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Taking advantage of firm policies
Posted: Tue Nov 07, 2017 3:52 pm
by umichman
Does anybody stick around a little longer than they maybe have to in order to get the free dinner and ride home? Not like you are done at 5 and get those things at 6. But you are done at 540 and have an hour of tomorrows work you can do today to get the free stuff at 6.
Edit. To respond to below, you would have to work from home anyways.
Re: Taking advantage of firm policies
Posted: Tue Nov 07, 2017 3:56 pm
by estefanchanning
If, to you, sticking around for an hour to get a free meal is worth more than an extra hour with your loved ones, then I'm sorry.
Re: Taking advantage of firm policies
Posted: Tue Nov 07, 2017 4:00 pm
by jd20132013
life hack, stay in big law long enough and all your loved ones will leave
Re: Taking advantage of firm policies
Posted: Tue Nov 07, 2017 4:03 pm
by PorscheFanatic
You can expense dinners if you work past 6? By that standard, people in my office would be expensing dinners like 5 nights/week then.
From my perspective, it seems like the group I work with simply doesn't eat (they snack on the free potato chips and other things in our kitchen).
As a first year, would it be weird if I started expensing the cheap meals I buy when I work later? I value my health and waist line, so I'd rather buy something decent for $10 than just eat chips, but feel like I'd be the only one and not sure how that might be viewed when I constantly expense my meals.
No one would judge me for eating dinner instead of chips if I'm here working, I just wonder how the expense thing would go over since I think the partners are the ones that approve expenses, and I'm in a small office.
Re: Taking advantage of firm policies
Posted: Tue Nov 07, 2017 4:16 pm
by umichman
PorscheFanatic wrote:You can expense dinners if you work past 6? By that standard, people in my office would be expensing dinners like 5 nights/week then.
From my perspective, it seems like the group I work with simply doesn't eat (they snack on the free potato chips and other things in our kitchen).
As a first year, would it be weird if I started expensing the cheap meals I buy when I work later? I value my health and waist line, so I'd rather buy something decent for $10 than just eat chips, but feel like I'd be the only one and not sure how that might be viewed when I constantly expense my meals.
No one would judge me for eating dinner instead of chips if I'm here working, I just wonder how the expense thing would go over since I think the partners are the ones that approve expenses, and I'm in a small office.
Yeah able to expense at 6
Re: Taking advantage of firm policies
Posted: Tue Nov 07, 2017 4:17 pm
by Anonymous User
umichman wrote:Does anybody stick around a little longer than they maybe have to in order to get the free dinner and ride home? Not like you are done at 5 and get those things at 6. But you are done at 540 and have an hour of tomorrows work you can do today to get the free stuff at 6.
Edit. To respond to below, you would have to work from home anyways.
Yes, I did this all the time. Might as well take advantage of the perks.
Re: Taking advantage of firm policies
Posted: Tue Nov 07, 2017 4:25 pm
by LaLiLuLeLo
Do you count your lentils before you cook them to make sure you don't use too many?
jfc, some of you people.
Re: Taking advantage of firm policies
Posted: Tue Nov 07, 2017 5:42 pm
by Anonymous User
As long as it doesn't affect deadlines, and assuming the Partners I'm working with have left or I've confirmed they don't need anything, I like to leave the office as early as possible. I might still do more work later from home, but the freedom of leaving the office even an hour earlier is far more worth it to me than a free meal. Sure, the meals may add up in $$$ but so does the free time (if your workload legitimately allows it). As a big law associate, your time is now more valuable than meal expenses. Try and knock out the gym early for the day, go for a run, grab dinner with friends/family/significant other, or spend time on a hobby.
If you already have time-sensitive work to do and/or need to pile on the hours, then stay as much as you need to. But wouldn't go out of my way for the meal. Alternatively, if you ARE going to stay later, maybe try to make a light Friday working remotely work every now and then.
FWIW, I'm a 2nd year big law corporate associate west coast. In my opinion, this all makes for a better quality of life - but you can ignore me if you just want to gun for hours, bonuses, partner, etc.
Re: Taking advantage of firm policies
Posted: Tue Nov 07, 2017 6:28 pm
by lolwat
If it's like 5:45 and you get the free stuff at 6:00, yeah. If it's like 5, no.
As a big law associate, your time is now more valuable than meal expenses.
This is only sort of true and not necessarily for everyone. I think many firms just pay a set salary and bonus based on class rather than individual performance. So you personally can't earn more money just by billing more hours (and in fact, if you do work beyond what is required, you're diluting your personal hourly income... not taking into account other factors like gunning for partnership). When it's down to your free time you just have to determine whether the money you earn/save from things like meal expenses is worth the extra 15-20 minutes you have to stay at the office. Maybe that $20-something a day is worth it. Maybe you'd prefer to spend those 20 minutes at home. But it's the same concept as like, people who tutor on the weekends for some extra spending cash.
Re: Taking advantage of firm policies
Posted: Tue Nov 07, 2017 6:54 pm
by 1styearlateral
Which biglaw associates are going home at 5 because I want to apply.
Re: Taking advantage of firm policies
Posted: Tue Nov 07, 2017 7:00 pm
by Danger Zone
1styearlateral wrote:Which biglaw associates are going home at 5 because I want to apply.
Or even 6 for that matter
Re: Taking advantage of firm policies
Posted: Tue Nov 07, 2017 7:12 pm
by LaLiLuLeLo
Danger Zone wrote:1styearlateral wrote:Which biglaw associates are going home at 5 because I want to apply.
Or even 6 for that matter
Oh no, NYC vs. other markets discussion incoming
(I leave around 6 if I'm slow)
Re: Taking advantage of firm policies
Posted: Tue Nov 07, 2017 7:26 pm
by rpupkin
jd20132013 wrote:life hack, stay in big law long enough and all your loved ones will leave
thread winner
Re: Taking advantage of firm policies
Posted: Tue Nov 07, 2017 7:28 pm
by SmokeytheBear
LaLiLuLeLo wrote:Danger Zone wrote:1styearlateral wrote:Which biglaw associates are going home at 5 because I want to apply.
Or even 6 for that matter
Oh no, NYC vs. other markets discussion incoming
(I leave around 6 if I'm slow)
I don't go in if I'm slow.
Re: Taking advantage of firm policies
Posted: Tue Nov 07, 2017 7:43 pm
by Lincoln
SmokeytheBear wrote:LaLiLuLeLo wrote:Danger Zone wrote:1styearlateral wrote:Which biglaw associates are going home at 5 because I want to apply.
Or even 6 for that matter
Oh no, NYC vs. other markets discussion incoming
(I leave around 6 if I'm slow)
I don't go in if I'm slow.
What's a "slow"?
Re: Taking advantage of firm policies
Posted: Tue Nov 07, 2017 8:42 pm
by KM2016
SmokeytheBear wrote:LaLiLuLeLo wrote:Danger Zone wrote:1styearlateral wrote:Which biglaw associates are going home at 5 because I want to apply.
Or even 6 for that matter
Oh no, NYC vs. other markets discussion incoming
(I leave around 6 if I'm slow)
I don't go in if I'm slow.
RT
Re: Taking advantage of firm policies
Posted: Wed Nov 08, 2017 1:32 am
by Anonymous User
JFC you're not making partner anyway. Milk that shit for all it's worth and then bounce.