Gerard Fox Law - Beware Forum
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Gerard Fox Law - Beware
All-
Since I didn't see this firm mentioned on this site, I wanted to relate my experience with "Gerard Fox Law" (http://www.gerardfoxlaw.com), which styles itself as an "elite" litigation boutique with offices in DC/LA/SF/NY. It is not.
I joined the firm from a biglaw firm, and was attracted to its small size and promise of substantive responsibility. Recruiters heavily advertise for this firm because there is NEAR-CONSTANT TURNOVER. I joined in Summer 2017, and in just four months, at least seven attorneys (including three partners/of counsel and two senior associates) left or were fired. At least four paralegals/assistants left or were fired during this period as well. Several came into my office crying because they were fired so suddenly and with no warning. I spoke with an attorney who was fired who speculated that the firings were related to financial pressures. Keep in mind this is a very small firm, so firing this number of people is inherently alarming. And most of those terminated had not even been at the firm very long..
Perhaps the biggest problem is that the firm is run by (you guessed it) a guy named Gerard Fox, with his wife Samantha as CFO. He is incredibly egotistical and often bad-mouths people who have left the firm as "quitters" and "whiners" (he says this in firmwide emails..), even though a rational manager would wonder if he's doing something wrong with such an incredible amount of turnover. I would have thought having one managing partner would lead to efficiency, but what you make up for in efficiency you lose in competent, stable management.
There is a lot of iffy financial management at this firm too. Plenty of offices in LA and NY remain unoccupied, even though that real estate ain't cheap. Small-time clients also don't always pay full bills.
The cases are mostly really small-time, obviously (since it's a small firm with low rates), but keep that in mind if you're used to more meaningful or interesting cases.
You will get some decent substantive experience here (drafting motions, handling arbitrations from start to finish) and some people are nice. But it's really not a secure place to work, and the colleagues don't make up for the atrocious management.
Hope this helps.
Since I didn't see this firm mentioned on this site, I wanted to relate my experience with "Gerard Fox Law" (http://www.gerardfoxlaw.com), which styles itself as an "elite" litigation boutique with offices in DC/LA/SF/NY. It is not.
I joined the firm from a biglaw firm, and was attracted to its small size and promise of substantive responsibility. Recruiters heavily advertise for this firm because there is NEAR-CONSTANT TURNOVER. I joined in Summer 2017, and in just four months, at least seven attorneys (including three partners/of counsel and two senior associates) left or were fired. At least four paralegals/assistants left or were fired during this period as well. Several came into my office crying because they were fired so suddenly and with no warning. I spoke with an attorney who was fired who speculated that the firings were related to financial pressures. Keep in mind this is a very small firm, so firing this number of people is inherently alarming. And most of those terminated had not even been at the firm very long..
Perhaps the biggest problem is that the firm is run by (you guessed it) a guy named Gerard Fox, with his wife Samantha as CFO. He is incredibly egotistical and often bad-mouths people who have left the firm as "quitters" and "whiners" (he says this in firmwide emails..), even though a rational manager would wonder if he's doing something wrong with such an incredible amount of turnover. I would have thought having one managing partner would lead to efficiency, but what you make up for in efficiency you lose in competent, stable management.
There is a lot of iffy financial management at this firm too. Plenty of offices in LA and NY remain unoccupied, even though that real estate ain't cheap. Small-time clients also don't always pay full bills.
The cases are mostly really small-time, obviously (since it's a small firm with low rates), but keep that in mind if you're used to more meaningful or interesting cases.
You will get some decent substantive experience here (drafting motions, handling arbitrations from start to finish) and some people are nice. But it's really not a secure place to work, and the colleagues don't make up for the atrocious management.
Hope this helps.
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Re: Gerard Fox Law - Beware
I know someone who went here for a summer with the promise they’d be opening a Seattle office. That didn’t materialize.
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Re: Gerard Fox Law - Beware
How's the pay?
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Re: Gerard Fox Law - Beware
I am unaware of anyone who was laboring under the impression that this firm is an "elite litigation boutique."
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Re: Gerard Fox Law - Beware
gaddockteeg wrote:How's the pay?
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Re: Gerard Fox Law - Beware
To be clear, no one sane thinks this is an ‘elite’ anything, except for the management. The point is that the management is delusional, not that I’m making an insightful observation by saying it’s not a high-quality firm.
The pay is about 50,000$-80,000 off the Cravath scale, at all levels, with minimal bonuses.
The pay is about 50,000$-80,000 off the Cravath scale, at all levels, with minimal bonuses.
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Re: Gerard Fox Law - Beware
Is your firm hiring first years for 2018?
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Re: Gerard Fox Law - Beware
Ah okay got it. I perused the website out of curiousity but couldn't tell what they meant by "elite"giggaman1228 wrote:To be clear, no one sane thinks this is an ‘elite’ anything, except for the management. The point is that the management is delusional, not that I’m making an insightful observation by saying it’s not a high-quality firm.
The pay is about 50,000$-80,000 off the Cravath scale, at all levels, with minimal bonuses.
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Re: Gerard Fox Law - Beware
How wiuld it make financial sense to hire and fire peoplw all the time
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Re: Gerard Fox Law - Beware
If clients suddenly don’t pay, or if they suddenly bail, you can run into a need to fire people quickly (Within 1-2 years of hiring them). Or if partners don’t bring in as much business as they promise, you might need to offload people fast. It’s a sign of mismanagement obviously. But it’s not unheard of to have to fire people a lot if you are under financial pressure.
Of course at this firm, the wife of the head partner (Samantha Fox) is also the CFO. There’s so many potential conflicts.
Of course at this firm, the wife of the head partner (Samantha Fox) is also the CFO. There’s so many potential conflicts.
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Re: Gerard Fox Law - Beware
If a firm is not paying at least Cravath scale (including bonus), it is not an elite litigation boutique.giggaman1228 wrote: The pay is about 50,000$-80,000 off the Cravath scale, at all levels, with minimal bonuses.
OP sorry to hear, but these sorts of things happen. The good news is that career detours are generally reversible.
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Re: Gerard Fox Law - Beware
Partners not bringing in business is one thing. But I think firing associates other than for poor performance isn't really just mismanagement, it's a sign the firm isn't doing very well at all. For small firms IMO it makes far more sense for the partners to weather the storm by taking a small hit to themselves for a year or two and just keep the associates they already have, rather than to fire associates during bad years and hire new ones when things pick up again. (It's also not very good if the firm only has a few clients and is totally fucked if one or more of those clients suddenly don't pay or suddenly bail.)giggaman1228 wrote:If clients suddenly don’t pay, or if they suddenly bail, you can run into a need to fire people quickly (Within 1-2 years of hiring them). Or if partners don’t bring in as much business as they promise, you might need to offload people fast. It’s a sign of mismanagement obviously. But it’s not unheard of to have to fire people a lot if you are under financial pressure.
I wouldn't necessarily agree with compensation as being the sole factor here in what counts as an elite litigation boutique... but then again I'm probably splitting hairs by this point.If a firm is not paying at least Cravath scale (including bonus), it is not an elite litigation boutique.
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Re: Gerard Fox Law - Beware
He said, ignoring the fact that Williams & Connolly pays well under market.nealric wrote:If a firm is not paying at least Cravath scale (including bonus), it is not an elite litigation boutique.giggaman1228 wrote: The pay is about 50,000$-80,000 off the Cravath scale, at all levels, with minimal bonuses.
OP sorry to hear, but these sorts of things happen. The good news is that career detours are generally reversible.
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Re: Gerard Fox Law - Beware
Is the Samantha Fox who is the CFO the same Samantha Fox who was a rockstar thirty or so years ago?
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Re: Gerard Fox Law - Beware
This seems very likely!Bubbles1012 wrote:Is the Samantha Fox who is the CFO the same Samantha Fox who was a rockstar thirty or so years ago?
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Re: Gerard Fox Law - Beware
FascinatedWanderer wrote:I am unaware of anyone who was laboring under the impression that this firm is an "elite litigation boutique."
Yeah... they just like to think they are. The firm's SA listing at our school advised us not to apply if we don't have a 3.5 GPA... when almost all AmLaw firms' cutoffs was a 3.3 lol
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Re: Gerard Fox Law - Beware
This was my first thought. I remember 1988 fondly.Bubbles1012 wrote:Is the Samantha Fox who is the CFO the same Samantha Fox who was a rockstar thirty or so years ago?
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Re: Gerard Fox Law - Beware
FascinatedWanderer wrote:He said, ignoring the fact that Williams & Connolly pays well under market.nealric wrote:If a firm is not paying at least Cravath scale (including bonus), it is not an elite litigation boutique.giggaman1228 wrote: The pay is about 50,000$-80,000 off the Cravath scale, at all levels, with minimal bonuses.
OP sorry to hear, but these sorts of things happen. The good news is that career detours are generally reversible.
Yea and I wouldn't advise anyone with williams grades o go there over a boutique that actually pays market
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Re: Gerard Fox Law - Beware
Munger, Keker, and W&C have usually paid below market over the past 20 years. Why would you advise someone not to work at those places?jd20132013 wrote: Yea and I wouldn't advise anyone with williams grades o go there over a boutique that actually pays market
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Re: Gerard Fox Law - Beware
"Any firm that must say, 'We are elite' is not truly elite."
-Tywin Lannister, probably.
-Tywin Lannister, probably.
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Re: Gerard Fox Law - Beware
W&C traditionally paid over-market base, but with no bonus. It was over-market at certain class levels during the recession. Setting that aside, I don't really consider W&C a litigation "boutique." A place with 250+ attorneys is straight up biglaw in my book.FascinatedWanderer wrote:He said, ignoring the fact that Williams & Connolly pays well under market.nealric wrote:If a firm is not paying at least Cravath scale (including bonus), it is not an elite litigation boutique.giggaman1228 wrote: The pay is about 50,000$-80,000 off the Cravath scale, at all levels, with minimal bonuses.
OP sorry to hear, but these sorts of things happen. The good news is that career detours are generally reversible.
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- rpupkin
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Re: Gerard Fox Law - Beware
I agree that W&C is no longer a boutique but it's not straight-up biglaw either. Same for MTO.nealric wrote:W&C traditionally paid over-market base, but with no bonus. It was over-market at certain class levels during the recession. Setting that aside, I don't really consider W&C a litigation "boutique." A place with 250+ attorneys is straight up biglaw in my book.
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Re: Gerard Fox Law - Beware
I'm aware of all of this. Doesn't change the fact that they pay $25k less than market for third years when considering all-in comp. And about $50k less all-in for fourth years.nealric wrote:W&C traditionally paid over-market base, but with no bonus. It was over-market at certain class levels during the recession. Setting that aside, I don't really consider W&C a litigation "boutique." A place with 250+ attorneys is straight up biglaw in my book.FascinatedWanderer wrote:He said, ignoring the fact that Williams & Connolly pays well under market.nealric wrote:If a firm is not paying at least Cravath scale (including bonus), it is not an elite litigation boutique.giggaman1228 wrote: The pay is about 50,000$-80,000 off the Cravath scale, at all levels, with minimal bonuses.
OP sorry to hear, but these sorts of things happen. The good news is that career detours are generally reversible.
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Re: Gerard Fox Law - Beware
Because they don't pay market. Ymmv of courserpupkin wrote:Munger, Keker, and W&C have usually paid below market over the past 20 years. Why would you advise someone not to work at those places?jd20132013 wrote: Yea and I wouldn't advise anyone with williams grades o go there over a boutique that actually pays market
- rpupkin
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Re: Gerard Fox Law - Beware
But I thought your point was that you would advise someone to go to boutiques that actually pay market. What boutiques are you talking about? The boutiques/smaller firms that consistently pay market and above (like Susman and McKool) tend to focus on plaintiff-side work and require longer hours. If your hypothetical advice-seeker wanted to avoid those environments (many people do), would you tell them to choose big law over Munger/Keker/W&C because big law pays market?jd20132013 wrote:Because they don't pay market. Ymmv of courserpupkin wrote:Munger, Keker, and W&C have usually paid below market over the past 20 years. Why would you advise someone not to work at those places?jd20132013 wrote: Yea and I wouldn't advise anyone with williams grades o go there over a boutique that actually pays market
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