Hours in Houston/Dallas Forum
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Hours in Houston/Dallas
Summer Associate in Texas asking a question.
I'm curious what average billables across Texas are for 1st and 2nd years at big law firms. The average here, at a big NYC firm outpost, is about 2400. Curious if this is high, low, or pretty typical. Firm name appreciate but not required.
I'm curious what average billables across Texas are for 1st and 2nd years at big law firms. The average here, at a big NYC firm outpost, is about 2400. Curious if this is high, low, or pretty typical. Firm name appreciate but not required.
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Re: Hours in Houston/Dallas
That's pretty unbelievable to me.
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Re: Hours in Houston/Dallas
As in high? Because that's what I thought when I saw it and found out.
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Re: Hours in Houston/Dallas
I can only speak to Houston corporate scene (I'm a 2nd year M&A at native Houston firm). The average across Houston firms should be less than 2400. V&E had significant minorities of corporate associates at less than 2000 last year. BB works more but still less than 2400. NRF averages significantly less than both BB/V&E (both lit and corporate) -- south of 2000 for most. K&E was super crazy slammed in 2015 and 2016, but they have hired more recently and while they are quite busy, it's no longer the suicidefest it used to be. The regional firms will vary greatly.Anonymous User wrote:Summer Associate in Texas asking a question.
I'm curious what average billables across Texas are for 1st and 2nd years at big law firms. The average here, at a big NYC firm outpost, is about 2400. Curious if this is high, low, or pretty typical. Firm name appreciate but not required.
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Re: Hours in Houston/Dallas
2400 as an average seems high, but its possible one or two people will reach/exceed that. Major firm M&A here, I finished last year with just under 2300, though a few hundred of that was pro-bono and random firm work that counted for hours (Jan-may was reeeealllyyyy slow last year). Still had over 2000 "client" hours.
This year on pace for the same or slightly less, though its been a very up and down year for me, I am either slammed or dead. If a couple of deals spread out and I can stay comfortably busy the rest of the way, 2300 is possible for me again.
I know the top firms have been busy (VE, KE, Latham, BB to a lesser extent (I rarely work across from them so idk honestly). KE is still a grindhouse, and probably always will be, but the huge restructuring deals that consumed their office the last couple of years have slowed down (until oil tanks again) and their staffing is starting to catch up with the work load.
This year on pace for the same or slightly less, though its been a very up and down year for me, I am either slammed or dead. If a couple of deals spread out and I can stay comfortably busy the rest of the way, 2300 is possible for me again.
I know the top firms have been busy (VE, KE, Latham, BB to a lesser extent (I rarely work across from them so idk honestly). KE is still a grindhouse, and probably always will be, but the huge restructuring deals that consumed their office the last couple of years have slowed down (until oil tanks again) and their staffing is starting to catch up with the work load.
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Re: Hours in Houston/Dallas
The only offices I know with "average" billables that high are certain lit boutiques.
OP I think you probably just talked to a particularly busy associate or two and that's what they said. 2400 as officewide average is prettty high and unusual.
OP I think you probably just talked to a particularly busy associate or two and that's what they said. 2400 as officewide average is prettty high and unusual.
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Re: Hours in Houston/Dallas
With those billables, what do your typical days look like in terms of hours?
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Re: Hours in Houston/Dallas
If you mean generally, it can mean 12 hours days pretty regularly to bill that much.HenryHankPalmer wrote:With those billables, what do your typical days look like in terms of hours?
If you mean more specifically, it varies wildly. In the last week I had two "normal days" of getting to the office between 9 and 9:30 and going home between 6 and 6:30. Had a bad day of getting in before 8:30 and staying until after 10; one really bad day of working at home for an hour before I got to the office at 9, and not being done until around 2 am. Then Friday was a closing which took far longer than necessary, but despite that I got out of the office shortly after 4 and comfortably played 18 holes of golf before dark.
Tl;DR: it varies greatly.
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Re: Hours in Houston/Dallas
At one of the big shops in Houston. Even with a horribly slow Q1 due to the energy markets last year, I ended 2400 and 2600 billed and I was one of the higher billers in my class. I know a couple associates at my firm (in other class years) may have been in the 2600 to 2800 range, but they were the deviations from the rule, and my firm's Houston office was very busy last year.
It's hard to make a normative statement about an entire firm's pace because it really varies depending on practice group. For example, the M&A group at K&E works a different amount (and has drastically different expectations about the work level that is normal) than the K&E CapM group. Grinders can (and will) exist in any practice, but really the best question to ask is how busy any specific practice group is overall.
And after a couple years in the game, a 200-hour month feels relatively light (never thought I'd say that...) and I'd prefer doing 12 consecutive 200-hour months (for 2400) total than alternating 300/100 months. In other words, it's not the high annual hours that hurt, it's the high weeks (80-100+) and months (300+) that start wearing on you.
It's hard to make a normative statement about an entire firm's pace because it really varies depending on practice group. For example, the M&A group at K&E works a different amount (and has drastically different expectations about the work level that is normal) than the K&E CapM group. Grinders can (and will) exist in any practice, but really the best question to ask is how busy any specific practice group is overall.
And after a couple years in the game, a 200-hour month feels relatively light (never thought I'd say that...) and I'd prefer doing 12 consecutive 200-hour months (for 2400) total than alternating 300/100 months. In other words, it's not the high annual hours that hurt, it's the high weeks (80-100+) and months (300+) that start wearing on you.
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Re: Hours in Houston/Dallas
Accidental double post
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Re: Hours in Houston/Dallas
Isn't that the truth. A steady 200 is glorious. Its the 75 hour months and 275 hour months that kill me.Anonymous User wrote:At one of the big shops in Houston. Even with a horribly slow Q1 due to the energy markets last year, I ended 2400 and 2600 billed and I was one of the higher billers in my class. I know a couple associates at my firm (in other class years) may have been in the 2600 to 2800 range, but they were the deviations from the rule, and my firm's Houston office was very busy last year.
It's hard to make a normative statement about an entire firm's pace because it really varies depending on practice group. For example, the M&A group at K&E works a different amount (and has drastically different expectations about the work level that is normal) than the K&E CapM group. Grinders can (and will) exist in any practice, but really the best question to ask is how busy any specific practice group is overall.
And after a couple years in the game, a 200-hour month feels relatively light (never thought I'd say that...) and I'd prefer doing 12 consecutive 200-hour months (for 2400) total than alternating 300/100 months. In other words, it's not the high annual hours that hurt, it's the high weeks (80-100+) and months (300+) that start wearing on you.
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