Ask a lawyer anything
Posted: Sun Jan 20, 2013 7:19 pm
I've been practicing for 4 years. Was in biglaw for two seconds and now in a small firm/specialized practice area.
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Volunteered at like a court mediation program or something?anattorney wrote:I was very lucky. While I was off I volunteered full time in my current practice field (family law) and then found an entry level position to apply to. My initial salary was pretty bad, considering my debt load, but has almost doubled since I started.
I was at a non-profit that assists low income clients. Where I am they want about 5 years of experience for an attorney to act as a volunteer mediator in court.Mick Haller wrote:Volunteered at like a court mediation program or something?anattorney wrote:I was very lucky. While I was off I volunteered full time in my current practice field (family law) and then found an entry level position to apply to. My initial salary was pretty bad, considering my debt load, but has almost doubled since I started.
It wasn't uncommon at my firm.txdude45 wrote:It is unheard of for someone to start out as an associate in one city and then transfer to another after a couple years? (NY-->TX for example)
What range of school did you go to? Did you volunteer at the organization while you were in school, or was it something you did later?anattorney wrote:I was at a non-profit that assists low income clients. Where I am they want about 5 years of experience for an attorney to act as a volunteer mediator in court.Mick Haller wrote:Volunteered at like a court mediation program or something?anattorney wrote:I was very lucky. While I was off I volunteered full time in my current practice field (family law) and then found an entry level position to apply to. My initial salary was pretty bad, considering my debt load, but has almost doubled since I started.
Thanks! Did the organization give you decent experience? Obviously you marketed it well, but was the actual work you were doing for the organization applicable to private family law? I'm thinking of taking a similar path (hopefully).anattorney wrote:Top 20 school. I volunteered at this place during law school also. I had always had the idea that I would transition into family law after a few years in biglaw, but now I see it would have been next to impossible and am glad that things shook out the way they did.
I started around 60k and once my boss determined he liked me, I got a bump after 6 months and have gotten substantial raises every year. I'm now in low 100s and get a decent bonus. For high volume practices, I'd expect starting salary to be more like 40k.kalvano wrote:Can you give an idea about salary? You said it was less initially than what you needed, but that it got better.
Did it start in the $40K's? $50K's?
You are the perfect person to ask this question: Do you think it is generally a bad idea for people to attend schools in the T-15 to T-20 range? Schools like UT, UCLA and Vanderbilt? Should most people not attend law school if they cannot attend a T-14 (or "T-13") school?anattorney wrote:Top 20 school. I volunteered at this place during law school also. I had always had the idea that I would transition into family law after a few years in biglaw, but now I see it would have been next to impossible and am glad that things shook out the way they did.
What do you mean by high volume? How is that different from what you do?anattorney wrote:I started around 60k and once my boss determined he liked me, I got a bump after 6 months and have gotten substantial raises every year. I'm now in low 100s and get a decent bonus. For high volume practices, I'd expect starting salary to be more like 40k.kalvano wrote:Can you give an idea about salary? You said it was less initially than what you needed, but that it got better.
Did it start in the $40K's? $50K's?
Other random salary reference points from people I went to law school with (e.g. 4th-5th year attorneys):
-Public interest lawyer #1: 40k
-Public interest lawyer #2: 60k
-Government attorney (not DA/PD): 95k
-Civil litigation attorney at smallish firm: 80k
-Family law attorney in a different jurisdiction: 35k plus 'commissions' for cases she brings in
Completely depends on how much you are paying and what your goals are (type of practice, location of practice). In some cases it may be a terrible idea, in some cases it may be a better idea than attending a T14.bizzybone1313 wrote:You are the perfect person to ask this question: Do you think it is generally a bad idea for people to attend schools in the T-15 to T-20 range? Schools like UT, UCLA and Vanderbilt? Should most people not attend law school if they cannot attend a T-14 (or "T-13") school?anattorney wrote:Top 20 school. I volunteered at this place during law school also. I had always had the idea that I would transition into family law after a few years in biglaw, but now I see it would have been next to impossible and am glad that things shook out the way they did.
Can you also tell us about the people who lost their biglaw jobs in 2008. You said only 1 out of your class is there. What are the rest doing?anattorney wrote:I started around 60k and once my boss determined he liked me, I got a bump after 6 months and have gotten substantial raises every year. I'm now in low 100s and get a decent bonus. For high volume practices, I'd expect starting salary to be more like 40k.kalvano wrote:Can you give an idea about salary? You said it was less initially than what you needed, but that it got better.
Did it start in the $40K's? $50K's?
Other random salary reference points from people I went to law school with (e.g. 4th-5th year attorneys):
-Public interest lawyer #1: 40k
-Public interest lawyer #2: 60k
-Government attorney (not DA/PD): 95k
-Civil litigation attorney at smallish firm: 80k
-Family law attorney in a different jurisdiction: 35k plus 'commissions' for cases she brings in
High volume meaning you churn through lots of clients with small cases. I work with rich clients so I have fewer cases that usually generate a lot of fees.kalvano wrote:What do you mean by high volume? How is that different from what you do?anattorney wrote:I started around 60k and once my boss determined he liked me, I got a bump after 6 months and have gotten substantial raises every year. I'm now in low 100s and get a decent bonus. For high volume practices, I'd expect starting salary to be more like 40k.kalvano wrote:Can you give an idea about salary? You said it was less initially than what you needed, but that it got better.
Did it start in the $40K's? $50K's?
Other random salary reference points from people I went to law school with (e.g. 4th-5th year attorneys):
-Public interest lawyer #1: 40k
-Public interest lawyer #2: 60k
-Government attorney (not DA/PD): 95k
-Civil litigation attorney at smallish firm: 80k
-Family law attorney in a different jurisdiction: 35k plus 'commissions' for cases she brings in
People who lost their job - a few doing non-lawyer things. One does in house type stuff somewhere he had a connection. One started his own firm but I think is pretty much living off a trust fund.Pokemon wrote:Can you also tell us about the people who lost their biglaw jobs in 2008. You said only 1 out of your class is there. What are the rest doing?anattorney wrote:I started around 60k and once my boss determined he liked me, I got a bump after 6 months and have gotten substantial raises every year. I'm now in low 100s and get a decent bonus. For high volume practices, I'd expect starting salary to be more like 40k.kalvano wrote:Can you give an idea about salary? You said it was less initially than what you needed, but that it got better.
Did it start in the $40K's? $50K's?
Other random salary reference points from people I went to law school with (e.g. 4th-5th year attorneys):
-Public interest lawyer #1: 40k
-Public interest lawyer #2: 60k
-Government attorney (not DA/PD): 95k
-Civil litigation attorney at smallish firm: 80k
-Family law attorney in a different jurisdiction: 35k plus 'commissions' for cases she brings in
I usually work 9 or 9:30 to 5:30 or 6 except occasional periods when I'm slammed. However, I do work on weekends fairly often because on weekdays people are calling me every 5 minutes so I can't concentrate on more sustained things like writing a motion.bizzybone1313 wrote:On average, how many hours a week do you work? Do you think you have the skills and/or ability to easily start a solo practice if you needed to on a whim?