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Associate Life Survey: All Summer In A Day Eight Weeks?

summer associate program ATL Above the Law blog.jpgNow that the summer associate season is upon is, ATL has been devoting a bit more coverage to summer programs, and the ATL / Lateral Link surveys will do the same.

But does David Lat secretly hate summer? Here’s a snippet from one of his recent columns over at the New York Observer:

When you stop and think about it, the summer associate programs at New York’s largest corporate law firms are a shockingly inefficient way to recruit talent.

The top firms pay their summers over $3,000 a week—a week!—to enjoy three-hour lunches and surf the Web, and do a little bit of work on the side, but just a little, on the firm’s most interesting and sexy matters. Don’t forget the cooking lessons, wine tastings, pool parties, a clambake or a cruise—all of it carefully designed to create in these future lawyers a Pavlovian association between Big Law and Big Pleasure.

Cutting back on these perks would seem to be an easy way for firms to save money without causing too much uproar. In fact, firms might earn brownie points with their clients for showing such restraint.

Oh noes! Did the Chuck Norris of Legal Gossip just deliver a roundhouse kick to recruiting tradition?

And he’s not alone. Firms like Sonnenschein, Pillsbury, and Thelen Reid have decided to cap their summer programs at ten weeks or, in Thelen Reid’s case, eight. And the NLJ has pointed out that some of the biggest firms in Big Law are hiring smaller summer classes. Worse yet, as Lat observes in the Observer:

A few midsize and regional firms, such as Gibbons Del Deo in Newark, have abandoned summer programs altogether in favor of focusing on poaching experienced attorneys from other firms.

Scrooge season has come early to Big Law and Regional Law alike.

But are they right? Should firms focus less on summer programs, and use the funds to hire laterals instead? Or perhaps provide signing bonuses or higher pay?

Today’s ATL / Lateral Link survey focuses on whether summer programs should be trimmed. Add your two cents — and decide if that should be next year’s summer budget — after the jump.

Update: This survey is now closed. Click here and here for the results.

Earlier: The Incredible Shrinking Summer Program


Justin Bernold is a Director at Lateral Link, the sponsor of this survey.

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