Hiring: Raw Ironies at Paul, Weiss, Goldman Sachs and More
Hiring is a high-risk decision. Part of that is this: Almost 50 percent will fail within 18 months in succeeding at what they were onboarded to accomplish. But there are plenty of other risks, as former chair of Paul, Weiss Brad Karp found out this week. A "prize" hire back in 2016 - Scott Barshay - participated in the internal coup. Barshay now has Karp's job. The Wall Street Journal sizes up that hire a decade ago as among Karp's leadership milestone achievements: "Key to Karp’s success as a firm leader was bringing in Barshay. Karp had spent years publicly retelling the story of how he fought to poach Barshay in 2016 from rival firm Key Cravath to build Paul Weiss’s then-fledging mergers and acquisitions practice." The WSJ adds that Barshay had told partners over and over again that he had no desire to be chair. Should that the "lady does protest too much, methinks" have been a red flag about ambition? Obviously leaders have to factor in th...