Anonymous wrote:Another GC for a nonprofit here. I am an Ivy grad (Harvard) and honestly it does come in handy. I'm youngish and the Board takes me very seriously because they all know I went to Harvard Law. I don't talk about it but when they introduce me around they always bring it up.
I work 3 days a week, only lawyer, from home. It is really the perfect law job for a mom but I spent my time billing 3000+ in biglaw.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:General Counsel for a start-up. My dog and baby can come to work with me every day. I can wear jeans to work. Love.It.
Sounds like my dream. Will you hire me?
Anonymous wrote:General Counsel for a start-up. My dog and baby can come to work with me every day. I can wear jeans to work. Love.It.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was in house and it was family friendly in the sense that it was just 40 hr/week but you had to be at your desk whenever you were supposed to be working.
Now at an agency and it's more flexible in terms of working at home (but you do need to take leave for every dr. appt etc).
Naive question, but what do you mean you had to be at your desk whenever you were supposed to be working? No meetings, no client visits? Or do you mean no working from home?
Anonymous wrote:If you don't land one of those good first jobs that provides good work experience, are you forever at a disadvantage? Similar to what they say about college grads who are unemployed or underemployed, they will always be behind.
Anonymous wrote:Have to ask. Are those with these wonderful jobs Ivy grads?
Anonymous wrote:I was in house and it was family friendly in the sense that it was just 40 hr/week but you had to be at your desk whenever you were supposed to be working.
Now at an agency and it's more flexible in terms of working at home (but you do need to take leave for every dr. appt etc).
Anonymous wrote:DH also in-house, fairly junior, feel very lucky. Great benefits, reasonable hours, interesting work.
The lack of billable hours / timesheets makes a huge difference.