Sabtu, 09 Juli 2011

Singapore Legal System


A snippet of the relevant history
Democracy basics: The Singapore Constitution: The separation of Powers

The Singapore system is based on the separation of powers , in this videos the concept of splitting power into 3 branch to check and balance each other is essentially is the same as USA .



Parliament

In Singapore, we follow the British Parlimentary Model called the Westminster Style of Parliament:

except that we do not have the House of Lords.



1) Law making function: Parliament makes laws and where necessary, the ruling and opposition will debate its merit before calling a vote on it.



NB: In Singapore we do not have the upper House of Lords

2) Inquisitorial function of opposition to serve as a check on the ruling party:

 Here is an example of the inquisitorial role of an opposition in a fieRce debate in UK in parliament:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5xUy2inkGHQ&feature=related


Common Law

Historical origins of common law


Stare Decisis :

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yLleV7XhkRI



History of Common Law:



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GjSa7ccitME&feature=relmfu



a) Mediation

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H0_h1BDOhtw

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G90f4EsegDg&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tWqbwyjUPfE

b) Arbitration

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FWYfOy5WF-w

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7msZIT3nXpA



Difference between a) and b) :

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vdliiSe7hhg&feature=related

Kamis, 07 Juli 2011

Motivational: Red Bull for your spirit

The coffee is to wake up your body, the inspirational collection is to wake up your spirit.

Without the spirit, there will be no effort and therefore little success...like coffee , it should be taken once a day and not at the last minute.

And how you motivate yourself is such an important skill but is not formally taught in schools. You can count yourself  lucky to be reading just this...

a) Managing Procrastination for your Essay datelines:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s9SWJRwvHb4

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qjIsdbBsE8g

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VA8D1cGW5Qk

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZWZcbufhRpo&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=endscreen&v=cpwkzb--Jwo&NR=1

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m5g8rjdsgRQ

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=37wR_TWdVy0

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DJ2T4-rUUcs

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fWZGg3h8kxM

b) Short video clips on motivation

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iADTpgRXYrk

Steve Jobs:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zkTf0LmDqKI&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nzoNZoiAbbA&feature=related

The guru of motivation: Anthony Robbins:


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IoCZFoXCbWk

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MzpWT66Km8E

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fWZGg3h8kxM&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BcXYB-4kOl4&feature=related

http://www.motivational-well-being.com/motivational-videos.html

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gc4HGQHgeFE

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WO4tIrjBDkk

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lSM1mvMypWU ;

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hzgzim5m7oU ;

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W5Ypppk45ow

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H8ZuKF3dxCY&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uASVzkrEKgs‏

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wZsSQvv9ygM

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VkCFeNeqyHk

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c2wopO178LQ&feature=BFa&list=PLB479772A9E46CD2D&index=4

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R1HygVNVslI&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U3NgzQ9Pcsg&feature=fvsr

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V_T3DU1QcrU

Oh and by the way coontributions are welcome , just post on the comments page.

c)Movies: Top 25 movies: http://sourcesofinsight.com/25-inspirational-movies/

Finish all 25 and there's more from the contributors in the commentaries and by the time you get to 50, your life will forever change ...for the better. Skeptical? well if it does not work, you would have enjoyed the best movies and saved yourself the time and $ watching other meaningless ones anyways.

d) read true stories everyday
http://www.motivateus.com/

Study Skills: Please include this as your homepage during this semester. This will ensure you are always on top of the necessary skills!!

a) Self diagnostics



Print this check list and after each lesson, check each point and most importantly be honest to yourself, as the course progress, there must be clear improvement and reduction of bad habits.  The worst thing you can do to yourself is to lie to yourself.


Failure Diagnostics checklist: How to check whether you are going to fail this course

SS = Go watch Study skills videos  in businesslawvideos blogspot

M= Go watch Motivation Videos in businesslawvideos blogspot


Name of Student:
Solution
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
o                         A) Still in dreamland that the Law paper is easy when in fact is it the toughest
M











o                         B) Still in the holiday mood and your brain needs time to “warm-up”… until a couple of weeks before the exam
M










o                         C) Not coming for class or disappearing during class thinking that you can get by with the slides and textbook alone
M










o                         D) poor effort at preparing for  the tutorials, in time, and comprehensively
o                           Buddies: please check their tutorials
M










o                         E) Thinking the lecture was easy to understand and not doing your readings after each lesson and summarizing the lecture into a mind map
M










o                         F) Getting distracted in class, lack of active listening skills
M/SS










o                         G) Thinking you can get by studying someone else’s Mind Map and ending up confused
M










o                         H) Not motivated to seeking help or easier ways of understanding the topic when you get stuck.
M










o                         I ) Multi-tasking with while studying or during class
SS










o                         J) Thinking that failure will happen to the guy next to you and NEVER you.
o                           20-30% failed every sem… so out of every three , one of you will be back. So if we remove the repeaters, it means 40% of fresh students will fail.
M










o                         K) Expecting spoon feeding like a Secondary School Student  without additional reading of the textbooks
SS










o                         Last minute cramming and studying
SS










o                         StudyBuddy’s Name:
o                         ______________________
o                         Declaration: I hereby swear to tell my buddy the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth about where he is heading.

Signature













Study Skills


i)http://www.howtostudy.org/


ii)Just watch the " most views" youtube daily the following  subjects until you really "get it":

a)How to study http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pXNfVs1pPQc

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QLjip0wygAI

b) How to take notes http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bvsf591rYWE

c) How to make mind maps : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y4yzG65r6Ko

d) How to memorise http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ulk9BCRA83Y

e) How to listen http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y9LBUf1NzU0&feature=relmfu
for example :

f) How to reduce study time using flashcards: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CS8RZoirLzQ



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-QVRiMkdRsU&feature=relmfu

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RH95h36NChI&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9O7y7XEC66M&feature=relmfu

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1xeHh5DnCIw&feature=relmfu

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E9GrOxhYZdQ&feature=relmfu

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v5bxp5DY6dc&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?NR=1&feature=fvwp&v=e0dKnzu8-D8

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fEdoiwnJyW0&feature=relmfu

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NfqZWWA5Rgo&feature=relmfu

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zG0sdlNVxBQ&feature=fvwrel

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AQmAeXIwI5M&feature=fvwrel

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UT-_G4-fYkw&feature=relmfu

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4kj6DrkygyE&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gRzmKQ-OEKY&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Aer6YqOmK2A&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0H7es6CkE8k&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FdGDnUKZcMM&feature=related



Be humble...there may be more to learn than what you already know...so keep at it for the next 2 months, if you find a good one ...rate it and share it here in the comments below.

or you might try....

iii) http://www.watchknowlearn.org/Category.aspx?CategoryID=949

iv) In general study skills consists of four steps:

a) Preparation: http://secondaryonevideos.blogspot.sg/2012/07/study-skills.html

b) Taking in:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NRjAokddf9I

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4kj6DrkygyE&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MlabrWv25qQ&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wLWV0XN7K1g&feature=fvwrel

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gRzmKQ-OEKY&feature=related

http://secondaryonevideos.blogspot.sg/2012/08/study-skills-taking-in.html


c) Remembering: http://secondaryonevideos.blogspot.sg/2012/09/study-skills-remembering.html

d) Output , testing skills:  http://secondaryonevideos.blogspot.sg/2012/09/study-skills-output.html

b) Law exams: IRAC Method of answering IS A MUST FOR LAW ASSIGNMENT CASE QUESTIONS AND EXAM CASE QUESTIONS

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g6KOsHYiL3k&feature=related

http://www.lawnerds.com/guide/irac.html#TheIRACFormula

http://www.oup.com/uk/orc/bin/poole/books/001common/guidance/



d) Memory flashcards on your mobile device! 20-200 times more effective.  This is on iPhone, but I'm sure you can find similiar ones on your Android or PC, so go look and add into comments to share your findings.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uiYS1d5BmN0&feature=related

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CS8RZoirLzQ


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t6nExtqBs8A&feature=related




or simply just use your phone camera as a flash card device.

e) If English is your problem...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ssuiqtreiBg&feature=related


Sabtu, 10 April 2010

Too scared to move

It's a cliche to say that America is a litigious country, but once again someone has come into my office with a problem that, quite frankly, would like not have occurred in any other country.

The details of the problem aren't relevant, and shouldn't be disclosed in any event. But here, in such a generic way as to not disclose details but to make my larger point, are the circumstances:

1. A person suffers a catastrophic injury on or near my client's property.
2. Client in no way directly caused it (i.e., act of commission), and Client appears not to have indirectly caused it (i.e., act of omission), though the plaintiff's lawyer is digging to manufacture evidence by which a jury could at least conceive that perhaps something could have been done better by Client that could have prevented the injury from occurring.
3. Client is now in fear of losing his life savings at almost-retirement age, and likely will have to suffer the stress of civil litigation for the next 2-3 years.

It is a clear sign of the distaste our society has for Plaintiff's lawyers when our state's largest association of them changes its name from "The North Carolina Academy of Trial Lawyers" to the more innocuous sounding "North Carolina Advocates for Justice." We all want justice, right? Perhaps they should take one more step and call themselves the "Justice League," or maybe even just "The Superfriends."

While we can (and do) blame all lawyers for our litigious society, I'd point out that there have to be clients to keep lawyers in business, and furthermore, there wouldn't be this business if there weren't a system set up that appears to perpetuate trial litigation. Put together, we have a legal system in which litigious injury claims carry with them a chance of reward that far outweighs the small risk involved in filing them. Until that system is changed, it will only be logical that (1) more claims will be filed than should be; (2) cottage industries are set up simply to propagate the voluminous filing of claims; and (3) people will have to guide their actions not by what is right or best but instead what minimizes their risk and the costs associated with litigation.

Here are, however, a few suggestions for ways in which we could reduce the fear litigation in our society.

1. Make the Plaintiff state his full alleged claims, and then have to pay the Defendant's legal costs if he fails to recover at least half of the amount claimed for damages. This idea attacks two issues at once. First, in North Carolina, negligence plaintiffs are not required to state the amount of their damages, being required only to allege whether the damages are in excess of $10,000 or not. Obviously, this allows Plaintiffs to file claims without providing the Defendants any real idea of the damages they're claiming, or even having to know themselves what their alleged damages are. Furthermore, old ideas of a "loser pays" system neglect the fact that while many Plaintiffs go to trial and actually do receive damages, the damages are often for nowhere near what they really wanted--so though they received something, they in fact were in reality losers. This idea would (1) require the Plaintiff to place his cards on the table by naming concrete damages, and (2)require him to cover the Defendant's costs if what a court awarded him was far less than what he asked. More importantly, however, this requirement would reduce the overstated claims brought by Plaintiffs and their attorneys, by which they allege damages in excess of $10,000, and come to trial with wild figures in the six and seven figures. If you as a Plaintiff are required to specify your damages, and then further can be penalized if your recovery is less than half of what you specified, you, logically, will be more careful not to overstate your perceived damages.

2. Change negligence and liability law from the "common law" system to a "civil law" system. In general, you could find in me no greater standard-bearer for Anglo-Saxon history, culture and its legal system, and I proudly state that the United Kingdom, in the last few hundred years, is one of the main progenitors of democracy and modernization all over the world, and the world is better for English influence. That said, we could perhaps learn a little bit from "civil law" countries. Most English-speaking countries use common law in their courts to determine civil (non-criminal) liability. This system of law is developed, over time, by judges and courts of appeals, based upon case law, as established case by case. While this system is lauded for its flexibility, it has the nasty side effect--in liability cases--to be so gray, so murky, so difficult to pin down, that average citizens simply cannot know whether many of their actions could make them liable or not. The general rule as stated by the courts is whether an action is "reasonable" as determined by a "reasonable person" standard (i.e., would a reasonable person have taken this action or not?). The problem with this standard is it has no set interpretation, except for those made by lawyers to convince juries and judges. And it is fairly easy for attorneys and juries to play Monday morning quarterback, and to determine that, if looking back on an action, there was a better way to do it, then ipso facto the person by failing to do it that better way must have been negligent. There is no easy way for a person to determine whether his actions may bring him liability, other than to read years worth of court cases to determine where liability has been found in the past--and even in this case, that's not foolproof because the common law is constantly evolving, so that what's a rule this year may not be quite the same rule in the next.

By contrast, in a civil law country, these civil rules are determined statutorily, by legislators. While this can, of course, create its own set of inscrutable rules (see, e.g., the IRS code), there is at least a set of rules, written down on paper, that cannot be changed simply because judges or lawyers believe it is time to modify the laws.

In a civil law country, the rules would state very clearly, in black and white, what actions could make you civilly liable. Anything not included in those rules would then be activities that would not bring liability. Wouldn't that be nice?

Furthermore, the statutes could prescribe a set formula for damages in those instances of liability, so that a Defendant accused of negligence by a Plaintiff would very easily understand, by law, what his potential liability would be, instead of it being left in the hands of 12 strangers with no real restraints on your pocketbook.

3. Do not allow a Plaintiff to receive the benefit of punitive damages. In our common law system, there are two basic types of damages that a Plaintiff can receive: compensatory and punitive. Compensatory damages, in theory, compensate the Plaintiff for the loss he has incurred--if someone's negligence totalled your $10,000 car, then your compensatory damages would be $10,000. Punitive damages, however, are meant as a punishment for certain egregious wrongdoing of a Defendant. Perhaps, in certain cases, a Defendant's actions are so egregiously wrong that he should be punished. But if the goal of punitive damages is to punish, why should the Plaintiff then be given those damages? All this does is give a Plaintiff a greater financial incentive to misstate wrongdoing in order to increase his potential payday. Instead, any punitive damages awarded against a Defendant should be paid into the court system, to cover the court costs and minimize taxpayer expenditures. The punitives could only, perhaps, be awarded by a jury so that there is no incentive for judicial officials to award punitives in order to increase their budget coffers. Perhaps there are some times a Defendant should be justly punished--but should a Plaintiff be enriched as a result?

Without major changes in our legal system, future generations will live their lives in paralyzing fear of lawsuits, litigation, and perceived liability. If just a few of these changes were implemented, many of the wrongful incentives currently inherent in the system would vanish, creating a system instead where legitimate wrongs are redressed, but abolishing the low-risk lottery system we currently have in place.

Minggu, 06 September 2009

A partnership exit plan

If you've read this blog for some time, you know that I've written often about what happens when business partners can no longer get along. But other things can happen to break up a partnership that should also be considered when setting up a business venture. For example, what if one of you dies, becomes incapacitated, or suddenly is in a divorce that may cause your partner's share of the business to be owned by his ex-spouse?

Buy-sell agreements are integral to the start of a new venture, but a well-drafted one should cover not only what happens when it is time to end the partnership, but also what happens if the unexpected occurs. Some of the issues a good buy-sell should cover are:

1. A provision allowing for a buyout of a deceased partner's share of the business (often using the funds from life insurance policies paid for by the business).

2. A provision requiring a forced sell-out of a partner's interest if that partner is convicted of certain wrongdoing (such as felony criminal convictions) or, if he is in a profession, loses his license.

3. Contractual provisions that restrict the shares of a partner that pass unintentionally to a third party (such as through death or divorce), so that the surviving partner does not have to make partnership decisions with this new, unchosen partner.

A well-written buy-sell contract can help you envision and solve many of a partnership's long-term possible problems before the partnership ever gets off the ground. If you're in North Carolina, and need help setting up a venture or entity, feel free to contact me for an appointment.

Minggu, 30 Agustus 2009

Entrepeneurs and Adversity

More than a year now into the recession, and, for the first time in my career, having watched a largely suceessful clientele of entrepeneurs weather financial storms, I've learned that business people have handled this recession in different ways, some positive and some negative. In addition, in connection with my banking practice, I have seen other entrepeneurs deal head-on with the financial stress brought on by the recent financial downturn.

1. "Be good to the people on your way up the ladder 'cause you'll need them on the way down..." Lucky Dube, "The Way it Is." Some formerly successful people have not handled the downturn well--financially or psychologically. Perhaps they didn't save for the eventual rainy day, perhaps their business plan was too narrow to envision failure, or perhaps they had great plans, but bad timing. These people have fallen on hard times, and they're not handling it well. They're bitter at the system that they believe failed them. They're angry with the banks foreclosing on their properties and homes. And often, they wonder what has happened to many of the friends they used to have. Were these people just "fake friends" and hangars on? Maybe. But my law partner and I were joking about a particular entrepeneur in the national news who'd fallen on hard times: "What's the difference between the rich Mr. X and the poor Mr. X? The poor Mr. X is an S.O.B.!"

The point, reader, is not that poverty makes someone a worse person--it's that when a person who isn't friendly loses the thing that makes them powerful (wealth), they're still left with all their poor qualities.

2. The contrarian investor. In pure financial terms, some entrepeneurs have excelled in these down times. Yes, I watched them make wealth during headier times. But these individuals were not one-trick ponies: they weren't riding the "house-flipping" band wagon of the real estate boom, nor were they likely part of the dot-com craze a decade earlier (though they might have made money off of both). Instead, these individuals possessed something, by their raising, their genes, or some sort of gift that simply allows them to see what most of us cannot. These individuals have been able to find money-making opportunities in any economic climate, and have actually thrived.

3. The lesson learner. Most entrepeneurs--even the good ones--have still felt the pinch of this latest economic crisis, however. They're NOT making as much money as they once were--and it's not clear for some if they'll ever make that much money again any time soon. Though things are not going as well as they used to, these entrepeneurs are enduring, and are become better people for it.

Some of them have done well enough in the past that they're able to continue to survive off of their savings. Others have had to pare down their business operations--and their lifestyle. Some are even struggling with their finances, but are doing so honestly, contacting the banks, trying to work out solutions while being fair to those whom they owe. For these people, the economic recession has been a lesson. It has made them realize that even the most successful business can fail given the right climate, that even a wealthy man can lose his riches in certain circumstances. It has caused them to remember that money isn't an end-all, and that many of the characteristics that helped them first gain financial success--hard work, integrity, and thrifty living--will also help them weather the current financial storms.


This recession will fade one day, but others will likely come. Entrepeneurs, from a financial standpoint, will you have what it takes to withstand--and even financially thrive--in the next downturn? More importantly, will you have the integrity and character necessary to let you take on life's financial difficulties?

Minggu, 12 Juli 2009

Five things I did right as a lawyer

A couple posts ago, I wrote to aspiring lawyers about some of the things I did wrong, in an effort to help some of you avoid my mistakes in your careers and personal lives. This week, however, I'd like to suggest certain things that I did right--and I hope you'll consider doing them too.

1. I kept the Bar Exam in perspective. I wanted to write this before many of you take your Bar Exams. When I say that I kept the Bar in perspective, I don't mean that I didn't take it seriously. I also am not going to lie to you and act like that I didn't worry about whether I'd pass it or what I'd do if I flunked it. No, all of those feelings are natural. I'm talking literally about what I did in the days leading up to the Bar Exam.

This was my first--and hopefully only--time that I would take the exam, so I didn't have previous history to go on as to how to study for the Bar. However, I knew what had worked for me in law school for three years, and I had to trust myself, and my own abilities, that if I simply stuck with what worked, and used my tried and true methods of study, that I'd be ok. For me, that meant setting up study schedules, allotting a set number of days and hours to each potential subject, and after planning it out, simply sticking to the plan.

I also knew myself well enough to know that if I took myself off the plan, and focused on others, I would become unsure of myself, and also might psyche myself out mentally. When I was in Raleigh for the exam, some law school classmates were, during their lunch breaks, trying to study together and compare notes with their classmates as to how they answered certain questions. DO NOT DO THIS!!!! First, you've studied all summer; eat a leisurely lunch because that one hour isn't going to give you any advantage on the exam anyway. Second, you will inevitably discover that you and your classmates answered questions differently, leading you to question your own answer, which will not only drive you crazy, but it could seriously distract you in the final legs of your exam.

I stayed focus, I stuck with what had worked in the past, and--guess what? It worked again. I'd suggest you do the same.

2. I found a good mentoring law firm. When I worked as a law clerk in Madison, Georgia, a lawyer named Jim Winkler told me that wherever I tried to find a job, make sure to find a firm that would mentor me. I'd never thought of that before, but I thought that sounded like pretty good advice and, after having worked in the law profession for 11 years, I can confidently say that he passed on to me sage words. The quality of a lawyer you will become in your career will depend, in part, upon your first formative years. Regardless of what you're taught at law school, much of what you'll learn that molds you most will come after you start practicing. Too many firms (big, small, city or country), look at that new associate as a form of cheap labor, just a low-paid minion that can do lawyer work for less. You need to find someone who's willing to give you as much as you give them--someone who's willing to teach you not only how to do a good job, but how to be the best lawyer you can be. I've helped train a couple of associates, and I've really grown to appreciate how much time my senior partner invested in me.

It takes time to train someone from the ground up, to look at them not just as a wage laborer, but someone whom you want to help reach the best of his or her potential. In the short run, my firm could've trained me for six months, then had me out in the fields making money for them. And if they had, I'd probably be not much better ten years later than I was then. But instead, the partners invested effort into making me the best they thought I could be. I hope I can do that for other lawyers, and I suggest you find a firm that can teach you the same. I don't want to disparage lawyers straight out of school who open their own shop, but there's nothing to replace the mentoring of a senior member of the Bar.


3. I got a wide variety of experience when I started. Working in a small-town firm as a new associate, my senior partner let me get a taste of everything. I handled traffic tickets, simple divorces, wills, boundary line cases--just about anything I could imagine. While I have no desire to be a general practitioner, the variety of experience I got was invaluable, because it helped me in my current practice think from a wider perspective. I was involved in a case a couple years back involving a breach of contract, with co-counsel who represented a separate defendant. I sensed the Plaintiff was lying, and something smelled bad. I finally figured out that the Plaintiff, who'd represented himself to be a large real estate mogul, was committing loan fraud and was a sham. How did I figure it out? From my days closing real estate loans, I looked at the Plaintiff's figures, and could determine that his supposed real estate empire simply couldn't have worked.

Also, practicing in multiple areas of law taught me areas which I didn't like, but steered me to areas in which I found I had a knack. As a new lawyer, try not to get pigeon-holed. Your development may proceed slower than, say, the associate at the Big Law Firm who's funneled into its Egyptian Antiquities Law Department, but you'll be better for it in the end.


4. I focused first on becoming skilled, then on the money. Because my senior partner focused on making me skilled rather than pimping me out for money, I similarly focused on becoming the best I could be. Honestly, I didn't do poorly those first few years, but to the extent I have financial success now, it is because I put in the time in the salad days. Lawyers who are hired and are not well-mentored tend to also have a mentality about money early on, and try to find the quickest way to earn a buck. At some point, though, they will plateau, and not only be mediocre, but will in fact generate less income than if they'd focused more on their skills earlier.


5. I stuck with it when things got tough. Lots of lawyers coming out of school fantasize about working a couple years with someone, then going out on their own. Five years into my practice, I was one step away from leaving, having already found a building to lease, incorporated my practice, and even turned in my notice. However, I worked things out with my partners, and now am glad that we worked together to create a better firm. This is not to say that every lawyer should stay at his first job forever--I know that's not always possible. But remember, there is power in numbers. You'll often find that with lawyers, the whole is greater than the sum of the parts, and often, lawyers with large client bases lose some of their stability and prestige when they go on their own. Think hard before you do it.


That's enough lawyerly advice for now. According to my calculations, you have about two or three weeks left before the big day. You've had your study break, now get back to work. Good luck, you can do it!