To All the Law Students Who I have Loved (or Just Liked a Bit)
I write a lot about work/life balance, mental health, and the pursuit of things other than money in the legal profession.
My wife (and lawyer) Maureen McKay has laughed at me about this (among other things.) She has said, “Murray, if any of the young people who you counsel to pursue a balanced lifestyle were to have applied to your firm back when you were hiring Associates and talked about working reasonable hours and reserving evenings and weekends for their families, you would not have hired them.”
She’s right. But, in my defense, it’s complicated.
The foundation of the problem is that lawyers do not learn how to practice law in law school or through the bar admission process, which means that those who are headed for private practice must learn their craft on the job. Someone has to pay to train them. That someone may be them. ?
A great deal of the time spent by a new lawyer who is lucky enough to work for a firm which takes mentoring and training seriously cannot be billed to a client. In order for them to earn their salary, they must work more hours.
A lawyer who is unfortunate and finds employment with a firm which releases them on the unsuspecting public without proper training and mentoring will have to spend all the more time teaching themselves how to practice law while also running the risk of becoming a crummy lawyer.
Those who choose to start their own practices will have to work even more hours to support themselves, since in addition to client work, they will also have to do administrative tasks and market their businesses and are unlikely to be able to attract the type of work which generates high fees.
So, into this morass marches the newcomer who wants to work regular hours and have their evenings and weekends free to preserve their mental and physical health and work on their relationships. I applaud their goals, but I have yet to figure out how they can do it within their first five to seven years of practice and also become a competent lawyer.???????????
Let’s take an example:
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Assume that a young lawyer named Sam wants to work from 9 to 5 with an hour off for lunch and weekends and evenings free. That gives him a 7-hour day. There are about 251 working days a year in Ontario (excluding weekends and statutory holidays). Let’s subtract 10 more for a two-week vacation to get to 241. Sam wants to earn $100,000. Law firms typically say that you have to bill three times your salary, so if we assume an hourly rate of $300.00, Sam has to bill 1,000 hours.
If we multiply 241days times 7 hours, we get 1,687 hours. So what’s the problem?
There is no problem at all if Sam never says hello to his colleagues, gets up to stretch his legs, takes a sick day, goes to the dentist, speaks to his children or spouse during the day, or goes to the bathroom.? More likely, Sam is going to lose an average of at least two hours a day (482 hours a year), which takes his total hours for the year down from 1,687 to 1,205.
Now, remember that Sam is a newbie.? He is learning on the? job.? His firm cannot bill a huge chunk of his time. Let’s assume that 30% of his time is written off in the first year.? Sam has now billed only 844 hours. He needs to work more hours to pay his way.
None of this accounts for the fact that new lawyers are notoriously poor at recording all of their time, or that Sam will have all sorts of non-billable hours to invest in the course of learning his craft and administering his practice, or that there will be write-offs for non-collectible accounts receivable.
So when Sam comes to my firm and says that he wants to work from 9 to 5 without weekends or evenings, I am thinking that he is going to cost me a lot of money. I may just pass him over for someone who wants to work way too hard for a few years.
Now there is a way out of this for Sam. After five to seven years, if he has become a competent lawyer and developed a solid client base, he can do whatever he wants, including working reasonable? hours, provided that he is prepared to accept the more modest financial rewards which come with a somewhat relaxed lifestyle.
My? name is Murray and I have authorized this message. If you don’t like it, don’t blame me. Blame capitalism.
This article was originally published by Law360 Canada, part of LexisNexis Canada Inc.
Executive Chairman at Actuarial Solutions Inc.
5 个月"So, into this morass marches the newcomer who wants to work regular hours and have their evenings and weekends free to preserve their mental and physical health and work on their relationships. I applaud their goals, but I have yet to figure out how they can do it within their first five to seven years of practice and also become a competent lawyer." and "Let's say they want to earn $100,000 a year" Murray Gottheil The solution to the puzzle is that 'newbies' have to lower their salary expectations. If a newcomer came to you and said "I have needs for more personal time than most young lawyers, so instead of $100k, I would be happy with $75k" would you have considered them? The problem is that newbies want the balance AND the salary that comes with the grind. We run a shop that doesn't ask for oppressive hours from youngsters. After three years some discover that they are behind their friends financially and want to switch gears. We also hire mid-career folks that have been grinding hard and want to slow the pace for family and will take a pay cut to get balance. The key in all this is for everyone to be honest and transparent on expectations for dollars and hours. Then everyone can choose the deal that works for them.
Principal Litigation Lawyer at Just-Fides Advocacy
10 个月Wise words.
Business lawyer | Top 25 UK law firm lawyer minus the corporate nonsense | Creative problem solver for passionate business owners | King of contracts ??| Girl dad + part-time rocker ??| DM me for more info.
10 个月Great article. I remember my very long and stressful days as a new lawyer well, and I truly hope for the next batch of up-and-coming lawyers that there is a better way!
20 years in audit, finance and tax
10 个月I heard this expression in many variants: "you have to feed your skill before it starts to feed you".
Civil and Commercial Litigation Lawyer
10 个月It’s likely not realistic for a litigator in private practice to learn the law, to learn how to “lawyer,” and to develop a client base without putting in a lot of hours a week (and likely many, many more than a lot are comfortable working) in the first 5-7 years (and beyond). Certainly in the private practice litigation world there will be many, many nights spent on discovery evidence review, trial preparation (if one is actually a trial lawyer), legal research and facta writing, and oral submission prep for the upcoming motion, application, or even an appeal in the first 5-7 years. But once skills are honed along with a decent understanding of process and the law, and when one has a decent reputation and a solid client base, one may be able to negotiate better work/life terms either where they are currently situated or someplace new — if that’s what they even want. Many litigators like (love?) the work and don’t mind the hours, and are content knowing that 9-5 is not only unrealistic, but even enjoyable.