by Harmony Groves Kessler (GGU JD 12)
Harmony |
While I did a variety of hourly work for attorneys in the Bay Area and completed a Bridge Fellowship, the months dragged on with no reply to heaps of applications. The trouble was everyone wanted an attorney with some experience, but a new attorney cannot get experience unless there is a job available. I had to think outside the box and outside what I thought my path in law would be to move my job search forward.
I decided to open my own practice because I was receiving requests from friends and acquaintances for work on small legal projects, and because I wanted to gain more experience as an attorney to use as leverage for a legal position. I researched the requirements to open a practice through NOLO books and the CalBar.org website.* I negotiated with insurance brokers and received a good rate on professional liability insurance. I printed business cards and put up a basic, one-page website. I was open for business and available to navigate basic issues on diverse topics thanks to my free ONLAW CEB account and my ability to ask questions to the network of attorneys I had built up and other lawyer friends.
After about a month and a half of private practice handling business contracts, small estates and DUI defense, I was hired as an independent contractor for a full-time position as a juvenile dependency attorney (from a Craiglist ad, believe it or not!). The response to the Craigslist ad was very high, but because I had started my own practice, I came to the interview as an attorney in a small private practice with my own insurance (perfect for an independent contractor), instead of as a “newly admitted attorney” waiting for someone to take me on.
I am excited about the work I am now engaged in and able to easily take on work as an independent contractor. I can still take on small matters on the side for extra income in addition to my current position. My path to my current job is not the one I had envisioned, and I will admit that at times it is incredibly frustrating and scary, but it is right for me.
*I have since learned that LCS has resources to help GGU Law graduates start their own solo practice, including the solo law practice workshop video - a 5-hour YouTube video featuring nine GGU Law Alumni solo practitioners of varying years out and practice areas on how to set up and run a solo practice. The video is also helpful to independent contract attorneys.