Showing Up: The Difference between Those Who Get Hired and Advance in Law Firms and Those Who Do Not

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Showing Up: The Difference between Those Who Get Hired and Advance in Law Firms and Those Who Do Not By Harrison Barnes from Los Angeles Office Managing Director Summary: Learn 10 things that separate successful law firm attorneys from all the rest in this article. The most successful attorneys in most law firms always show up. It is never enough just to be doing the work you are given. I have spent roughly the past 20 years speaking with attorneys looking for jobs inside of law firms on a daily basis. From a law firm's review of your resume to their "evaluation" of you once you start working there, people are constantly watching to see if you are "showing up." Attorneys who are selected to work in the best law firms and remain in the best law firms consistently do more than their peers--and show up more often. Physically and mentally, they show up more than their peers--and as time goes by they get better and better at showing up. Working in the largest and best firms--and staying there--is all about showing up. This is how the "game" works and understanding this is the key to success at all levels of the profession. See also:The Top Three Qualities Warren Buffett Looks for When Hiring Attorneys, Managers, and Others-and Why This Is All You Need to Know to Hire, Get Hired, and Be a Great Employee At some point in their careers, most attorneys stop showing up. Many lose their enthusiasm when they are in law school and start out as an attorney never showing up. Other attorneys lose their will when they are a year or two into the practice of law. Other attorneys stop showing up after ten years when they get tired and give up. The practice of law can be grueling. The hours can be very long, the people unpleasant, and the stresses of getting ahead--getting and keeping business--exhausting for many attorneys. Law school is also tough as well. Moreover, at every stage of the game, most attorneys find that many of their peers are not their allies but are "out to get them"--whether it is fellow associates or partners later in their career. To remain ahead, the attorneys need to show up more than these peers. The law firm game is about showing up. Law firms have developed all sorts of systems to make sure their attorneys are showing up. Here is how the law firm organism tests its attorneys at every level of the game to make sure they are showing up. A Preference for Attorneys Who Went to the Best Schools, Got the Best Grades and Got Positions with the Best Law Firms as Summer Associates, Their First Jobs and So Forth The best law firms hire people in school--and after school--who have a history of consistently doing well. Getting into the best colleges and law schools shows that you can do well and impress others--professors, standardized tests, recommenders, and others. The better you did in college, the more seriously you took it and the more likely it was you showed up and applied yourself. The better you do in law school, the same thing. While employers have no way of knowing it, you presumably studied harder, applied yourself more, and "showed up" more than your peers. The presumption is the longer you have done this (college and law school) the more you will continue to do this over time and the better hire you will be--those who showed up in the past will figure out how to show up in the future. Law firms also like people who were summer associates in the best firms and had their first jobs with the best law firms. This is a sign that these attorneys have a history of showing up and impressing others--because

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