Employee Benefits is really boring.Anonymous User wrote:I work in Employee Benefits and Executive Comp. and I think it’s probably the best practice area (I’m in a firm that does more counseling than deals). The exit options are either benefits counsel at a company, another firm, or an upper level HR position (such as director of HR). Since we do mostly counseling work, we can control our hours. I’m usually in around 930, out by 7. There aren’t many lulls throughout the day, which makes hitting hours during the daytime a little more realistic.
Obviously the one thing that sucks is that there is so much law you need to learn (tax code, ERISA, HIPAA, ACA, etc.), but it makes you really desirable to a lot of employers because they know if they screw up on exec comp or benefits, they could get hefty penalties from the DOL or IRS.
Exit options and "best" practice areas Forum
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Re: Exit options and "best" practice areas
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Re: Exit options and "best" practice areas
Definitely not common. Those positions appear reserved for more senior associates and/or people with pre-law finance experience. The secondment step certainly isn't required, but it does seem to help. Tricky thing is that it's an entirely different sport (unless you're really just trying to be the desk lawyer). It's tough to compete with MBA's and buy-side analysts who have been doing this for years by the time you've graduated law school. Need to put in a lot more time to catch up.carsondalywashere wrote:So it's not common for restructuring associates to leave a firm to work for a fund or a bank, and traditionally it requires a secondment for a move like that to happen?Anonymous User wrote:restructuring mid-level, now at my 2nd V10.carsondalywashere wrote: Where do restructuring people go?
Based on what i've seen (in order of frequency):
1. stick around current firm until counsel or super senior (we have 11th-12th year associates...)
2. continue doing bk at smaller firm/different city
3. pivot to general corporate work at smaller firm
4. use secondment with fund/bank client to land some type of hybrid position
exit options suck
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Re: Exit options and "best" practice areas
Is is safe to say that if you go into restructuring, you should expect to be working at some kind of law firm for the rest of your career? What happens to the people who don't get to stay on as counsel at a large firm like Kirkland/Weil? Most small BK firms don't do debtor work, correct?Anonymous User wrote:Definitely not common. Those positions appear reserved for more senior associates and/or people with pre-law finance experience. The secondment step certainly isn't required, but it does seem to help. Tricky thing is that it's an entirely different sport (unless you're really just trying to be the desk lawyer). It's tough to compete with MBA's and buy-side analysts who have been doing this for years by the time you've graduated law school. Need to put in a lot more time to catch up.carsondalywashere wrote:So it's not common for restructuring associates to leave a firm to work for a fund or a bank, and traditionally it requires a secondment for a move like that to happen?Anonymous User wrote:restructuring mid-level, now at my 2nd V10.carsondalywashere wrote: Where do restructuring people go?
Based on what i've seen (in order of frequency):
1. stick around current firm until counsel or super senior (we have 11th-12th year associates...)
2. continue doing bk at smaller firm/different city
3. pivot to general corporate work at smaller firm
4. use secondment with fund/bank client to land some type of hybrid position
exit options suck
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- Joined: Tue Aug 11, 2009 9:32 am
Re: Exit options and "best" practice areas
That's the expectation I carry with me every day anyway. I still don't know what happens to all those Weil/Kirkland debtor-side associates. Smaller firms in NYC generally represent peripheral players like trustees, landlords, vendors, etc... I'm sure there's an ecosystem of firms in other cities that work on smaller deals/cases.carsondalywashere wrote:Is is safe to say that if you go into restructuring, you should expect to be working at some kind of law firm for the rest of your career? What happens to the people who don't get to stay on as counsel at a large firm like Kirkland/Weil? Most small BK firms don't do debtor work, correct?Anonymous User wrote:Definitely not common. Those positions appear reserved for more senior associates and/or people with pre-law finance experience. The secondment step certainly isn't required, but it does seem to help. Tricky thing is that it's an entirely different sport (unless you're really just trying to be the desk lawyer). It's tough to compete with MBA's and buy-side analysts who have been doing this for years by the time you've graduated law school. Need to put in a lot more time to catch up.carsondalywashere wrote:So it's not common for restructuring associates to leave a firm to work for a fund or a bank, and traditionally it requires a secondment for a move like that to happen?Anonymous User wrote:restructuring mid-level, now at my 2nd V10.carsondalywashere wrote: Where do restructuring people go?
Based on what i've seen (in order of frequency):
1. stick around current firm until counsel or super senior (we have 11th-12th year associates...)
2. continue doing bk at smaller firm/different city
3. pivot to general corporate work at smaller firm
4. use secondment with fund/bank client to land some type of hybrid position
exit options suck
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Re: Exit options and "best" practice areas
I'ts hard to do, but not impossible. Your formative years, even as a junior RE finance associate, is learning to negotiate/analyze/mark-up title, survey, zoning, Phase I/IIs, etc., and deal with RE-specific things like environmental liability, lease/license review, LL/T SNDAs and estoppels, fixture filings, etc. Things that a real estate paralegal or junior associate can handle, but you would be expected to at least be able to catch major issues as the person running the deal. I've heard of finance associates transitioning into RE finance by running deals on the finance points and taking second seat to a trained real estate associate on real property specific matters (and slowly over time losing the training wheels).Anonymous User wrote:[
I've heard of some finance associates (banking,high yield, lev fin) pivot to firms and join their RE finance practice. Have you seen RE finance lawyers gravitate towards more generalist RE roles?
Depending on your firm, IMHO it's probably too expensive to train from scratch a 4th/5th year finance associate to do general RE matters like leasing, acquisitions/dispositions, RE M&A support (LOL WHICH IS NIGHTMARE SO THAT'S FOR THE BEST), transaction related land use issues. They might keep you relegated to finance deals, and maybe over a couple of years you can start to pick up enough RE knowledge to handle other RE matters.
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Re: Exit options and "best" practice areas
What firm(s) do you recommend with this kind of practice for a 2nd year trying to lateral out of traditional lev fin? I've seen some people go to Ropes & Gray.Anonymous User wrote:I'ts hard to do, but not impossible. Your formative years, even as a junior RE finance associate, is learning to negotiate/analyze/mark-up title, survey, zoning, Phase I/IIs, etc., and deal with RE-specific things like environmental liability, lease/license review, LL/T SNDAs and estoppels, fixture filings, etc. Things that a real estate paralegal or junior associate can handle, but you would be expected to at least be able to catch major issues as the person running the deal. I've heard of finance associates transitioning into RE finance by running deals on the finance points and taking second seat to a trained real estate associate on real property specific matters (and slowly over time losing the training wheels).Anonymous User wrote:[
I've heard of some finance associates (banking,high yield, lev fin) pivot to firms and join their RE finance practice. Have you seen RE finance lawyers gravitate towards more generalist RE roles?
Depending on your firm, IMHO it's probably too expensive to train from scratch a 4th/5th year finance associate to do general RE matters like leasing, acquisitions/dispositions, RE M&A support (LOL WHICH IS NIGHTMARE SO THAT'S FOR THE BEST), transaction related land use issues. They might keep you relegated to finance deals, and maybe over a couple of years you can start to pick up enough RE knowledge to handle other RE matters.
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Re: Exit options and "best" practice areas
Just chiming in, investigations/white collar has some of the worst exit options, along with general commercial lit. The work is interesting no doubt but there's zero path to true partnership (you can make service partner for a big rainmaker) without leaving for government (USAO or DOJ) first. Only problem is the gov. positions are all hypercompetitive. When you don't have the option to go-house, pretty much every 5th year to 9th year associate in a city's white collar market is applying to the same 5 AUSA spots.
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Re: Exit options and "best" practice areas
With a handful of exceptions, most top RE groups at V50 firms are RE finance heavy (like Gibson, S&C, Cleary, Simpson, Skadden) with ancillary generalist RE practices. The generalist RE practice pops up at RE dirt firms like Fried Frank, Greenberg and similar firms.Anonymous User wrote:What firm(s) do you recommend with this kind of practice for a 2nd year trying to lateral out of traditional lev fin? I've seen some people go to Ropes & Gray.Anonymous User wrote:I'ts hard to do, but not impossible. Your formative years, even as a junior RE finance associate, is learning to negotiate/analyze/mark-up title, survey, zoning, Phase I/IIs, etc., and deal with RE-specific things like environmental liability, lease/license review, LL/T SNDAs and estoppels, fixture filings, etc. Things that a real estate paralegal or junior associate can handle, but you would be expected to at least be able to catch major issues as the person running the deal. I've heard of finance associates transitioning into RE finance by running deals on the finance points and taking second seat to a trained real estate associate on real property specific matters (and slowly over time losing the training wheels).Anonymous User wrote:[
I've heard of some finance associates (banking,high yield, lev fin) pivot to firms and join their RE finance practice. Have you seen RE finance lawyers gravitate towards more generalist RE roles?
Depending on your firm, IMHO it's probably too expensive to train from scratch a 4th/5th year finance associate to do general RE matters like leasing, acquisitions/dispositions, RE M&A support (LOL WHICH IS NIGHTMARE SO THAT'S FOR THE BEST), transaction related land use issues. They might keep you relegated to finance deals, and maybe over a couple of years you can start to pick up enough RE knowledge to handle other RE matters.
Firms that give me an impression of well balanced RE group based on past deals and reputation are Paul Weiss, Paul Hastings, Goodwin, Kramer Levin.
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Re: Exit options and "best" practice areas
What about Kirkland, Sidley, and Latham?Anonymous User wrote:With a handful of exceptions, most top RE groups at V50 firms are RE finance heavy (like Gibson, S&C, Cleary, Simpson, Skadden) with ancillary generalist RE practices. The generalist RE practice pops up at RE dirt firms like Fried Frank, Greenberg and similar firms.Anonymous User wrote:What firm(s) do you recommend with this kind of practice for a 2nd year trying to lateral out of traditional lev fin? I've seen some people go to Ropes & Gray.Anonymous User wrote:I'ts hard to do, but not impossible. Your formative years, even as a junior RE finance associate, is learning to negotiate/analyze/mark-up title, survey, zoning, Phase I/IIs, etc., and deal with RE-specific things like environmental liability, lease/license review, LL/T SNDAs and estoppels, fixture filings, etc. Things that a real estate paralegal or junior associate can handle, but you would be expected to at least be able to catch major issues as the person running the deal. I've heard of finance associates transitioning into RE finance by running deals on the finance points and taking second seat to a trained real estate associate on real property specific matters (and slowly over time losing the training wheels).Anonymous User wrote:[
I've heard of some finance associates (banking,high yield, lev fin) pivot to firms and join their RE finance practice. Have you seen RE finance lawyers gravitate towards more generalist RE roles?
Depending on your firm, IMHO it's probably too expensive to train from scratch a 4th/5th year finance associate to do general RE matters like leasing, acquisitions/dispositions, RE M&A support (LOL WHICH IS NIGHTMARE SO THAT'S FOR THE BEST), transaction related land use issues. They might keep you relegated to finance deals, and maybe over a couple of years you can start to pick up enough RE knowledge to handle other RE matters.
Firms that give me an impression of well balanced RE group based on past deals and reputation are Paul Weiss, Paul Hastings, Goodwin, Kramer Levin.
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Re: Exit options and "best" practice areas
Isn't that why most associates seek out white collar in the first place though--to jump to AUSA?Anonymous User wrote:Just chiming in, investigations/white collar has some of the worst exit options, along with general commercial lit. The work is interesting no doubt but there's zero path to true partnership (you can make service partner for a big rainmaker) without leaving for government (USAO or DOJ) first. Only problem is the gov. positions are all hypercompetitive. When you don't have the option to go-house, pretty much every 5th year to 9th year associate in a city's white collar market is applying to the same 5 AUSA spots.
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Re: Exit options and "best" practice areas
Personally, only time I've ever been against them is on RE finance related deals--they obviously do RE general work too, it's just I've never encountered them across the table on a leasing deal or run of the mill acquisitions/dispositions. I know Latham does good land use work in other offices. You'll see those names frequently on the corporate support side though.Anonymous User wrote:What about Kirkland, Sidley, and Latham?Anonymous User wrote:With a handful of exceptions, most top RE groups at V50 firms are RE finance heavy (like Gibson, S&C, Cleary, Simpson, Skadden) with ancillary generalist RE practices. The generalist RE practice pops up at RE dirt firms like Fried Frank, Greenberg and similar firms.Anonymous User wrote:What firm(s) do you recommend with this kind of practice for a 2nd year trying to lateral out of traditional lev fin? I've seen some people go to Ropes & Gray.Anonymous User wrote:I'ts hard to do, but not impossible. Your formative years, even as a junior RE finance associate, is learning to negotiate/analyze/mark-up title, survey, zoning, Phase I/IIs, etc., and deal with RE-specific things like environmental liability, lease/license review, LL/T SNDAs and estoppels, fixture filings, etc. Things that a real estate paralegal or junior associate can handle, but you would be expected to at least be able to catch major issues as the person running the deal. I've heard of finance associates transitioning into RE finance by running deals on the finance points and taking second seat to a trained real estate associate on real property specific matters (and slowly over time losing the training wheels).Anonymous User wrote:[
I've heard of some finance associates (banking,high yield, lev fin) pivot to firms and join their RE finance practice. Have you seen RE finance lawyers gravitate towards more generalist RE roles?
Depending on your firm, IMHO it's probably too expensive to train from scratch a 4th/5th year finance associate to do general RE matters like leasing, acquisitions/dispositions, RE M&A support (LOL WHICH IS NIGHTMARE SO THAT'S FOR THE BEST), transaction related land use issues. They might keep you relegated to finance deals, and maybe over a couple of years you can start to pick up enough RE knowledge to handle other RE matters.
Firms that give me an impression of well balanced RE group based on past deals and reputation are Paul Weiss, Paul Hastings, Goodwin, Kramer Levin.
A good generalist RE practice group is rare at top firms b/c the way the industry works (especially post-recession), clients just aren't going to pay traditional big law salaries for general RE work (other thank banks for lender-side work and some complex condo stuff). Elite dirt RE firms/groups generally pay less than market as a result, aside from FF, GT (maybe HK?--don't know their salary scale).
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Re: Exit options and "best" practice areas
Why zero path to partnership from commercial lit? I would assume most of the people who do mainly commercial lit aren't going to the governmentAnonymous User wrote:Just chiming in, investigations/white collar has some of the worst exit options, along with general commercial lit. The work is interesting no doubt but there's zero path to true partnership (you can make service partner for a big rainmaker) without leaving for government (USAO or DOJ) first. Only problem is the gov. positions are all hypercompetitive. When you don't have the option to go-house, pretty much every 5th year to 9th year associate in a city's white collar market is applying to the same 5 AUSA spots.
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Re: Exit options and "best" practice areas
I'm biased, because I love business, but i think that doing "general corporate" for a few years in a tech-heavy practice (Valley or otherwise) will put you in the best position to move in-house and then later be a GC. I am decent at securities, Cap Mkts, venture, M&A, corp gov (board advisory), shareholder activism, private company work, public company work, employment, stock administration, commerical and soft IP/privacy. I do aaaaaaalll the things. And I know how to do them because I worked with tech companies for a lot of years, and saw aaaaaaaaaaaall the things come up, and learned from good colleagues how to best handle them. I like the fact that my skillset is diverse, my time in a firm meant working on lots of different types of deals, and I am mostly a generalist nowadays. If you like corporate, doing this kind of work, with pleasant clients is a true joy.
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Re: Exit options and "best" practice areas
Not to undermine you, but you can do all of these things in general corporate at pretty much every big firm. The only thing that you might miss out on is the commercial and soft IP/privacy part, but you still might get some exposure in that too at non-tech firms.RedGiant wrote:I am decent at securities, Cap Mkts, venture, M&A, corp gov (board advisory), shareholder activism, private company work, public company work, employment, stock administration, commerical and soft IP/privacy.
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Re: Exit options and "best" practice areas
Typically gen lit has to worst exit options. There are a ton of people looking for this work and few spotsAnonymous User wrote:Thoughts on general commercial lit?
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Re: Exit options and "best" practice areas
Bumping because interested in hearing more about banking/finance exit opportunities and as well as funds exit options. Are all banking & credit exits with banks in NYC? And for funds, are the exits solely in-house at funds?
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Re: Exit options and "best" practice areas
It’s extremely difficult to build material reliable business from scratch in commercial lit. Not only do you need to luck into having a useful relationship, but you also need to 1. Not have that relationship have a stronger relationship with somebody else, and 2. Have that person with the relationship get sued/investigated with some degree of regularity (ie have it be a really big company).Anonymous User wrote: ↑Thu Feb 07, 2019 8:16 pmWhy zero path to partnership from commercial lit? I would assume most of the people who do mainly commercial lit aren't going to the governmentAnonymous User wrote:Just chiming in, investigations/white collar has some of the worst exit options, along with general commercial lit. The work is interesting no doubt but there's zero path to true partnership (you can make service partner for a big rainmaker) without leaving for government (USAO or DOJ) first. Only problem is the gov. positions are all hypercompetitive. When you don't have the option to go-house, pretty much every 5th year to 9th year associate in a city's white collar market is applying to the same 5 AUSA spots.
Even if you get the relationship and it’s yours, meaning you’re the go-to for lawsuits or investigations, how often does the average Fortune 500-1000 company get sued/investigated? Or even 200-500 for that matter? And how do you cultivate a relationship with one of these GC-types that will cause them to choose you over their best buds from high school and/or the firms with which their company has worked for the past couple of decades?
I’m firmly behind the unfortunate point that while lit is by far the best while you’re in it (provided you like that type of thing), it definitely gets the most stressful about a decade out of law school for most.
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