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Fri, 20 Sep 2024 02:06:26 -0700

Andy from private IP /all The inevitability of the law firm machine As I write this, I'm suffering under a crushing burden of stress. I have a jury trial on Monday, and combined with everything else, I cannot sleep. What they don't tell you about being a small law firm owner is that it is simply impossible to stay current on all the cases and case statuses when there are five attorneys in the firm and everyone is working on different things. I wish I had known this years ago. I'm not exactly complaining, because this is better than being a senior associate in someone else's law firm, but ultimately, it is a recipe for a stressful life. Add to that the difficulty of collecting money from clients, and it's a wonder anyone would choose this life. I didn't exactly choose this; it chose me because it was the best option back in 2016 when I was sick to death of being an Of Counsel contract attorney and the opportunity arose to start the firm. Here I am eight years later, and it comes with multiple blessings and curses. If there's one thing I can say now, it's that the law firm machine cannot be stopped, and must continue. This is for several reasons, including but not limited to the financial track. There is simply nothing else I could do that would earn this type of revenue (at least, gross revenue). That is probably the biggest reason I'm tied to this. In addition, there's the constant pressure to pay staff/employees, which requires me to keep running the machine. Essentially, I'm falling into the trap described in the book The Millionaire Next Door. In that book, they talk about lawyers specifically as having high earnings but not having a lot in the bank. So true. I look at my profit-and-loss screen and I shake my head at where all the money goes. Payroll for nine people on an annual basis is a lot of money! The office lease and payroll are my two biggest expenses. Of course I could elect to not spend so much money on side projects, but that's the Faustian bargain I made: that I would use my law earnings to subsidize things I actually enjoy doing, such as music, guitars, and the like. That's my long way of saying that I can't and won't be able to change anything about the current setup. It's already optimal, which says a lot about law as a business. I jokingly told my colleague Vivian today that I'm "slowly going insane and prepared to renounce law as a career." Everyone laughed, but there is a grain of truth there: this is why there are so many toxic workplaces and disordered law firm partners. Because the overwhelming pressures cause people to crack. I'm hoping to avoid that, and it's nice having this board as an outlet for my frustrations. Thanks for listening! #LawFirm _reply Fri, 20 Sep 2024 11:31:54 -0700
2tierreality from private IP /all At a certain size and scale, the are a lot of attorney-owners who completely step away as a working attorney but stay involved as the attorney and "founder", and only internally advise the other attorneys regarding strategy, etc. But they are done trying and managing cases. Maybe you're already there or close to the point where you could do that. Consulting companies like Atticus try to sell attorney-owners on this model all the time. Why not make the leap? Or maybe you enjoy practicing too much and would be miserable of you had to step away. _reply Fri, 20 Sep 2024 11:38:53 -0700
whiteguyinchina from private IP /all I knew this guy whose gross revenue was 120 million usd by trading a niche metal product. His overhead must have been like a million max. Small office and maybe 5 employees. So much better than law or a doctor. But hey no prestige _reply Tue, 24 Sep 2024 06:11:54 -0700
Andy from private IP /all The good part is that getting clients and cases is not a problem at this point. It's self-sustaining in terms of flow of cases. The problem is more in the area of manpower. I need more staff, but then the payroll obligation goes up, and that is a big source of my stress because I'm always writing large checks to people. Payroll in a nine-person law firm is a staggering amount of money, which I think explains a lot of why there aren't many other attorneys in a similar position. Most law firms of this size are actual law firms with multiple partners who can share the burden. Here, it's just me...makes it more stressful and difficult in every respect. And yet, I wouldn't trade this for some other arrangement, in part because I have a strong sense of agency from being able to make my own decisions and do whatever interests me. _reply Wed, 25 Sep 2024 16:14:11 -0700
Andy from private IP /all We won the jury trial before the actual trial on a last-minute motion for judgment on the pleadings that was my idea. Client is delighted in how we did and with the result. What a freaking crazy world.
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