Exit ops for a Tax lawyer?
Posted: Tue Oct 12, 2021 1:05 pm
What are typical paths for a biglaw tax lawyer wanting to leave biglaw? Can they go in-house to PE funds? Banks?
Law School Discussion Forums
https://www.top-law-schools.com/forums/
https://www.top-law-schools.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=23&t=311200
What are the typical comp packages for the above and what class year provides for the optimal exit?nealric wrote: ↑Tue Oct 12, 2021 4:38 pmI moved in-house in the oil and gas industry. Generally speaking, there are opportunities in-house at any company large enough to need full time tax counsel (a healthy portion of the F500 plus some larger private companies/funds). Besides that, there's also government jobs (both IRS/DOJ and state tax agencies) and tax boutiques.
Overall, exit ops aren't dramatically different from corporate, but your specific practice within Biglaw may dictate where your options are.
will depend on your goals (e.g. whether and how much loan burden you need to pay down before fleeing biglaw)
In-house is heavily dependent on the industry, location, and company profile. Base is typically a smaller fraction of all-in comp than in biglaw. You start bringing in 401k matches, equity comp, and pensions which are not common in Biglaw. That said, I'd expect somewhere between $200-400k all-in for the typical mid/senior associate moving in-house.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Tue Oct 12, 2021 4:56 pmWhat are the typical comp packages for the above and what class year provides for the optimal exit?nealric wrote: ↑Tue Oct 12, 2021 4:38 pmI moved in-house in the oil and gas industry. Generally speaking, there are opportunities in-house at any company large enough to need full time tax counsel (a healthy portion of the F500 plus some larger private companies/funds). Besides that, there's also government jobs (both IRS/DOJ and state tax agencies) and tax boutiques.
Overall, exit ops aren't dramatically different from corporate, but your specific practice within Biglaw may dictate where your options are.
This is coming from someone still in law school, but has a tax gig lined up. When moving in-house to a F500 company, do they still look at your grades? How does school prestige play into it? Firm rank?nealric wrote: ↑Tue Oct 12, 2021 4:38 pmI moved in-house in the oil and gas industry. Generally speaking, there are opportunities in-house at any company large enough to need full time tax counsel (a healthy portion of the F500 plus some larger private companies/funds). Besides that, there's also government jobs (both IRS/DOJ and state tax agencies) and tax boutiques.
Overall, exit ops aren't dramatically different from corporate, but your specific practice within Biglaw may dictate where your options are.
It's totally up to the proclivities of the hiring manager. However, when my company has hired, our primary focus is on finding someone who has the requisite experience and expertise more than anything. A 4.0 and a job at a v5 isn't meaningful if all you did was 3 years of diligence. That said, someone who got mediocre grades and went to a mediocre firm may be less likely to get good experience.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Wed Oct 13, 2021 11:36 amThis is coming from someone still in law school, but has a tax gig lined up. When moving in-house to a F500 company, do they still look at your grades? How does school prestige play into it? Firm rank?nealric wrote: ↑Tue Oct 12, 2021 4:38 pmI moved in-house in the oil and gas industry. Generally speaking, there are opportunities in-house at any company large enough to need full time tax counsel (a healthy portion of the F500 plus some larger private companies/funds). Besides that, there's also government jobs (both IRS/DOJ and state tax agencies) and tax boutiques.
Overall, exit ops aren't dramatically different from corporate, but your specific practice within Biglaw may dictate where your options are.
What would you qualify as a mediocre firm? I have pretty shit grades from a T14 and am bound for a V50 firm. I'm not planning on leaving, but I want to know if I am doomed if I need to pivot out of Big Law.nealric wrote: ↑Wed Oct 13, 2021 11:59 amIt's totally up to the proclivities of the hiring manager. However, when my company has hired our primary focus is on finding someone who has the requisite experience and expertise more than anything. A 4.0 and a job at a v5 isn't meaningful if all you did was 3 years of diligence. That said, someone who got mediocre grades and went to a mediocre firm may be less likely to get good experience.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Wed Oct 13, 2021 11:36 amThis is coming from someone still in law school, but has a tax gig lined up. When moving in-house to a F500 company, do they still look at your grades? How does school prestige play into it? Firm rank?nealric wrote: ↑Tue Oct 12, 2021 4:38 pmI moved in-house in the oil and gas industry. Generally speaking, there are opportunities in-house at any company large enough to need full time tax counsel (a healthy portion of the F500 plus some larger private companies/funds). Besides that, there's also government jobs (both IRS/DOJ and state tax agencies) and tax boutiques.
Overall, exit ops aren't dramatically different from corporate, but your specific practice within Biglaw may dictate where your options are.
As a general rule, grades fade in importance the farther out you are from graduation. Doubtful they would even come up at all for someone 10+ years out. Most folks drop GPAs from their resumes before they hit that point (though they'd keep honors designations).
Nah. I was at a v100.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Wed Oct 13, 2021 12:07 pmWhat would you qualify as a mediocre firm? I have pretty shit grades from a T14 and am bound for a V50 firm. I'm not planning on leaving, but I want to know if I am doomed if I need to pivot out of Big Law.nealric wrote: ↑Wed Oct 13, 2021 11:59 amIt's totally up to the proclivities of the hiring manager. However, when my company has hired our primary focus is on finding someone who has the requisite experience and expertise more than anything. A 4.0 and a job at a v5 isn't meaningful if all you did was 3 years of diligence. That said, someone who got mediocre grades and went to a mediocre firm may be less likely to get good experience.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Wed Oct 13, 2021 11:36 amThis is coming from someone still in law school, but has a tax gig lined up. When moving in-house to a F500 company, do they still look at your grades? How does school prestige play into it? Firm rank?nealric wrote: ↑Tue Oct 12, 2021 4:38 pmI moved in-house in the oil and gas industry. Generally speaking, there are opportunities in-house at any company large enough to need full time tax counsel (a healthy portion of the F500 plus some larger private companies/funds). Besides that, there's also government jobs (both IRS/DOJ and state tax agencies) and tax boutiques.
Overall, exit ops aren't dramatically different from corporate, but your specific practice within Biglaw may dictate where your options are.
As a general rule, grades fade in importance the farther out you are from graduation. Doubtful they would even come up at all for someone 10+ years out. Most folks drop GPAs from their resumes before they hit that point (though they'd keep honors designations).