International Lawyer Coach Blog blog archives for Monday, April 20th, 2009.

Lawyers Considering Complete Career Change: Stop “Thinking Like a Lawyer”

Filed under: Career Change — Janet Moore, April 20, 2009

 

In today’s turbulent market, law firms are laying off lawyers at an unprecedented rate. As a lawyer coach, I see a large increase in stress, not only among laid-off lawyers, but also in lawyers with secure jobs who see an uncertain future.

 

Some lawyers are considering leaving the law altogether but find such a process daunting. They tend to apply traditional analytical thinking to their career path–and get stuck.

 

 

However, as Michael Melcher explains in his recent ABA Journal article

 

 

Why Thinking Like a Lawyer is Bad for Your Career, applying “thinking-like-a-lawyer” to your own career doesn’t work very well because “the processes of attaining career fulfillment and growing as a professional are not all that susceptible to logic.”

 

Start by examining why you want to change careers, where you want your career path to take you and, perhaps most important, whether your goals are realistic. Analyzing your strengths and weaknesses is a prerequisite to a successful career move. According to Nicholas Rumin, founder and principal of New York-based Rumin Search Consulting, lawyers with a clear vision of their goals “move forward more quickly.”

 

 

How do you do this? Books like Deborah Arron’s What Can You Do with a Law Degree?  And Michael Melcher’s  The Creative Lawyer:  A Professional Guide to Authentic Personal Satisfaction  pose thought provoking questions. Their exercises and worksheets walk lawyers through the career self-examination process.  Lawyers feeling concerned about making a drastic career switch may also enjoy former attorney Marci Alboher’s book called One Person/Multiple Careers:  A New Model; for Work/Life Success.

 

 

 
© Copyright 2006-2007 International Lawyer Coach, Inc. All Rights Reserved