Anonymous wrote:Clearly the DCUM middle class making $400k+ are shy to reveal their path to success. Thanks to the 1M lawyer
1) NASA engineer
2) $190k
3) excelled in high school, elite engineering degree and masters, hooked up with a NASA mission I believed in and thought would make world better place. Regret not following the money into tech or defense, mommy tracked last decade and reluctant to take a risk because of DH more demanding and better paying job which disrupt our working parent juggle mid air.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1. Big law partner
2. 6.4 in 2023
3. Law school, clerkship, then a tremendous amount of hard work. I now manage a large team. But I work harder than everyone on my team. 2023 was more than 3500 hours.
Here we see the concept of value-billing in action; that is, charging the client as much as you think they'll pay.
It is not plausible you worked 70 hours a week, every single week; 10 hours a day every single day, seven days a week, 30 days a month. Bullshit.
It's totally believable you billed that amount, and if your clients paid the firm, good on you, you deserve your cut. Not a criticism.
Clients should wise up, though.
To be clear, I did not say I billed clients 3500 hours. My 2023 was about 2300 billable hours. 1200 hours were spent on everything else that makes my practice run, as well as firm management, etc. And in terms of working, on average, 70 hours per week... well, I don't know what to tell you. Yes, I worked 70 hours a week on average. My usual routine is 40 to 45 hours Mon to Weds; 18 to 22 hours Thurs/Friday; and 5 to 10 hours on the weekend. Varies based on workload and what is going on.
Anonymous wrote:1. I buy/sell stocks. I don't work for anyone.
2. About $100k a year the last 4 years.
3. Degree in Finance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1. Big law partner
2. 6.4 in 2023
3. Law school, clerkship, then a tremendous amount of hard work. I now manage a large team. But I work harder than everyone on my team. 2023 was more than 3500 hours.
Here we see the concept of value-billing in action; that is, charging the client as much as you think they'll pay.
It is not plausible you worked 70 hours a week, every single week; 10 hours a day every single day, seven days a week, 30 days a month. Bullshit.
It's totally believable you billed that amount, and if your clients paid the firm, good on you, you deserve your cut. Not a criticism.
Clients should wise up, though.
Anonymous wrote:1. Big law partner
2. 6.4 in 2023
3. Law school, clerkship, then a tremendous amount of hard work. I now manage a large team. But I work harder than everyone on my team. 2023 was more than 3500 hours.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1) Fed/analyst
2) 167k
3) associates degree (grit, tenacity; worked my way up from the bottom)
Wow! You only have an associates degree or did you end up getting more formal education?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1) environmental policy, now a supervisor
2) GS-15, $191K
3) MS degree then straight into a fed government job as a GS-9. Worked my way up to GS15 over 20+ years. Absolutely love my job, my coworkers, and my Agency's mission.
What is your MS degree in?
Anonymous wrote:1) environmental policy, now a supervisor
2) GS-15, $191K
3) MS degree then straight into a fed government job as a GS-9. Worked my way up to GS15 over 20+ years. Absolutely love my job, my coworkers, and my Agency's mission.
Anonymous wrote:1) Fed/analyst
2) 167k
3) associates degree (grit, tenacity; worked my way up from the bottom)