|
Career Corner
I'm a lawyer who's never "taken" to the legal profession.
Can I look forward to other career options?
A quick survey of the lawyers who returned for Duke's first Career
Week last year demonstrates that Duke graduates do many things
other than working for law firms. Just from this sampling, there
was a senior attorney for the Pennsylvania Coalition against Domestic
Violence, a vice president of Northrop Grumman, an interim executive
director of the North Carolina Human Relations Commission, the
assistant legal counsel for the North Carolina School Boards Association,
a workers' compensation judge--and our own Sue Wasiolek, the assistant
vice president for student affairs.
What your question does not tell me is whether you've "gone
off" the law entirely, or simply don't want to work in a law
firm, where you have to bill in excess of 2,000 hours a year and
never see your family. A couple of our Career Week sample decided
to compromise by founding their own firms!
Let's assume, however, that simply thinking about having the word "lawyer" or "attorney" in
your title (or, for that matter, partner or judge) makes you break
out in hives. Are there other options? Absolutely. By definition,
you're smart, you know how to think and reason, and you can write
well. The trick now is to persuade someone to hire you and pay
you enough to satisfy the student-loan collectors or mortgage company.
Lawyers who are looking for jobs outside the law often believe
that they can do anything, if only given a chance. They also tend
to look for salaries equivalent to those they would have made in
private practice. Here's where you may have to eat some humble
pie. To get your foot in the door, you must plead your case to
an employer that you can do the job they need to have done. Sometimes,
that means you'll be promoting skills, such as your marketing ability,
that require far fewer brain cells than your legal studies.
You may also have to consider a salary substantially lower than
your peers in the legal world. Ultimately, your educational background
may help you do your work better or more efficiently--and many
law-trained graduates reach the pinnacles of industry--but there's
no guarantee that you'll move ahead more quickly than your peers
with bachelor's degrees or M.B.A.s. The good news is that if you
really don't want to be a lawyer, you'll be much happier in your
chosen profession.
--Sheila J. Curran
Curran is the Fannie Mitchell Executive Director of the Career
Center, which offers career services to alumni as well as students.
|