Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, a 200k salary is not realistic in government straight out of law school. Have him look at a GS scale.
He has, and GS-15 is close to that salary, but it sounds like it would not be realistic to get there within a couple of years?
The only way to get a Federal job straight out of law school is through an honors program, and those are competitive at every agency. Even then, he'll start as a GS11, step 1.
There's also no reason to think that a federal job is easily in reach for a UMD grad. To have a decent chance, he needs to finish in the top 10 to 25% of his class (and guess what, everyone attending plans to do that).
The most realistic outcome is a local prosecutors office or a small firm. He needs to be OK with that to consider attending.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It really doesn’t seem like a good idea at his age. Maybe get a non-lawyer job at the SEC or FINRA? I’m sure they would love to have him with that experience.
He's been searching for several months, and there is virtually nothing for people with investments experience (vs. corporate finance/accounting). Just one specific office at the DFC, but even that one has a lot of travel, so seems intense...and he has applied for several jobs there with no results.
SEC hires lawyers and economists, not niche PE guys. He hasn't been able to find anything in finance at 40-45 hours/week, even at a much lower salary.
It feels really hard to be trapped at age 37. He's so unhappy and all he wants to do is to work normal hours so he can spend time with the kids and have a life.
If he's a finance guy, he should be looking at analyst and examiner positions at the federal banking agencies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What are the job prospects for someone graduating the law school at University of Maryland at age 40 and looking to get into government or in-house legal work? Prior experience is all in PE/hedge fund. Do you have to basically start over? Is a 200k salary working 40 hours/week realistic?
DH really wants to make this switch because he can't find a 40 hour/week job in investing (government, nonprofit, or private sector), and his heart isn't in finance anymore, and he's always been interested in doing legal work. He worked closely with lawyers on the legal aspects of deals and feels like legal work is a good fit for him. We do not have a ton of savings, I'm in a low paid field, but we wouldn't go into debt for this degree. I want to be supportive but just not sure if he will be able to get the kind of job he wants.
So, your husband has been working at hedge funds for years, but your family has minimal savings? Seems like you and your husband should examine your life choices.
Not everyone working at a hedge fund makes millions of dollars. Not every hedge fund is ubersuccessful. We saved a couple of million over the decade he was working there - part of that is for retirement and the other part was used to buy a house in cash. More recently, he has tried impact investing jobs, which really cut into his salary, but still don't have the work-life balance he's looking for.
so. you dont have a mortgage yet he still needs to make 200 grand?
Anonymous wrote:Why do you need 200k?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What are the job prospects for someone graduating the law school at University of Maryland at age 40 and looking to get into government or in-house legal work? Prior experience is all in PE/hedge fund. Do you have to basically start over? Is a 200k salary working 40 hours/week realistic?
DH really wants to make this switch because he can't find a 40 hour/week job in investing (government, nonprofit, or private sector), and his heart isn't in finance anymore, and he's always been interested in doing legal work. He worked closely with lawyers on the legal aspects of deals and feels like legal work is a good fit for him. We do not have a ton of savings, I'm in a low paid field, but we wouldn't go into debt for this degree. I want to be supportive but just not sure if he will be able to get the kind of job he wants.
So, your husband has been working at hedge funds for years, but your family has minimal savings? Seems like you and your husband should examine your life choices.
Not everyone working at a hedge fund makes millions of dollars. Not every hedge fund is ubersuccessful. We saved a couple of million over the decade he was working there - part of that is for retirement and the other part was used to buy a house in cash. More recently, he has tried impact investing jobs, which really cut into his salary, but still don't have the work-life balance he's looking for.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, a 200k salary is not realistic in government straight out of law school. Have him look at a GS scale.
He has, and GS-15 is close to that salary, but it sounds like it would not be realistic to get there within a couple of years?
The only way to get a Federal job straight out of law school is through an honors program, and those are competitive at every agency. Even then, he'll start as a GS11, step 1.
There's also no reason to think that a federal job is easily in reach for a UMD grad. To have a decent chance, he needs to finish in the top 10 to 25% of his class (and guess what, everyone attending plans to do that).
The most realistic outcome is a local prosecutors office or a small firm. He needs to be OK with that to consider attending.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What are the job prospects for someone graduating the law school at University of Maryland at age 40 and looking to get into government or in-house legal work? Prior experience is all in PE/hedge fund. Do you have to basically start over? Is a 200k salary working 40 hours/week realistic?
DH really wants to make this switch because he can't find a 40 hour/week job in investing (government, nonprofit, or private sector), and his heart isn't in finance anymore, and he's always been interested in doing legal work. He worked closely with lawyers on the legal aspects of deals and feels like legal work is a good fit for him. We do not have a ton of savings, I'm in a low paid field, but we wouldn't go into debt for this degree. I want to be supportive but just not sure if he will be able to get the kind of job he wants.
So, your husband has been working at hedge funds for years, but your family has minimal savings? Seems like you and your husband should examine your life choices.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It really doesn’t seem like a good idea at his age. Maybe get a non-lawyer job at the SEC or FINRA? I’m sure they would love to have him with that experience.
He's been searching for several months, and there is virtually nothing for people with investments experience (vs. corporate finance/accounting). Just one specific office at the DFC, but even that one has a lot of travel, so seems intense...and he has applied for several jobs there with no results.
SEC hires lawyers and economists, not niche PE guys. He hasn't been able to find anything in finance at 40-45 hours/week, even at a much lower salary.
It feels really hard to be trapped at age 37. He's so unhappy and all he wants to do is to work normal hours so he can spend time with the kids and have a life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It really doesn’t seem like a good idea at his age. Maybe get a non-lawyer job at the SEC or FINRA? I’m sure they would love to have him with that experience.
He's been searching for several months, and there is virtually nothing for people with investments experience (vs. corporate finance/accounting). Just one specific office at the DFC, but even that one has a lot of travel, so seems intense...and he has applied for several jobs there with no results.
SEC hires lawyers and economists, not niche PE guys. He hasn't been able to find anything in finance at 40-45 hours/week, even at a much lower salary.
It feels really hard to be trapped at age 37. He's so unhappy and all he wants to do is to work normal hours so he can spend time with the kids and have a life.