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$225K Starting Salary Not What It Used to Be: But, Why JD Class of 2027 Shouldn't Expect Increase

  Influential Law Fuel  confirms what Reddit legal sector posters have been complaining about: First-year salary has been frozen at $225K, with no signals that an increase is on the way. Milbank introduced what was that magic number in 2023. The current major beef is how inflation is reducing what $225k can buy and how much loan debt it can pay off quickly. The last two salary jumps - to $215k and the $225k - essentially resulted from peak periods in transactional law practices. There was fear that without a juicy enough carrot associates would leave, the work undone. Smirk. There was even bravado speculative talk about why not form unions. Obviously, juniors had power.  With AI tools proliferating to do grunt and even more complex tasks gone is so much of that partner angst. Any residue about holding on, at least for now, to the help can be handled with bonuses.  Bonuses represent discretionary payments, not fixed items on the balance sheet. The talent war is restr...

BoomerVille: Some of Us Actually Bought High-Grade Beef Today for the Cookout

  Dow Jones Industrial Average INDEXDJX: .DJI 50,731.04 +445.38 (0.89%) today May 22, 2:01 PM EDT • Disclaimer

Big Law: Is It Becoming Less a Relationship-Driven Business?

  Confirmed by what was disclosed in the Epstein files is how much Big Law operates through elite networks. Or, it did. Referrals came through relationships. And that we can size up as one probable reason Kathy Ruemmler got so chummy with the "connector" Jeffrey Epstein when she was a partner at Latham. However, that reliance on relationship-building could be lessening.  In the UK, a survey by the influential legal tabloid RollonFriday found out this: The number-one reason in-house selects a law firm to represent it and will continue to use that service provider is the quality of the answer to a very specific legal question.  As RollonFriday reports that's what differentiates firms. That is, how tailored the response is to the legal matter. No generics. No trotting out the same-old templates. No relying on ChatGPT.  For that, in-house is willing to ignore the web of relationships formed with law firms. It will go with the supplier known to come up with fresh persp...

BoomerVille: Can You Get a Second Chance?

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The retired don't need a survey like the recent one from Schroders  to have confirmed that their financial situation is getting scary. Inflation, medical expenses and fear of a stock market crash have pushed them into fearing they will outlive their money. Only 4% experience being retired as living the dream. Meanwhile, the worried fret there is no "second chance" for shoring up their financial situation. If that is how you feel you might be caught in a doom loop. But, no, you don't have to tumble into that abyss.  There are second chances.  A number of retirees have come to me for coaching about how to re-enter the labor market. Those willing to dumb down their resumes and how to present themselves do land full-time/part-time jobs and gigs. The dumbing down includes: Leaving off job search materials all academic degrees beyond the BA. The exception will be formal education related directly related to job duties. For example, you apply to be an adjunct at the universi...

Paul, Weiss: Closely Watched Law Firm

  The last line on the Bloomberg Law coverage of yet another litigation heavy leaving Paul, Weiss says it all: "The market has been keen for insights into [Scott] Barshay’s impact on the firm’s litigation group." Exiting for Paul Hastings is Roberto Gonzalez. He had been co-chair of Paul Weiss’ economic sanctions and anti-money laundering practice group. In other coverage, that is by Law.com , it's reported that litigation partner Andrew Enrlich is also leaving at the end of this month. He is co-chair of Paul, Weiss' securities and enforcement practice.  The watching creates a looping situation. The more the scrutiny the less probability the turbulence will calm down. As long as it exists the more will be the watching. In itself that can trigger more partner exits and difficulty poaching stars in their practices.  Obviously not cooled down is the upheaval created by multiple hits to the firm's reputation. They include the deal with Trump administration to lift...

Paul, Weiss: Hail, Hail, The Gang Is Not All Here ...

  Cultural/branding shifts are happening all the time in this crazy economy driven by political issues, cost-efficiency, AI and offshoring.  ESG (remember that movement) shoe maker Allbirds  became an AI business called New Birds AI. Job search platform LinkedIn is terminating the jobs of more than 600. Aggressive financial player Apollo has taken on the role of reformer of higher education, allegedly on company time (intel via Freedom of Information Act). So, it should seem just more of the same that law firm Paul, Weiss has been mutating from a progressive change-agent with deep litigation roots to a business focused on corporate, that is, transactional practices. Way back in September 2022 journalist David Enrich summed up that evolution in "Servants of the Damned" as the prevailing ethos in Big Law. In the rush to boost the monetary metric of Profits Per Equity Partner large law firms were no longer serving the public interest. The game was all-business. Max those...

Education Reformer Marc Rowan: Using Company Emails and Allegedly Staff Time

 Freedom of Information requests as well as other sources turned up this: Apollo CEO Marc Rowan used the company email account for his political campaign to reform higher education. The Financial Times cites that as wrong because of: " ... company ethics language stating that employees engaged in personal and civic affairs must make clear that their views and actions are their own, not the company's." In addition, Rowan is accused of using Apollo staff to do work on the project. This story exploded yesterday when the American Federation of Teachers and the American Association of University Professors sent a letter to Apollo's audit committee about these issues.  This matters to the unions because Apollo manages their pension funds. And it should matter to Apollo because if the story has legs there might have to be another attempt at reputation rehab. Many recall that when Leon Black was CEO at Apollo a major scandal broke out after it was discovered that he paid Jef...