Moving to In-House Early Forum
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Anonymous posting is only appropriate when you are revealing sensitive employment related information about a firm, job, etc. You may anonymously respond on topic to these threads. Unacceptable uses include: harassing another user, joking around, testing the feature, or other things that are more appropriate in the lounge.
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Moving to In-House Early
Posted this on in-house forum as well, since I didn't know where to.
I've heard so many negative things thereof. However, in my case, the associate position I took right out of law school was what I took because that was all I had. (15 ~ 20 Atty. Insurance Defense) I wanted to do corporate/transactional practice much more than ID. Besides, this corporation, which requires Korean-English bilingual attorney seems to fit perfectly in my niche. (And not sure whether it matters, but it's a major corporation) When I move to Korean practice groups of law firms in the future, this may be a silver lining.
That being said, I'm still scared of going in-house as a second-year associate, because people roll their eyes at resumes starting with an in-house position. (Position starts on June and I worked at my current firm right out of law school) I would greatly appreciate any advice.
I've heard so many negative things thereof. However, in my case, the associate position I took right out of law school was what I took because that was all I had. (15 ~ 20 Atty. Insurance Defense) I wanted to do corporate/transactional practice much more than ID. Besides, this corporation, which requires Korean-English bilingual attorney seems to fit perfectly in my niche. (And not sure whether it matters, but it's a major corporation) When I move to Korean practice groups of law firms in the future, this may be a silver lining.
That being said, I'm still scared of going in-house as a second-year associate, because people roll their eyes at resumes starting with an in-house position. (Position starts on June and I worked at my current firm right out of law school) I would greatly appreciate any advice.
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Re: Moving to In-House Early
Take the offer unless you want to be doing insurance defense forever
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Re: Moving to In-House Early
What do you mean by damage your resume? Will you have difficulty getting a biglaw job if you try in the future? Not sure, but having years of ID experience also isn’t going to help in this situation.
Will it hinder your chances of landing another in-house role? Probably not.
Will it hinder your chances of landing another in-house role? Probably not.
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Re: Moving to In-House Early
The types of people who look down on attorneys who start their careers in-house aren't going to think any more highly of insurance defense. But you shouldn't worry about what they think. If you want to do corporate/transactional work, going in-house over staying in insurance defense is a no-brainer.
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Re: Moving to In-House Early
Not necessarily a biglaw but just any mid~big sized firm in general... but I guess you're right that ID isn't going to cut it any better than the in-house experience.2013 wrote: ↑Thu Jan 28, 2021 4:02 pmWhat do you mean by damage your resume? Will you have difficulty getting a biglaw job if you try in the future? Not sure, but having years of ID experience also isn’t going to help in this situation.
Will it hinder your chances of landing another in-house role? Probably not.
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Re: Moving to In-House Early
The first sentence actually makes lots of sense. Thank you!hdr wrote: ↑Thu Jan 28, 2021 4:12 pmThe types of people who look down on attorneys who start their careers in-house aren't going to think any more highly of insurance defense. But you shouldn't worry about what they think. If you want to do corporate/transactional work, going in-house over staying in insurance defense is a no-brainer.