Atlanta
Posted: Sat Sep 03, 2011 10:14 pm
How was everyone's experience with Atlanta so far this go round?
Thanks in advance.
Thanks in advance.
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Because the legal market is incredibly depressed in Atlanta. GL.Anonymous User wrote:Went to UG in ATL. Now go to one of UT/Vanderbilt. Top third grades. Can't get a single firm there to touch me, and I have no idea why.
Yep. Top quarter at a lower T14. Ties to the south. Only landed one callback in ATL.Anonymous User wrote:Because the legal market is incredibly depressed in Atlanta. GL.Anonymous User wrote:Went to UG in ATL. Now go to one of UT/Vanderbilt. Top third grades. Can't get a single firm there to touch me, and I have no idea why.
Good thing I have other CBs and didn't put my eggs in the ATL basket. Shit suuuuuucks.Anonymous User wrote:Because the legal market is incredibly depressed in Atlanta. GL.Anonymous User wrote:Went to UG in ATL. Now go to one of UT/Vanderbilt. Top third grades. Can't get a single firm there to touch me, and I have no idea why.
Top 1/3 from UT/Vandy above. Maybe my ties weren't good enough when there were similarly qualified people with better ties and WE.Anonymous User wrote:Top 1/3 from UT/Vandy and got 3 CBs. Raised in Atlanta (family still there), went to Ugrad there, and worked there for a few years.
No idea. Maybe because the SE economy in general is heavily dependent on real estate and construction? Seems like NY and DC are positively vibrant compared to here though.theduder wrote:What is it about Atlanta that has made the legal market even worse than other cities? I know most large markets are struggling, but anecdotally it seems Atlanta is worse off. Thoughts?
It seems that at Emory/UGA, once you meet a magic cut-off, you start making bank with CBs. During one of the CBs I had this past week, all the UGA/Emory folks had CBs with pretty much every firm in the city.Anonymous User wrote:At Emory, seems like people who concentrated on Atlanta (like me) are having a rough time. My friends with similar grads are having way better luck in NY/DC, as weird as that sounds. I got the hint the week after OCI and started applying broadly outside of Atlanta.
No idea. Maybe because the SE economy in general is heavily dependent on real estate and construction? Seems like NY and DC are positively vibrant compared to here though.theduder wrote:What is it about Atlanta that has made the legal market even worse than other cities? I know most large markets are struggling, but anecdotally it seems Atlanta is worse off. Thoughts?
While I'm not sure why the legal market in Atlanta is so poor, I know from anecdotal evidence from friends in the ATL legal market as well as my own experience last summer that business is really, really slow in Atlanta.Anonymous User wrote:It seems that at Emory/UGA, once you meet a magic cut-off, you start making bank with CBs. During one of the CBs I had this past week, all the UGA/Emory folks had CBs with pretty much every firm in the city.Anonymous User wrote:At Emory, seems like people who concentrated on Atlanta (like me) are having a rough time. My friends with similar grads are having way better luck in NY/DC, as weird as that sounds. I got the hint the week after OCI and started applying broadly outside of Atlanta.
No idea. Maybe because the SE economy in general is heavily dependent on real estate and construction? Seems like NY and DC are positively vibrant compared to here though.theduder wrote:What is it about Atlanta that has made the legal market even worse than other cities? I know most large markets are struggling, but anecdotally it seems Atlanta is worse off. Thoughts?
I lived in Atlanta while it was a real boomtown. A lot of the region's prosperity was linked to that explosive growth which has slowed, along with everything else. A friend's father was a successful commercial developer in the metro area and I've heard the work has really dried up over the last few years. It's speculative, but I wouldn't be surprised if some of the support industries like law are more vulnerable down there than in cities like NYC with more robust (or at least too-big-to-fail) clients.Anonymous User wrote:While I'm not sure why the legal market in Atlanta is so poor, I know from anecdotal evidence from friends in the ATL legal market as well as my own experience last summer that business is really, really slow in Atlanta.
Outside the legal market, I have many friends in Atlanta who struggled to find employment too. It just seems like the economy is in the pooper. Anybody have knowledge or experience to the contrary?