DPW pushing people out
Posted: Wed Jun 29, 2022 9:50 am
I heard anecdotally that DPW allegedly pushes out associates who don't make partner. Is this true? How true is this for S&C and Paul, Weiss? Thanks
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Basically all firms do this. It's called up or out for a reason. The better question is what firms let you keep on as a super-senior associate or will put you in an of counsel role in perpetuity. Unsure what that list looks like.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Wed Jun 29, 2022 9:50 amI heard anecdotally that DPW allegedly pushes out associates who don't make partner. Is this true? How true is this for S&C and Paul, Weiss? Thanks
Isn't this true of mostly all of the top Big Law firms? If you aren't seen as partner material, it's not as though you can stay associate forever. And some of these firms are also phasing out "of counsel" positions. So it's not a DPW-specific thing, and it's not new. At least as far as I know..Anonymous User wrote: ↑Wed Jun 29, 2022 9:50 amI heard anecdotally that DPW allegedly pushes out associates who don't make partner. Is this true? How true is this for S&C and Paul, Weiss? Thanks
Gotta love people offering anecdotal experience to prove too much.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Thu Jun 30, 2022 12:51 amOver the past 5-10 years or so (post-great recession), "up or out" hasn't been a thing anymore. Most top firms have been understaffed for years and have been doing what they can to hang on to associates. A competent (or even not so competent) senior associate will easily keep their job. We'll see if that changes if/when another recession comes.
Are you actually at Kirkland NY? Because I’m at a different Kirkland office and it’s not the case here. Like.... that’s part of the point of NSPs, isn’t it? A whole bunch of highly profitable people in a weird zone where they’re billed out like partners but paid much less than equity. I’m not aware of any NSPs being pushed out after failing to make equity in my office - why would they be? Kirkland of all firms would never throw away a profitable cog in their machine unless there was a good reason.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Thu Jun 30, 2022 9:10 am"Up or out" is absolutely a thing, at, e.g., Kirkland NY. And Kirkland takes its cues, in large part, from the practices of the firms it perceives to be its competitors for talent/work. I very much doubt that up-or-out is *not* a thing at a majority of comparable top Big Law firms.
Settle. I don't think anyone is trying to mislead anyone, just reflecting different experiences. OP, the general trend among law firms is that up or out is less of a feature than it was 5 years ago (when it was less of a feature than 5 years before that). It's one of the significant shifts in law firms since the Great Recession of 08/09. A major reason for this is "super senior" associates / non-equity partners are big profit centers for law firms and somewhere along the line management committees figured out it didn't make sense to kick these people out because of some arbitrary x-year deadline. Having said that, as you're seeing from different responses, there still is a range in terms of how much the up or culture has died or persisted across different firms.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Thu Jun 30, 2022 7:04 amBut please stop misleading people into thinking there's no such thing as up or out anymore.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Thu Jun 30, 2022 12:51 amOver the past 5-10 years or so (post-great recession), "up or out" hasn't been a thing anymore. Most top firms have been understaffed for years and have been doing what they can to hang on to associates. A competent (or even not so competent) senior associate will easily keep their job. We'll see if that changes if/when another recession comes.
Read your post again. The original bolded text absolutely tried to say that up or out is over period, so I naturally told you that's wrong. You said that competent associates will keep their jobs. That's also demonstrably false at some firms and totally therefore completely misleading for those at a firm that pushes people out. There's no "in my experience" or "YMMV" anywhere in your post. Don't try to pin responsibility for your imprecise language on me or rewrite your post to make yourself seem more reasonable. You weren't. Anyway, you don't defend the original points I questioned so I'm glad we can agree your original post was an overreach.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Thu Jun 30, 2022 9:22 amSettle. I don't think anyone is trying to mislead anyone, just reflecting different experiences. OP, the general trend among law firms is that up or out is less of a feature than it was 5 years ago (when it was less of a feature than 5 years before that). It's one of the significant shifts in law firms since the Great Recession of 08/09. A major reason for this is "super senior" associates / non-equity partners are big profit centers for law firms and somewhere along the line management committees figured out it didn't make sense to kick these people out because of some arbitrary x-year deadline. Having said that, as you're seeing from different responses, there still is a range in terms of how much the up or culture has died or persisted across different firms.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Thu Jun 30, 2022 7:04 amBut please stop misleading people into thinking there's no such thing as up or out anymore.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Thu Jun 30, 2022 12:51 amOver the past 5-10 years or so (post-great recession), "up or out" hasn't been a thing anymore. Most top firms have been understaffed for years and have been doing what they can to hang on to associates. A competent (or even not so competent) senior associate will easily keep their job. We'll see if that changes if/when another recession comes.
Holy shit dude get a grip. Your post is like a warning message against people joining the profession.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Thu Jun 30, 2022 9:47 amRead your post again. The original bolded text absolutely tried to say that up or out is over period, so I naturally told you that's wrong. You said that competent associates will keep their jobs. That's also demonstrably false at some firms and totally therefore completely misleading for those at a firm that pushes people out. There's no "in my experience" or "YMMV" anywhere in your post. Don't try to pin responsibility for your imprecise language on me or rewrite your post to make yourself seem more reasonable. You weren't. Anyway, you don't defend the original points I questioned so I'm glad we can agree your original post was an overreach.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Thu Jun 30, 2022 9:22 amSettle. I don't think anyone is trying to mislead anyone, just reflecting different experiences. OP, the general trend among law firms is that up or out is less of a feature than it was 5 years ago (when it was less of a feature than 5 years before that). It's one of the significant shifts in law firms since the Great Recession of 08/09. A major reason for this is "super senior" associates / non-equity partners are big profit centers for law firms and somewhere along the line management committees figured out it didn't make sense to kick these people out because of some arbitrary x-year deadline. Having said that, as you're seeing from different responses, there still is a range in terms of how much the up or culture has died or persisted across different firms.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Thu Jun 30, 2022 7:04 amBut please stop misleading people into thinking there's no such thing as up or out anymore.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Thu Jun 30, 2022 12:51 amOver the past 5-10 years or so (post-great recession), "up or out" hasn't been a thing anymore. Most top firms have been understaffed for years and have been doing what they can to hang on to associates. A competent (or even not so competent) senior associate will easily keep their job. We'll see if that changes if/when another recession comes.
Agreed. My response is exactly what most opposing counsel do when you say something incorrect. They tell you why you're wrong. If you don't like making precise arguments or being told when you've overgeneralized, then you probably shouldn't join the profession. I don't see why that's controversial.
I'm the original anon you're responding to. At my firm, in the V10, you are wrong, based on my more than decade of experience. We do not follow an up or out model anymore and haven't since ITE, for the reasons everyone (except you, in your obstinance) is highlighting--super seniors run cases and make the firm a boatload of money without requiring $million comp. Again, your experience, at your firm, wherever it is in the Vault, may be different. You are being unnecessarily argumentative here.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Thu Jun 30, 2022 10:22 amAgreed. My response is exactly what most opposing counsel do when you say something incorrect. They tell you why you're wrong. If you don't like making precise arguments or being told when you've overgeneralized, then you probably shouldn't join the profession. I don't see why that's controversial.
But there is a problem here. I get that this is a forum, but it's filled with people who overreach and give off the cuff advice that unassuming 0Ls or law students might actually listen to. You may feel big and smart to proclaim the death of up or out, but I'm not going to apologize because my tone in proving that to be false made you feel bad or whatever. What was I supposed to say? "Oh thanks for the info, totally right except sometimes I feel like up or out can be a thing and I assume that's what you meant. Great post!" Nope.
Anyway, if you actually cared about getting a grip we'd all see that we agree - up or out is firm-dependent and is sometimes a thing, but sometimes not, and sometimes something in between. If you want to keep complaining about the tone of my posts be my guest, but then you're derailing with irrelevant arguments about arguments even more than I am.
At my V40, I don't get the sense that the up or out model is really thing anymore. As long as you are competent and a hard worker, you aren't going to get pushed out for simply not being partner material. We have many super-senior associates and counsels in our group.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Thu Jun 30, 2022 10:44 amI'm the original anon you're responding to. At my firm, in the V10, you are wrong, based on my more than decade of experience. We do not follow an up or out model anymore and haven't since ITE, for the reasons everyone (except you, in your obstinance) is highlighting--super seniors run cases and make the firm a boatload of money without requiring $million comp. Again, your experience, at your firm, wherever it is in the Vault, may be different. You are being unnecessarily argumentative here.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Thu Jun 30, 2022 10:22 amAgreed. My response is exactly what most opposing counsel do when you say something incorrect. They tell you why you're wrong. If you don't like making precise arguments or being told when you've overgeneralized, then you probably shouldn't join the profession. I don't see why that's controversial.
But there is a problem here. I get that this is a forum, but it's filled with people who overreach and give off the cuff advice that unassuming 0Ls or law students might actually listen to. You may feel big and smart to proclaim the death of up or out, but I'm not going to apologize because my tone in proving that to be false made you feel bad or whatever. What was I supposed to say? "Oh thanks for the info, totally right except sometimes I feel like up or out can be a thing and I assume that's what you meant. Great post!" Nope.
Anyway, if you actually cared about getting a grip we'd all see that we agree - up or out is firm-dependent and is sometimes a thing, but sometimes not, and sometimes something in between. If you want to keep complaining about the tone of my posts be my guest, but then you're derailing with irrelevant arguments about arguments even more than I am.
Dude do you not understand how to scope an argument? Let me summarize:Anonymous User wrote: ↑Thu Jun 30, 2022 10:44 amI'm the original anon you're responding to. At my firm, in the V10, you are wrong, based on my more than decade of experience. We do not follow an up or out model anymore and haven't since ITE, for the reasons everyone (except you, in your obstinance) is highlighting--super seniors run cases and make the firm a boatload of money without requiring $million comp. Again, your experience, at your firm, wherever it is in the Vault, may be different. You are being unnecessarily argumentative here.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Thu Jun 30, 2022 10:22 amAgreed. My response is exactly what most opposing counsel do when you say something incorrect. They tell you why you're wrong. If you don't like making precise arguments or being told when you've overgeneralized, then you probably shouldn't join the profession. I don't see why that's controversial.
But there is a problem here. I get that this is a forum, but it's filled with people who overreach and give off the cuff advice that unassuming 0Ls or law students might actually listen to. You may feel big and smart to proclaim the death of up or out, but I'm not going to apologize because my tone in proving that to be false made you feel bad or whatever. What was I supposed to say? "Oh thanks for the info, totally right except sometimes I feel like up or out can be a thing and I assume that's what you meant. Great post!" Nope.
Anyway, if you actually cared about getting a grip we'd all see that we agree - up or out is firm-dependent and is sometimes a thing, but sometimes not, and sometimes something in between. If you want to keep complaining about the tone of my posts be my guest, but then you're derailing with irrelevant arguments about arguments even more than I am.
My end game is interacting with you as little as possible going forward given how you're behaving in this thread. I am not trying to argue here and I certainly don't want to do some point by point debate. I will start my endgame ... now.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Thu Jun 30, 2022 10:58 amDude do you not understand how to scope an argument? Let me summarize:Anonymous User wrote: ↑Thu Jun 30, 2022 10:44 amI'm the original anon you're responding to. At my firm, in the V10, you are wrong, based on my more than decade of experience. We do not follow an up or out model anymore and haven't since ITE, for the reasons everyone (except you, in your obstinance) is highlighting--super seniors run cases and make the firm a boatload of money without requiring $million comp. Again, your experience, at your firm, wherever it is in the Vault, may be different. You are being unnecessarily argumentative here.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Thu Jun 30, 2022 10:22 amAgreed. My response is exactly what most opposing counsel do when you say something incorrect. They tell you why you're wrong. If you don't like making precise arguments or being told when you've overgeneralized, then you probably shouldn't join the profession. I don't see why that's controversial.
But there is a problem here. I get that this is a forum, but it's filled with people who overreach and give off the cuff advice that unassuming 0Ls or law students might actually listen to. You may feel big and smart to proclaim the death of up or out, but I'm not going to apologize because my tone in proving that to be false made you feel bad or whatever. What was I supposed to say? "Oh thanks for the info, totally right except sometimes I feel like up or out can be a thing and I assume that's what you meant. Great post!" Nope.
Anyway, if you actually cared about getting a grip we'd all see that we agree - up or out is firm-dependent and is sometimes a thing, but sometimes not, and sometimes something in between. If you want to keep complaining about the tone of my posts be my guest, but then you're derailing with irrelevant arguments about arguments even more than I am.
You: blanket statement that up or out is dead.
Me: not true. At some places it still lives, at some places it's gone. Some places are in the middle.
You: you're wrong it's dead at my firm.
I'm honestly trying to understand what in my post is wrong, as you suggest. Did I not recognize that some places have completely abolished up or out? Can you give me a quote? If you can't, then who is really being "unnecessarily argumentative here"?
I don't know what your end game is here. We clearly agree on pretty much everything substantive. I take it you want to feel like you won something, either by showing that I'm wrong (which you haven't) or that I overreacted (sure, maybe I did). But that's not going to remove the sting from overgeneralizing in your original post, and you're only digging yourself deeper by fighting a straw man.
*knows they are going to lose on point by point debate*Anonymous User wrote: ↑Thu Jun 30, 2022 11:17 amMy end game is interacting with you as little as possible going forward given how you're behaving in this thread. I am not trying to argue here and I certainly don't want to do some point by point debate. I will start my endgame ... now.
Former Kirkland associate - it is absolutely an up or out firm. You have 3 inflection points: Year 3, Year 6, NSP (year 7-9). At each of those inflection points, about a third of the class drops, except for NSPs where far fewer make it to shares. I watched this model at work for years, and from my personal experience seeing people come and go, the math checked out completely. There are a few "super senior" NSPs, but the ones that I knew of only got basically one more extra shot at shares (so 1-2 years) and then were pushed out.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Thu Jun 30, 2022 9:20 amAre you actually at Kirkland NY? Because I’m at a different Kirkland office and it’s not the case here. Like.... that’s part of the point of NSPs, isn’t it? A whole bunch of highly profitable people in a weird zone where they’re billed out like partners but paid much less than equity. I’m not aware of any NSPs being pushed out after failing to make equity in my office - why would they be? Kirkland of all firms would never throw away a profitable cog in their machine unless there was a good reason.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Thu Jun 30, 2022 9:10 am"Up or out" is absolutely a thing, at, e.g., Kirkland NY. And Kirkland takes its cues, in large part, from the practices of the firms it perceives to be its competitors for talent/work. I very much doubt that up-or-out is *not* a thing at a majority of comparable top Big Law firms.
In my office, as long as you bring in more than you cost, you can keep making the SPs $$$$$ until you die if you want.
I'm a current Kirkland NSP. What are you talking about? What office, what group? Not my experience at all. We have tons of non-share partners here who have been here 10, 15, 20 years. We even have a "permanent non-share partner" ranking that was created 5 or 6 years ago to formally recognize that we have a ton of good attorneys who aren't going to make shares but who we nevertheless very much want to keep around as long as they're happy and who are valued. I'm getting the vibe that maybe some of the transactional groups (in NY) may still be much more old school in their approach -- I'm not in NY and I'm lit., so maybe that's a difference.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Thu Jun 30, 2022 1:38 pmFormer Kirkland associate - it is absolutely an up or out firm. You have 3 inflection points: Year 3, Year 6, NSP (year 7-9). At each of those inflection points, about a third of the class drops, except for NSPs where far fewer make it to shares. I watched this model at work for years, and from my personal experience seeing people come and go, the math checked out completely. There are a few "super senior" NSPs, but the ones that I knew of only got basically one more extra shot at shares (so 1-2 years) and then were pushed out.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Thu Jun 30, 2022 9:20 amAre you actually at Kirkland NY? Because I’m at a different Kirkland office and it’s not the case here. Like.... that’s part of the point of NSPs, isn’t it? A whole bunch of highly profitable people in a weird zone where they’re billed out like partners but paid much less than equity. I’m not aware of any NSPs being pushed out after failing to make equity in my office - why would they be? Kirkland of all firms would never throw away a profitable cog in their machine unless there was a good reason.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Thu Jun 30, 2022 9:10 am"Up or out" is absolutely a thing, at, e.g., Kirkland NY. And Kirkland takes its cues, in large part, from the practices of the firms it perceives to be its competitors for talent/work. I very much doubt that up-or-out is *not* a thing at a majority of comparable top Big Law firms.
In my office, as long as you bring in more than you cost, you can keep making the SPs $$$$$ until you die if you want.
I have a lot of positive things to say about KE and am definitely not as bitter as some former alums. For instance, pretty much everyone that got pushed out went on to succeed at another biglaw firm. NSPs that got pushed out pretty much all made shares elsewhere or went and made 500k all-in comp in house. But, let's be clear that KE is absolutely one of THE up or out firms.
Citing to an article from 1998 for your claim about the current state of biglaw partnership options is pretty telling (in a negative way). The model has changed dramatically in the intervening 25 years.Billywonderful wrote: ↑Thu Jun 30, 2022 1:59 pm(Reconceiving the Tournament of Lawyers: Tracking, Seeding, and Information Control in the Internal Labor Markets of Elite Law Firms, 84 VA. L. REV. 1581 (1998)
That's what you want to read about partnership track vs. the other thing we don't want to discuss
Some say it's fine to be at BigLaw and not be on the partnership track. Not true.
This is from nearly 25 years ago. You have to at least give these people the point that 2008/09 changed things for many law firms.Billywonderful wrote: ↑Thu Jun 30, 2022 1:59 pm(Reconceiving the Tournament of Lawyers: Tracking, Seeding, and Information Control in the Internal Labor Markets of Elite Law Firms, 84 VA. L. REV. 1581 (1998)
That's what you want to read about partnership track vs. the other thing we don't want to discuss
Some say it's fine to be at BigLaw and not be on the partnership track. Not true.
Just recently left one of the non-NY K&E offices, and can confirm the above as well. We have NSPs that are content with their lives and TC and the firm is more than happy to make partner-level billable $ from them in perpetuity. Up-or-out is probably a nice excuse to let go of the less-than-stellar NSPs.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Thu Jun 30, 2022 1:54 pmI'm a current Kirkland NSP. What are you talking about? What office, what group? Not my experience at all. We have tons of non-share partners here who have been here 10, 15, 20 years. We even have a "permanent non-share partner" ranking that was created 5 or 6 years ago to formally recognize that we have a ton of good attorneys who aren't going to make shares but who we nevertheless very much want to keep around as long as they're happy and who are valued. I'm getting the vibe that maybe some of the transactional groups (in NY) may still be much more old school in their approach -- I'm not in NY and I'm lit., so maybe that's a difference.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Thu Jun 30, 2022 1:38 pmFormer Kirkland associate - it is absolutely an up or out firm. You have 3 inflection points: Year 3, Year 6, NSP (year 7-9). At each of those inflection points, about a third of the class drops, except for NSPs where far fewer make it to shares. I watched this model at work for years, and from my personal experience seeing people come and go, the math checked out completely. There are a few "super senior" NSPs, but the ones that I knew of only got basically one more extra shot at shares (so 1-2 years) and then were pushed out.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Thu Jun 30, 2022 9:20 amAre you actually at Kirkland NY? Because I’m at a different Kirkland office and it’s not the case here. Like.... that’s part of the point of NSPs, isn’t it? A whole bunch of highly profitable people in a weird zone where they’re billed out like partners but paid much less than equity. I’m not aware of any NSPs being pushed out after failing to make equity in my office - why would they be? Kirkland of all firms would never throw away a profitable cog in their machine unless there was a good reason.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Thu Jun 30, 2022 9:10 am"Up or out" is absolutely a thing, at, e.g., Kirkland NY. And Kirkland takes its cues, in large part, from the practices of the firms it perceives to be its competitors for talent/work. I very much doubt that up-or-out is *not* a thing at a majority of comparable top Big Law firms.
In my office, as long as you bring in more than you cost, you can keep making the SPs $$$$$ until you die if you want.
I have a lot of positive things to say about KE and am definitely not as bitter as some former alums. For instance, pretty much everyone that got pushed out went on to succeed at another biglaw firm. NSPs that got pushed out pretty much all made shares elsewhere or went and made 500k all-in comp in house. But, let's be clear that KE is absolutely one of THE up or out firms.