15 Career Mistakes Attorneys Make

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15 Career Mistakes Attorneys Make Because They Do Not Have the Right Career Information By Harrison Barnes from Los Angeles Office Managing Director Summary: Find out what information blindness is and how avoiding it can help you avoid these major career mistakes as an attorney. Attorneys require a plethora of information, especially when taking on a case and representing a client's interests. Those same attorneys, however, may not be making intelligent decisions on a day-to-day basis, particularly about their careers. These attorneys suffer an imbalance of power due to an imbalance of information about their prospects, the current state of their law firm, peer relationship and when to move on to another firm. The Bible says, "Pride goeth before destruction." If you do not have the ability to see and understand the mistakes you are making and the false assumptions you are making on a day-to-day basis, the odds are good that you will experience catastrophic failure in your career. One of the biggest problems all attorneys have is that they do not have enough information to make intelligent career decisions. There is an imbalance of power because there is an imbalance of information. Attorneys lack information about jobs, their prospects in their current firms, the health of their firms, how to deal with peers and decision makers, when to move and when not to move, and more. Nowhere is the lack of information more prevalent than in the law firm environment and in attorneys' job searches--where far too many attorneys blindly follow career paths without access to the vital information they need to truly succeed. In some respects, you might call this "poetic justice" (or extremely ironic) because attorneys are typically the ones who hold information when it comes to their relationships with their clients. Attorneys tend to understand their clients' legal problems better than their clients and have the ability to selectively solve problems. Most attorneys have an imbalance of information compared to their clients. Attorneys know the law, the weaknesses and strengths of each matter they work on--and more. Attorneys charge for their superior information; however, when it comes to their own careers, they often lack information about what to do. Do you have access to the information about what you should do in your legal career? See: Police Chases, Foreclosures and Access to Information for more information. There are many mistakes attorneys make in their careers that are due in large part to information blindness. Here are some of the major ones: You are in the right profession I would estimate that perhaps 50% of all attorneys out there are not in the right profession. Being in the wrong profession has all sorts of unintended consequences for attorneys and ends up limiting them in their lives and careers. Attorneys who are in the wrong profession typically are (1) unhappier, (2) more stressed, (3) apt to make less money, and (4) more unfulfilled than they would be if they were in a different profession. Many attorneys enter and remain in the legal profession for the wrong reasons. See Why You Should (and Should Not) Quit the Practice of Law for more information. Just because you are smart does not mean you should be practicing law If you have the right intellectual pedigree, it is not too difficult to get into a major law school and law firm. This

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15 Career Mistakes Attorneys Make by BCG Attorney Search - Issuu