chugging along like the very stable firm that it is. I hear that Lewis & Roca is not doing very well. Most of the other Phoenix-based firms have virtually shut down hiring 2Ls for the time being (see: RCA, G&K, JS&S, etc.). If you don't get one of the Big 3 (S&W, FC, L&R) the only other "BigLaw" option these days is a national firm's Phoenix office.
Anonymous User wrote:Advantages and disadvantage of going with a local branch of a national firm?Anonymous User wrote:Not anymore, though. OM and G&B have had some truly TTT-level summer classes over the last 2-3 years. Yes, OM and G&B traditionally get people with the best paper credentials, but over the last few years they've basically only hired judicial clerks.Anonymous User wrote:I think the difference is that OM and G & B tend to focus on recruiting top national talent while also recruiting some local while Snell tends to do the opposite.
If you're a 2L the best you can do in Phoenix is probably Snell, Fennemore, or Lewis & Roca. I would go Snell for corp/tax/BK, Fennemore for environmental/RE, Lewis & Roca for general lit. Snell probably has the best breadth of practice (and lay prestige, FWIW). They're also doing remarkably well given the terrible state of the Arizona economy and the state of other Phoenix firms. Fennemore is doing well and chugging along like the very stable firm that it is. I hear that Lewis & Roca is not doing very well. Most of the other Phoenix-based firms have virtually shut down hiring 2Ls for the time being (see: RCA, G&K, JS&S, etc.). If you don't get one of the Big 3 (S&W, FC, L&R) the only other "BigLaw" option these days is a national firm's Phoenix office.
Differences in hiring criteria?
I don't know about differences in hiring criteria. My completely uninformed guess would be that the national firms go deeper into classes but not as deep into law schools (i.e. no hiring outside of T20 + ASU/UA)Anonymous User wrote:Advantages and disadvantage of going with a local branch of a national firm?Anonymous User wrote:Not anymore, though. OM and G&B have had some truly TTT-level summer classes over the last 2-3 years. Yes, OM and G&B traditionally get people with the best paper credentials, but over the last few years they've basically only hired judicial clerks.Anonymous User wrote:I think the difference is that OM and G & B tend to focus on recruiting top national talent while also recruiting some local while Snell tends to do the opposite.
If you're a 2L the best you can do in Phoenix is probably Snell, Fennemore, or Lewis & Roca. I would go Snell for corp/tax/BK, Fennemore for environmental/RE, Lewis & Roca for general lit. Snell probably has the best breadth of practice (and lay prestige, FWIW). They're also doing remarkably well given the terrible state of the Arizona economy and the state of other Phoenix firms. Fennemore is doing well and chugging along like the very stable firm that it is. I hear that Lewis & Roca is not doing very well. Most of the other Phoenix-based firms have virtually shut down hiring 2Ls for the time being (see: RCA, G&K, JS&S, etc.). If you don't get one of the Big 3 (S&W, FC, L&R) the only other "BigLaw" option these days is a national firm's Phoenix office.
Differences in hiring criteria?
As far as the firms based in Phoenix, it's definitely between Snell and Fennemore. Lewis & Roca may have been up there, but, like the other guy says, they've not been doing too hot, and I think they even shut down their SA program for awhile.Anonymous User wrote:I'm curious which firm is best in Phoenix - not which is the best firm who happens to be in Phoenix, but which firm has the best Phoenix office?
NALP says they're going to have 8 2L SAs this summer.Anonymous User wrote:As far as the firms based in Phoenix, it's definitely between Snell and Fennemore. Lewis & Roca may have been up there, but, like the other guy says, they've not been doing too hot, and I think they even shut down their SA program for awhile.Anonymous User wrote:I'm curious which firm is best in Phoenix - not which is the best firm who happens to be in Phoenix, but which firm has the best Phoenix office?
I am an ASU student. I can tell you that Quarles will have at least 2 SAs this coming summer. Also, Tiffany & Bosco will have two SAs this summer. There are a few other firms in Phoenix not on this list that did OCI and either hired or made offers to ASU students.Anonymous User wrote:NALP says they're going to have 8 2L SAs this summer.Anonymous User wrote:As far as the firms based in Phoenix, it's definitely between Snell and Fennemore. Lewis & Roca may have been up there, but, like the other guy says, they've not been doing too hot, and I think they even shut down their SA program for awhile.Anonymous User wrote:I'm curious which firm is best in Phoenix - not which is the best firm who happens to be in Phoenix, but which firm has the best Phoenix office?
Phoenix firms (ranked on # of 2L SAs):
Fennemore Craig - 9
Snell & Wilmer - 8
Lewis & Roca - 8
Perkins Coie - 5
Bryan Cave - 2
Gammage & Burnham - 2
Greenberg Traurig - 2
Polsinelli Shughart - 2
Steptoe & Johnson - 2
Osborn Maledon - 1
Quarles & Brady - unknown according to NALP, but I'm almost positive they have at 1 or 2
Squire Sanders - 0/unknown
Ballard Spahr - 0
Gust Rosenfeld - 0
Tiffany & Bosco - 0 (I believe they do most of their hiring post-grad now)
Jennings Strouss - 0 (old solid MidLaw firm that is now virtually imploding - they had 3 first year associates last year and have already laid them all off)
DLA Piper - 0 (but they never have any)
So there you have it. Roughly ~40 2L SA positions at big-ish firms in Phoenix this summer, and well over half of them are at the Big 3. If you know someone going to an Arizona law school and counting on "MidLaw" being an option, please direct them to this thread.
Another interesting tidbit: everyone has apparently followed S&W's lead and is now paying 115k to first years, up from 100k-110k last year.
This has been my understanding, too. I can't remember a single year when Snell did not have the most SAs in Phoenix.Anonymous User wrote:Interesting that Fennemore has more SAs than Snell. I thought Fennemore was the smaller and more conservative (in terms of hiring) of the two. At least that's the perception at ASU.
Considering they have like 10 people in the office, probably not.Anonymous User wrote:Anyone know about Brownstein Hyatt Farber Scheck? I know they just opened a PHX office. Any SAs this year?
UT isn't the BEST school for Phoenix BigLaw - Yale, Harvard, Stanford, the rest of the T14, etc. are all better. However, UT and Vanderbilt both do very well in Phoenix. If you have strong AZ ties and are in the top 1/3 at UT, then getting a job at a big Phoenix firm shouldn't be much of a problem. If you're below median it might still be possible. At ASU you basically have no chance unless you're in the top 10%, and even then it's a crapshoot.legaleagle9 wrote:just wondering: would UT be the best school to attend if you want Phoenix BigLaw? Because of its Southwest location? or would ASU still be better?
There are surprisingly VERY few UT Law grads in PHX. I'm not sure why, but maybe there's really just not a whole lot of cross-migration between Arizona and Texas. A ton of transplanted Arizonans seem to come from the Midwest, with smaller contingents coming from California and the Northeast.Anonymous User wrote:UT isn't the BEST school for Phoenix BigLaw - Yale, Harvard, Stanford, the rest of the T14, etc. are all better. However, UT and Vanderbilt both do very well in Phoenix. If you have strong AZ ties and are in the top 1/3 at UT, then getting a job at a big Phoenix firm shouldn't be much of a problem. If you're below median it might still be possible. At ASU you basically have no chance unless you're in the top 10%, and even then it's a crapshoot.legaleagle9 wrote:just wondering: would UT be the best school to attend if you want Phoenix BigLaw? Because of its Southwest location? or would ASU still be better?
You're right; I wasn't implying that UT isn't respected in PHX.Anonymous User wrote:It isn't about the number of grads that end up in Phoenix, it is about the respect the school gets. UT is respected in Phoenix.
It is a mixed bag. Snell is probably the best law firm for a client and generally attracts better clients. You are better off viewing Phoenix firms as tiers of quality rather than V50 styled lists. T1- Snell, Lewis and Roca, Fennemore, Osborn Maledon, Gammage and Burnham T2- "National firms" like Byran Cave, Perkins Coie, Quarles and Brady, Ballard Spahr. T3- other mid size local firms. This is just a very generic view, but the idea is to remember that it really doesn't matter if you pick Snell over Fennemore or vice versa.Anonymous User wrote:You're right; I wasn't implying that UT isn't respected in PHX.Anonymous User wrote:It isn't about the number of grads that end up in Phoenix, it is about the respect the school gets. UT is respected in Phoenix.
On the broader theme of this thread, I guess the consensus is that Snell is the leading PHX firm. However, the perception among AZ law students is that it doesn't quite have the favorable work/life balance which Fennemore is rumored to have. Quarles seems to be a bit more of a wildcard, as I think it's smaller than Snell and Fennemore.
Correct me if I'm wrong?
So, Snell, Fennemore, and L&R all have non-equity partner tracks? Any idea as to about how many partners are actually (equity) partners?Anonymous User wrote:It is a mixed bag. Snell is probably the best law firm for a client and generally attracts better clients. You are better off viewing Phoenix firms as tiers of quality rather than V50 styled lists. T1- Snell, Lewis and Roca, Fennemore, Osborn Maledon, Gammage and Burnham T2- "National firms" like Byran Cave, Perkins Coie, Quarles and Brady, Ballard Spahr. T3- other mid size local firms. This is just a very generic view, but the idea is to remember that it really doesn't matter if you pick Snell over Fennemore or vice versa.Anonymous User wrote:You're right; I wasn't implying that UT isn't respected in PHX.Anonymous User wrote:It isn't about the number of grads that end up in Phoenix, it is about the respect the school gets. UT is respected in Phoenix.
On the broader theme of this thread, I guess the consensus is that Snell is the leading PHX firm. However, the perception among AZ law students is that it doesn't quite have the favorable work/life balance which Fennemore is rumored to have. Quarles seems to be a bit more of a wildcard, as I think it's smaller than Snell and Fennemore.
Correct me if I'm wrong?
Snell is something of a sweatshop, have a habit of hiring girls based on bra size, and it sheds senior associates like it is going out of style. This doesn't even mention the non-equity "partner" track they have (which most new associates will be in line for). Fennemore and Lewis and Roca both pulled that non-equity bullshit too. Basically none of the phoenix firms will work you like biglaw NYC or something. Snell is probably the most aggressive with requiring time, but most ask for 1800 or 1900 billed.
Which firms do you have callbacks at? I can offer some insight that has a moderate degree of credibility.
Anonymous User wrote:
So, Snell, Fennemore, and L&R all have non-equity partner tracks? Any idea as to about how many partners are actually (equity) partners?