Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1. Senior attorney at a large Silicon Valley company. Manage several legal teams.
2. About $600k per year, excluding equity which is on average $700k - 800k per year.
3. SLAC, law school, DOJ and then inhouse.
Would you say you are equally or more busy than someone who works at a big law firm?
I would say less busy. I work around 50 hours per week. More if it is EOQ, travelling to HQ or leading a project with the tight deadline.
How hard is it to land this type of job? My husband is a partner in a mid-level law firm in DC and makes less than you do (only 2nd year partner not equity). He works insane hours. We would both love if he could get a less busy job than he has now but cannot afford the pay cut.
PP has a unicorn job. Mid-level law firm partner isn't landing that gig.
NP. I think what they are trying to say is that you probably have to be in a big law law firm (appearing to be a "get" for the company) to land that job and make that money. The steady, reliable person doesn't get that job. Though I would say that the steady, reliable person could get a job working for the PP. But there is also so little job security there.
+1. PP may not be a unicorn job, because i think top lawfirm'ers could land it. But midlevel law firm partner isn't going to.
Pp here - I actually have no idea if his firm is mid or top level. It’s top 100 firm in the country I think. But not top 10.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1. Senior attorney at a large Silicon Valley company. Manage several legal teams.
2. About $600k per year, excluding equity which is on average $700k - 800k per year.
3. SLAC, law school, DOJ and then inhouse.
Would you say you are equally or more busy than someone who works at a big law firm?
I would say less busy. I work around 50 hours per week. More if it is EOQ, travelling to HQ or leading a project with the tight deadline.
How hard is it to land this type of job? My husband is a partner in a mid-level law firm in DC and makes less than you do (only 2nd year partner not equity). He works insane hours. We would both love if he could get a less busy job than he has now but cannot afford the pay cut.
PP has a unicorn job. Mid-level law firm partner isn't landing that gig.
+1. PP may not be a unicorn job, because i think top lawfirm'ers could land it. But midlevel law firm partner isn't going to.
Anonymous wrote:It's notable, so many people say "hard work", "grit", "worked my @ ss off"... do you think the guys who work on your car didn't work hard to get where they are? The person with the most grit and determination is probably the cleaning lady who walked here from Venezuela...
I'm not normally one to go crazy shouting "white privilege" but these answers seem really tone deaf. I'd love to also hear about how you got lucky.
Anonymous wrote:It's notable, so many people say "hard work", "grit", "worked my @ ss off"... do you think the guys who work on your car didn't work hard to get where they are? The person with the most grit and determination is probably the cleaning lady who walked here from Venezuela...
I'm not normally one to go crazy shouting "white privilege" but these answers seem really tone deaf. I'd love to also hear about how you got lucky.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1. Senior attorney at a large Silicon Valley company. Manage several legal teams.
2. About $600k per year, excluding equity which is on average $700k - 800k per year.
3. SLAC, law school, DOJ and then inhouse.
Would you say you are equally or more busy than someone who works at a big law firm?
I would say less busy. I work around 50 hours per week. More if it is EOQ, travelling to HQ or leading a project with the tight deadline.
How hard is it to land this type of job? My husband is a partner in a mid-level law firm in DC and makes less than you do (only 2nd year partner not equity). He works insane hours. We would both love if he could get a less busy job than he has now but cannot afford the pay cut.
PP has a unicorn job. Mid-level law firm partner isn't landing that gig.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1. Senior attorney at a large Silicon Valley company. Manage several legal teams.
2. About $600k per year, excluding equity which is on average $700k - 800k per year.
3. SLAC, law school, DOJ and then inhouse.
Would you say you are equally or more busy than someone who works at a big law firm?
I would say less busy. I work around 50 hours per week. More if it is EOQ, travelling to HQ or leading a project with the tight deadline.
How hard is it to land this type of job? My husband is a partner in a mid-level law firm in DC and makes less than you do (only 2nd year partner not equity). He works insane hours. We would both love if he could get a less busy job than he has now but cannot afford the pay cut.
Anonymous wrote:People have some pretty tepid jobs here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1. Senior attorney at a large Silicon Valley company. Manage several legal teams.
2. About $600k per year, excluding equity which is on average $700k - 800k per year.
3. SLAC, law school, DOJ and then inhouse.
Would you say you are equally or more busy than someone who works at a big law firm?
I would say less busy. I work around 50 hours per week. More if it is EOQ, travelling to HQ or leading a project with the tight deadline.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1. Senior attorney at a large Silicon Valley company. Manage several legal teams.
2. About $600k per year, excluding equity which is on average $700k - 800k per year.
3. SLAC, law school, DOJ and then inhouse.
Would you say you are equally or more busy than someone who works at a big law firm?
Anonymous wrote:1. Senior attorney at a large Silicon Valley company. Manage several legal teams.
2. About $600k per year, excluding equity which is on average $700k - 800k per year.
3. SLAC, law school, DOJ and then inhouse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1. director of national accounts, food sales
2. 160k plus 20% bonus
3. aa degree, started as a territory rep & worked my way up
Do you want to go into other sales, which could be more lucrative?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's notable, so many people say "hard work", "grit", "worked my @ ss off"... do you think the guys who work on your car didn't work hard to get where they are? The person with the most grit and determination is probably the cleaning lady who walked here from Venezuela...
I'm not normally one to go crazy shouting "white privilege" but these answers seem really tone deaf. I'd love to also hear about how you got lucky.
This is a pretty myopic thing to say. I posted in this thread and from the responses so far I’m probably in the upper 5%. My parents came from the projects of their home country. So while you can think you know me and my privilege from one post, lady you’re the one who’s actually tone deaf.