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Real Estate Law --> Developer...Does this ever happen?

Posted: Thu Feb 12, 2015 9:20 pm
by Sgt Pepper
I have been taking some real estate classes and I really like the material. That said, I would like to move to the business side of things after a few years. Is this a job that anyone has made, or that can generally be made at all? Thanks a ton!

Re: Real Estate Law --> Developer...Does this ever happen?

Posted: Fri Feb 13, 2015 9:29 am
by BeenDidThat
Sgt Pepper wrote:I have been taking some real estate classes and I really like the material. That said, I would like to move to the business side of things after a few years. Is this a job that anyone has made, or that can generally be made at all? Thanks a ton!
No. Not a single person has ever gone from law to real estate development.

HTH.

Re: Real Estate Law --> Developer...Does this ever happen?

Posted: Fri Feb 13, 2015 10:08 am
by Sgt Pepper
BeenDidThat wrote:
Sgt Pepper wrote:I have been taking some real estate classes and I really like the material. That said, I would like to move to the business side of things after a few years. Is this a job that anyone has made, or that can generally be made at all? Thanks a ton!
No. Not a single person has ever gone from law to real estate development.

HTH.
Gracias bro I appreciate it

Re: Real Estate Law --> Developer...Does this ever happen?

Posted: Fri Feb 13, 2015 12:17 pm
by kalvano
Are you talking about moving to a development company as in-house counsel?

Re: Real Estate Law --> Developer...Does this ever happen?

Posted: Fri Feb 13, 2015 1:21 pm
by Sgt Pepper
kalvano wrote:Are you talking about moving to a development company as in-house counsel?
I was more interested in doing the actual business side like rounding up financing/negotiating with government/etc. I'm not sure how much of that an in-house counsel does?

Re: Real Estate Law --> Developer...Does this ever happen?

Posted: Fri Feb 13, 2015 7:06 pm
by kalvano
Sgt Pepper wrote:
kalvano wrote:Are you talking about moving to a development company as in-house counsel?
I was more interested in doing the actual business side like rounding up financing/negotiating with government/etc. I'm not sure how much of that an in-house counsel does?
I guess it would depend on the size of the company and what types of development the company generally does. Most of the business people in development that I interact with have an MBA or real estate finance background, or a construction background. Generally, the in-house counsel reviews leases, licenses, SNDAs, handles the loan closings, reviews construction agreements, as well as the general in-house counsel stuff.

Re: Real Estate Law --> Developer...Does this ever happen?

Posted: Wed Feb 18, 2015 12:08 am
by Anonymous User
Sgt Pepper wrote:
kalvano wrote:Are you talking about moving to a development company as in-house counsel?
I was more interested in doing the actual business side like rounding up financing/negotiating with government/etc. I'm not sure how much of that an in-house counsel does?
My father is a developer and he doesn't even have a high school degree. Asking this question is like asking whether people transition into non-JD required professions, which from my network, is common. So yes, you can do this. You need to be passionate about land, development, materials, networking with people in this realm, etc. People successful in real estate tend to be consumed/fascinated by it. (People successful in most professions are consumed/fascinated to a certain extent).

Re: Real Estate Law --> Developer...Does this ever happen?

Posted: Wed Feb 18, 2015 9:58 am
by Sgt Pepper
Anonymous User wrote:
Sgt Pepper wrote:
kalvano wrote:Are you talking about moving to a development company as in-house counsel?
I was more interested in doing the actual business side like rounding up financing/negotiating with government/etc. I'm not sure how much of that an in-house counsel does?
My father is a developer and he doesn't even have a high school degree. Asking this question is like asking whether people transition into non-JD required professions, which from my network, is common. So yes, you can do this. You need to be passionate about land, development, materials, networking with people in this realm, etc. People successful in real estate tend to be consumed/fascinated by it. (People successful in most professions are consumed/fascinated to a certain extent).
For sure, thanks. I guess the constant "once you are a lawyer nobody will hire you to do anything else" mantra has sunk in too far.

Re: Real Estate Law --> Developer...Does this ever happen?

Posted: Wed Feb 18, 2015 2:57 pm
by desertlaw
Here's your ceiling: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rick_Caruso

Dem exit options from Pepperdine Law!