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re: Life as a Lawyer Advice Needed

Posted on 4/16/24 at 8:07 am to
Posted by Hou_Lawyer
Houston, TX
Member since Jun 2019
1898 posts
Posted on 4/16/24 at 8:07 am to
Go to the school where they give her the most $.

If she’s top 5% then she may have a shot at biglaw. Otherwise she’s looking at $100k/yr unless she goes to a high end boutique but these are very specialized (e.g. patent).

I’ve done boutiques right out of school and then biglaw the last 10 yrs. My advice is to seek a different career. I’m not joking.
This post was edited on 4/16/24 at 8:08 am
Posted by JerseyJohn
Member since Feb 2021
85 posts
Posted on 4/16/24 at 8:23 am to

LSU Law just posted its employment survey for the Class of 2023. 100 reported working for a law firm. Of 80 that reported salary information, average was $103,000. High was $215,000. Again, these are first year lawyers.

LINK
Posted by EsquireReb
Member since Jan 2014
104 posts
Posted on 4/16/24 at 11:02 pm to
I didn't read this entire thread but I tell anyone who asks me about law school what I've learned in my experience.

1. Even though it's still a law degree, there are two major different paths you can take. (1) Top school, larger city, "Biglaw" or (2) working as a solo/partnering with one friend and working in a smaller to midsize town. (3) a third option can also be a small boutique/specialized firm. You need to decide what lifestyle you are aiming for as the school and skills you need can be very different.

2. I chose route two but I knew where I wanted to work going in. It was a grind for a decade. I don't advise many people take that route unless you have family/dad already running an office you can hang a shingle at to learn. If you can make it, the reward can be great but even now, I'm not sure if it was financially the right move when considering how long I spent to get her. I saw A LOT of lawyers graduate, work a year or two and then change careers. If you are going this route, the school you choose almost makes no difference. I know several night school/unaccredited law school grads making half a mil or more a year.

Succeeding as a solo/small town lawyer is often more about business than law. You have to be good at running an office. Some people are great lawyers but terrible businessmen. A great businessmen that's just an average lawyer will often do better. It took me a long time to grasp that concept.

All that said, I honestly go back and forth of whether or not it's worth it. From a strictly financial standpoint, it would be hard for me to recommend law unless you are talking top school and big city.
This post was edited on 4/16/24 at 11:06 pm
Posted by dirtsandwich
AL
Member since May 2016
5188 posts
Posted on 4/26/24 at 9:50 pm to
quote:

My advice is to seek a different career. I’m not joking.

This is what I tell anyone who asks me.
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