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Transactional Work or Litigation? A Few Thoughts

door number one lets make a deal.jpgOver at the Legal Profession Blog, Professor Jeff Lipshaw has some helpful advice about choosing between transactional and litigation work. Lipshaw, who has worked in both worlds — before academia, he practiced at a large firm (Dykema Gossett) and served as general counsel for two corporations — has lots of excellent insights to offer.

Our favorite part was his discussion of how personality might affect practice choice:

Are you a win-lose kind of person or a win-win kind of person? Great trial lawyers are sublimated warriors. Winning a trial or decimating a witness in cross-examination is the thrill of conquest and vanquishing. If you are not that kind of person, it can wear on you. Personally, I realized ten years into a litigation career, (a) I wanted to be liked (if not loved) too much to be a conqueror, (b) dealing with the opponents’ conception of the truth (opening up the other side’s brief and reading it, for example) was frustrating and hard on my blood pressure, and (c) as I discuss below, once you get beyond the adrenaline rush that causes your eyeballs to pop out of your head (some people like that), the way trials work in cases that big firms do can be kind of … boring.

On the flip side, negotiating transactions is also “adversarial” in a way, and a lot of it is about winning points. Just like a litigator can’t win without good facts and good witnesses, a transactional lawyer can’t make points without exogenous business leverage. For example, even in a “friendly” business combination involving public companies, there are a series of points negotiated between the acquirer and the target that have to do with how tied up the deal is….

The bane of a transactional lawyer’s existence… is an adversary who seems more intent on winning “lawyer points” than getting the deal done. One aspect of creativity in deal lawyering, it seems to me, is knowing when to hold ‘em and when to fold ‘em - how to concede the points you don’t need, or trade them for the ones you do.

You can — and should, if you’re confronting the transactional-versus-litigation choice yourself — read the full post over here. Good stuff.

One additional point, after the jump.

To those of you who are or will be summer associates, we’d suggest that you use the summer as a chance to explore both litigation and transactional practice (to the extent that you can; this varies from firm to firm). Sure, the SA experience is often far removed from Biglaw reality, but even the small assignments you get as a summer can give you some clue as to whether you might enjoy that type of work when you arrive at the firm full-time (assuming you get an offer in these perilous times). Big-ticket transactional work sounded sexy to us; but after a summer corporate rotation in which we spent weeks struggling to stay awake while poring through change-of-control provisions and SEC no-action letters, we decided it wasn’t our cup of tea.

If you have questions about the choice between transactional and litigation work, or advice of your own to offer on the subject, please avail yourself of the comments. Thanks.

Litigation or Transactional Law Career: Some Advice to Law Students [Legal Profession Blog]

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