Labor and employment - what skills are most important?
Posted: Fri Apr 12, 2019 10:38 am
Hi all,
I'm about 3 years out of law school and looking to make a career change this year. I focused heavily on public interest while in law school (no firm experience, lots of clinical experience, a policy clerkship, somewhat above median at a T10 school), and have done an academic fellowship and a nontrad nonprofit job that isn't traditional lawyering but involves a lot of client-facing work since graduation.
I'm hoping to transition into more traditional legal work this year, and one of the things I'm particularly interested in is joining an L&E department. I took a few labor/employment classes in law school and did well, but don't have specific postgrad experience at this point. So my question for those of you who have done L&E firm work before is - what skills have you found particularly valuable in your practice? If you've interviewed or hired L&E associates, what are the key characteristics that you look for?
Sorry if this is broad, any insight would be appreciated!
I'm about 3 years out of law school and looking to make a career change this year. I focused heavily on public interest while in law school (no firm experience, lots of clinical experience, a policy clerkship, somewhat above median at a T10 school), and have done an academic fellowship and a nontrad nonprofit job that isn't traditional lawyering but involves a lot of client-facing work since graduation.
I'm hoping to transition into more traditional legal work this year, and one of the things I'm particularly interested in is joining an L&E department. I took a few labor/employment classes in law school and did well, but don't have specific postgrad experience at this point. So my question for those of you who have done L&E firm work before is - what skills have you found particularly valuable in your practice? If you've interviewed or hired L&E associates, what are the key characteristics that you look for?
Sorry if this is broad, any insight would be appreciated!