terrible grades and biglaw
Posted: Thu Aug 21, 2014 9:59 pm
Is there ANY way to get biglaw ever, ever, ever with bottom thirty percent grades (of a TT or TTT)? Has this ever happened? If it can happen, what is the way to do it????
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mw115 wrote:Eventually, yes.
Immediately, extremely unlikely.
"What is the path into it eventually?"terrible_student wrote:mw115 wrote:Eventually, yes.
Immediately, extremely unlikely.
What is the path into it eventually? Also, what about after a clerkship? Maybe at state appellate or trial level??
This. My advice: find something you really enjoy doing and try hard to find a small-firm doing that work willing to take you under their wing.Calvin Murphy wrote:-Develop a book of business so irresistible that they won't even look at the education section on your résumé.terrible_student wrote:mw115 wrote:Eventually, yes.
Immediately, extremely unlikely.
What is the path into it eventually?
mw115 wrote:This. My advice: find something you really enjoy doing and try hard to find a small-firm doing that work willing to take you under their wing.Calvin Murphy wrote:-Develop a book of business so irresistible that they won't even look at the education section on your résumé.terrible_student wrote:mw115 wrote:Eventually, yes.
Immediately, extremely unlikely.
What is the path into it eventually?
mw115 wrote:This. My advice: find something you really enjoy doing and try hard to find a small-firm doing that work willing to take you under their wing.Calvin Murphy wrote:-Develop a book of business so irresistible that they won't even look at the education section on your résumé.terrible_student wrote:mw115 wrote:Eventually, yes.
Immediately, extremely unlikely.
What is the path into it eventually?
This is a good point that I should have mentioned.acrossthelake wrote:Note: Martin Lipton went to NYU and was EIC of their law review, then joined a small firm, and then co-founded WLRK 10 years out of law school, and then created the poison pill 17 years later (and 27 years after graduating law school). So he himself is not a long odds story at all.Calvin Murphy wrote:
-Develop a breakthrough legal maneuver. (See, e.g., Martin Lipton, The Poison Pill, available at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shareholder_rights_plan.)
Maybe a little. Probably depends what you mean by "respectable." It likely won't help a lot for market-paying biglaw.terrible_student wrote: What if I could get a state appellate clerkship from a judge who is a family friend? Would this make a difference in getting respectable firm employment?.
Not really.What if I could get a state appellate clerkship from a judge who is a family friend? Would this make a difference in getting respectable firm employment?.
Marty Lipton is like the RBG-no-offer of not getting biglaw out of law schoolCalvin Murphy wrote:This is a good point that I should have mentioned.acrossthelake wrote:Note: Martin Lipton went to NYU and was EIC of their law review, then joined a small firm, and then co-founded WLRK 10 years out of law school, and then created the poison pill 17 years later (and 27 years after graduating law school). So he himself is not a long odds story at all.Calvin Murphy wrote:
-Develop a breakthrough legal maneuver. (See, e.g., Martin Lipton, The Poison Pill, available at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shareholder_rights_plan.)
This is unlikely to help for like 99% of all state appellate clerkships. Is this some kind of a unicorn situation, e.g. the Delaware Court of Chancery, or the First Department of the New York Supreme Court Appellate division? If so, then this might help. But if this is some random clerkship in Wyoming, then no, this is not going to help.terrible_student wrote:What if I could get a state appellate clerkship from a judge who is a family friend? Would this make a difference in getting respectable firm employment?.
I'm a biglaw associate. Everyone else is correct. If your grades don't get you into biglaw in 2L OCI, then you're pretty much never going to make it as an associate. Your only hope is to build a portable book of business and a reputation for solid lawyering. Once you've done that (and I mean 10 years down the road) you might be a candidate for firms looking at lateral partners. Otherwise, you need something seriously special to get firms to overlook your grades, like the IP or work experience that others have mentioned. I don't even think developing a breakthrough legal maneuver would do it. Once you've developed it, biglaw can have other people learn it and do it just as well as you did.terrible_student wrote:Any biglaw associates out there with insight?
Read the judicial clerkship forum for a few minutes and you'll see the same advice over and over: "clerking is not a golden ticket to biglaw." And those guys are talking about federal clerkships, not a state appellate court. The only way this helps you is if you ace all your classes during 2L and 3L, graduate in the top of your class, spend your first year out of law school clerking, and then apply to biglaw during your clerkship. Still not a good chance, but at least remotely possible (IF you get your grades way up).terrible_student wrote:What if I could get a state appellate clerkship from a judge who is a family friend? Would this make a difference in getting respectable firm employment?
Good point. If by respectable you mean "good lawyers, substantive work, decent pay, satisfying quality of life," then you can probably find this with bad grades. The key then will be networking and being a good person to work with.mw115 wrote:Respectable firm =/= big law