DC Biglaw Tax
Posted: Mon Jan 03, 2022 6:09 pm
Curious about what the quality of work, hours, work culture, QOL, etc. are at the different biglaw tax groups in DC. Anyone have any intel they'd be willing to share?
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That's interesting, I would have thought that a larger group would provide more opportunities to try different things as a junior. I'm not sure if I want to do transactional/planning or controversy yet, so am hoping for someplace that's good at both. Also hoping for someplace that pays market, so probably the boutiques are out.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Tue Jan 04, 2022 1:16 amSkadden is probably the largest group. The one complaint I’ve heard from Skadden is you can get siloed pretty quickly because the group is so large.
Sometimes getting big means you need to people to fill slots and specialize. That’s not from personal experience, just an associate I met while networking in DC Tax.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Wed Jan 05, 2022 4:44 pmThank you both for the insights.
That's interesting, I would have thought that a larger group would provide more opportunities to try different things as a junior. I'm not sure if I want to do transactional/planning or controversy yet, so am hoping for someplace that's good at both. Also hoping for someplace that pays market, so probably the boutiques are out.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Tue Jan 04, 2022 1:16 amSkadden is probably the largest group. The one complaint I’ve heard from Skadden is you can get siloed pretty quickly because the group is so large.
Any firms in particular to avoid? It's hard to get a sense of things when most threads are about corporate groups.
Personally, a lot of my getting up to speed on new regs and legislation ends up being billable since you won’t really think about the intricacies of something like qualified small business stock investments until your client asks you about them.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Thu Jan 20, 2022 12:58 amOP here. Thanks for all the perspectives, I appreciate them all.
I'm curious about the hours and quality of life difference between boutiques and biglaw -- I'm not even really sure what counts as "good" or "bad" hours in tax, 2200? 2400? I understand that tax lawyers have more nonbillable commitments (presumably reading Tax Notes, getting up to speed on the latest proposed legislation or new regs, and the like) but don't really know what that plus billables means from a numbers perspective. And are there other ways in which the quality of life differs? Weekend work, quality of cases/deals, fire drills (to the extent that's a thing in tax)?
I think the amount of nonbillable work can be really brutal - particularly if you are working for a firm that has an hours minimum for bonuses. Working at midnight on a client matter that overall counts towards my billable target and bonus is fine (that's big law), but working at midnight on a client alert related to a new regulation where my hours don't count towards anything is awful. Compared to my M&A colleagues, I end up working the same hours but a good 400 of mine aren't billable, but are still actual work (it's more tiring to read regulations than, say, sit on a diligence call for 4 hours). Overall I don't think the tax lifestyle is that bad (I've never pulled an all-nighter in 8 years), but it's still big law.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Thu Jan 20, 2022 1:39 amPersonally, a lot of my getting up to speed on new regs and legislation ends up being billable since you won’t really think about the intricacies of something like qualified small business stock investments until your client asks you about them.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Thu Jan 20, 2022 12:58 amOP here. Thanks for all the perspectives, I appreciate them all.
I'm curious about the hours and quality of life difference between boutiques and biglaw -- I'm not even really sure what counts as "good" or "bad" hours in tax, 2200? 2400? I understand that tax lawyers have more nonbillable commitments (presumably reading Tax Notes, getting up to speed on the latest proposed legislation or new regs, and the like) but don't really know what that plus billables means from a numbers perspective. And are there other ways in which the quality of life differs? Weekend work, quality of cases/deals, fire drills (to the extent that's a thing in tax)?
That being said, I still do a lot of non billable reading on tax materials. Definitely more than any corporate associate.
Hours are honestly not great in tax but far fewer all nighters compared to corporate.
Boutique anon. Target is somewhere in the 1800-1900 range and it seems like that is what most people aim for. I work a pretty solid 9 or so hours a day but rarely work on anything after I leave the office and very rarely work weekends.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Thu Jan 20, 2022 12:58 amOP here. Thanks for all the perspectives, I appreciate them all.
I'm curious about the hours and quality of life difference between boutiques and biglaw -- I'm not even really sure what counts as "good" or "bad" hours in tax, 2200? 2400? I understand that tax lawyers have more nonbillable commitments (presumably reading Tax Notes, getting up to speed on the latest proposed legislation or new regs, and the like) but don't really know what that plus billables means from a numbers perspective. And are there other ways in which the quality of life differs? Weekend work, quality of cases/deals, fire drills (to the extent that's a thing in tax)?