I shocked my contacts at the beginning of the year when I announced that I joined another law firm. (I know, I never thought it would happen either.) I am now of counselย at an IP boutique firm calledย Venjurisย in Phoenix. I still haveย Carter Law Firm, though, for professional speaking and writing purposes.
Shifting from solo life to a multi-lawyer firm has been quite a change. For starters, I had to buy office furniture for the first time, since I was moving from a furnished office. My new office also comes with a receptionist. I love having administrative support that takes care of setting up client files, billing, screening my calls and doing some of my scheduling. Itโs been a little challenging getting all the programs to work on my computer, but for the most part, that is someone else’s responsibility.
Itโs also wonderful to have other intellectual property attorneys around if I need a second opinion about a case. When I was a solo, I shared office space with other lawyers but I was the only one who did IP work and mostlyย we kept to ourselves. In my new firm there is a strong team atmosphere even though we often work on separate cases.
Part of moving to the new firm has meant adapting to the office’s culture. When workingย solo, I could come and go as I pleased. Quite often, I didnโt go to my office unless I was seeing clients. At the new firm, we have a lot of freedom โ no dress code, no set hours, no billable hour requirements โ but weโre typically there every day unless we have anย outsideย obligation. There is an unspoken expectation that you will be in the office Mondayย throughย Friday, 9 toย 5’ish.
I’ve also had to get used to people talking to each other during the workday again โ whether itโs about cases or just shooting the breeze. But I recognize itโs an important part of relationship-building and collaboration.
A Kind of Reprieve
It seems more common these days to hear about lawyers giving up firm life to hang out their own shingle, but there are some like me who follow the opposite path. I recently had a discussion about this phenomenon with attorneys on Reddit. Matt Villmer of Sodoma Law, in Charlotte, N.C., shared this:
“Moving from a solo practice to a firm environment had a lot of benefits, and very few drawbacks, in my estimation. While operating my solo firm, I was the attorney, the bookkeeper, the accountant, the web designer, the marketing professional and the salesman. I spent as much time on administrative tasks as I did actually helping my clients. My transition into joining a small firm (10 attorneys) in North Carolina was a great reprieve from my solo days. Now I can focus on generating new business and helping my clients, while other firm employees balance the trust account and take care of the firm’s web presence. It’s great!”
Iโm really lucky to have found a firm that seemsย unphased by anything I do in my professional or personal lifeย โย they seem to embrace the fact that Iโm not exactly your typical attorney. As Annie says in “Little Orphan Annie,” โI think Iโm gonna like it here.โ
Ruth Carterย is a lawyer, writer and speaker. She is Of Counsel with Venjuris, focusing her practiceย on intellectual property, social media, First Amendment and flash mob law. Ruth is the author of the ABA book โThe Legal Side of Blogging for Lawyers,โ as well as โFlash Mob Law: The Legal Side of Planning and Participating in Pillow Fights, No Pants Rides, and Other Shenanigans.โย Follow her on Twitterย @rbcarter.
Illustration ยฉImageZoo