Departures from WilmerHale: An Interesting Internal Memo
Last month, the firm of WilmerHale denied that any layoffs have taken place at the firm. The accuracy of that statement depends on what the meaning of “layoff” is.
In an internal memo obtained by Above the Law, the firm acknowledges that “a very small number of individuals” have been asked to leave WH for economic reasons. The memo also notes that the performance review process “is affected by the reality of current economic conditions, as performance issues sometimes come to light more when business is slower.”
(This may constitute some welcome candor. Other firms try to claim, somewhat implausibly, that performance reviews are utterly unaffected by the economy, i.e., that associates are judged by the exact same standards as in boom times.)
Still, the knowledge that the economy contributed to one’s purportedly performance-based dismissal is cold comfort. From an affected associate at WilmerHale:
I was one of the ones that was cut for “performance” reasons. My evaluations were [several] pages long, single spaced — of accolades… with one half of one sentence that mentioned something I could improve on… from one partner out of [many] that evaluated me. I was let go based on that one phase, copied and pasted on the front of the eval…. Unlike the claim [in the memo] that the firm cannot give associates “three or four” chances to make improvements, I had never received a similar comment in the past.Many partners were apparently left out of the process of deciding which associates to cut — and as a result have begun to “vent” to the associates that were cut about the process. We (as cut associates) actually had the incredibly uncomfortable task of informing partners that we worked with, who did not know we had been cut, that we were leaving. The resulting frustration of partners has led to a leak of a few tidbits of info on the numbers cut. The numbers floating around differ, but I’ve heard that between 10-15% of all associates firm wide were informed of their “transitions” over the past month. Apparently, another round may be coming in the fall.
Anxiety-inducing for current WilmerHale associates, but perhaps not a surprise. Expect a number of firms to trim their ranks after summer associates head back to school.
More discussion, plus the full memo, after the jump.
A second WH source picked up on a different aspect of the same memo:
[W]e regularly have upward evaluations every spring, when associates review their supervising counsel and partners. This year, only in response to direct questioning from associates, management finally revealed that upward evaluations have been cancelled, and will not be held until spring, 2010. The official party line is that the cancellation is due to budgetary concerns (which doesn’t even make sense!), but there is a widespread belief that the real reason is to prevent all those “transitioned” or with harsh reviews from being able to set the record straight.
Finally, a different internal memo contains this discussion about possible future changes to the firm’s compensation scheme:
6. Have there been any developments regarding WilmerHale’s recent restructuring plan, specifically with respect to merit-based pay?WilmerHale’s decision to restructure its non-partner attorney positions contemplated a merit-based pay system at some point in the future. Currently, the firm is making progress on the issue, but no final decisions have been reached. One challenge in evaluating a merit-based pay structure is how to measure performance.
Very true. If firms do shift to more merit-based structures, many of them will have to beef up their performance evaluation systems.
Below is the memo summarizing last month’s Associates Communication Task Force meeting.
WILMERHALE — MEMORANDUM - ACTF FULL MEETING MINUTES
Date: July 2, 2009
To: WilmerHale Boston Associates
From: ACTF
Re: June 18, 2009 ACTF Full Meeting Minutes
This month’s full Associates Communication Task Force meeting took place at 12:00 p.m. on June 18, 2009. The following associates were present: [redacted]
Lisa Pirozzolo, Lia Der Marderosian, Evie Scoville, and Barbara Belmarsh were also present.
Questions posed by ACTF members before the meeting are noted in bold italics.
II. Spring Transitions
Associates would like information on the firm’s current process of transitioning people out of the firm in connection with the review process. Based on recent posts on Above the Law (“ATL”), many associates are concerned and anxious about this process and would like to understand how the firm is proceeding. Understanding the need to respect the privacy of those who are transitioning out, we have a few specific questions that we hope the committee can answer:
· Have all transitionees been notified?
· How many people from the Boston office were transitioned last year, and how many people from the Boston office are being transitioned this year?
· How many people are being transitioned across specific departments?
· How many people were transitioned firm-wide last year, and how many people are being transitioned firm-wide this year?
· What factors does the firm consider when making a performance-based transition?
· Does the firm have a general transition plan that includes the date of final termination and compensation?
· Is the firm helping transitioned attorneys find new jobs?
Finally, some associates were surprised to learn about the transitions on abovethelaw.com (“ATL”). While we understand the need for the firm to respond quickly to press inquiries, associates would appreciate receiving information that is shared with the public concurrently so they are made aware of firm news from internal sources. We think this would lessen the anxiety created by learning of firm events on ATL.
Lisa began by addressing associate questions regarding the transitions that have occurred at the Firm this Spring. She explained that transitions are personnel decisions that have been made on an individual basis, and as such, she could not address some of our specific questions. The Firm has already informed the vast majority of those affected by the transitions. The recent transitions have fallen into three primary categories: a) those based on the creation of the “Special Counsel” role during the Firm’s restructuring; b) those based the semi-annual performance evaluation process; and (c) those that were motivated by economic considerations.
A. Special Counsel Transitions
The Firm’s partnership approved a restructuring plan last summer that created the position of “Special Counsel.” This role is reserved for senior lawyers who have specialized skills (e.g., expertise in a particular regulatory scheme). The individuals considered for this position were previously termed “Non-Lockstep Counsel.” The restructuring plan created a formal election process for Special Counsel, which will occur for the first time during the upcoming Fall. Lisa said the Firm has been meeting with individuals who are potentially eligible for this position to give them advance notice as to whether they are likely to be elected. The Firm is using its resources to assist those individuals who are likely not going to be elected to Special Counsel to transition to new opportunities.
B. Performance-Based Transitions
Lisa said that a normal outcome of the Firm’s semi-annual evaluation process is that some associates transition out of the Firm. She acknowledged that this process is affected by the reality of current economic conditions, as performance issues sometimes come to light more when business is slower. In addition, due to the economic climate, the Firm is not in a position to give individuals third and fourth opportunities to turn things around. She added that the Firm is trying to provide affected individuals adequate notice and assist them with finding other opportunities.
Lisa said the Firm has used the same criteria it uses during evaluations to selected affected individuals, including: legal knowledge, level-appropriate substantive expertise, energy, entrepreneurial spirit, loyalty to staff and colleagues, ethical standards, contributions to the life of the firm, and willingness to take on additional work.
C. Economically-Motivated Transitions
Lisa said that a very small number of individuals have been asked to transition out of the Firm due to practice-driven economic reasons and that individuals who fall in this category have been told specifically that the reasons behind their termination are economic and not performance-based.
D. Firm Assistance for Affected Individuals
Lisa and Evie explained that the Firm has made efforts to assist affected individuals identify other opportunities. For example, the Firm provides internal and external resources (including career counseling, help with resume preparation, recommendations, etc.). The Firm has also leveraged its network, and has helped some individuals find positions with Firm clients.
III. Brad Scott
Many associates have questions regarding the role of the firm’s new Chief Legal Talent Officer, Brad Scott. What drove the need to create this position? Whom does Mr. Scott report to; and who reports to him?
Evie said the Firm created the position of Chief Talent Officer because it believes it is important to invest in the lifecycle of its lawyers. Before this position was created, several related initiatives were splintered between different areas of the Firm, such as diversity initiatives, Professional Development, Recruiting, Legal Personnel, and compensation. The Firm felt it was important to hire someone who has a different background to bring these areas together in one organization. Mr. Scott spent 25 years in the Army and wrote about talent development at West Point. He then went to IBM, and spent time at Weil Gotschal and Heller Ehrman as the Executive Director. Mr. Scott reports to Scott Green.
IV. Summer Associates
We realize that many summer associates are anxious about receiving permanent offers at the end of the summer. Has the firm communicated to the summer class how many offers it plans to extend at the end of the summer? If not, does the firm plan to speak to the summers directly about this issue?
Evie said the Firm recognizes that summer associates are anxious about receiving permanent offers at the end of the summer, and it has tried to ease this anxiety to the extent possible. The Firm plans to make its offer decisions based on the same criteria used in past summers. Several of the goals of this year’s program are to more significantly involve partners in the summer program and ensure that summer associates have interesting work.
V. Upward Evaluations
We noticed that the firm did not conduct Upward Evaluations this Spring. Is there a reason that Upward Evaluations were not solicited?
The Firm has decided not to conduct upward evaluations this year, partially due to budget reductions, and partially because it has learned that, after several years, conducting upward evaluations on an annual basis does not elicit more meaningful feedback than doing so every other year.
Earlier: Nationwide Layoff Watch: Getting the Message Across to WilmerHale Associates




Comments
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radek
2nd
PE, do you enjoy listening to The Howard Stern show?
I just got back in town, is Mystal outie 5000? BTW, the associate's one negative line was, "is a really crappy lawyer and unpleasant to be around."
Lat likes fish sticks.
5 - What's wrong with fish sticks?
Points:
1) Shame what has happened to the former Wilmer Cutler Pickering, that was truly a great firm before the merger.
2) For you law students/young associates, take note, when in hard times this is how firms stay alive, they don't have work (thus no revenue) so they reduce their labor expenses. "Performance" has little to do with it. You can't perform when there is no work, and this is the thinnest legal market in most of our lifetimes. In good times you'll be treated well, in situations as current you're nothing more than a cost to the management. Oh, and by the way the WH informant is correct, even if you do awesome work in a group for a specific partner, chances are that partner won't even notified that you've been transitioned if he/she isn't politically connected within. These events are hard on those partners as well.
3) I wish I could be more optomistic, but again I agree with the WH informant that more "transitions" are on the horizon. Its a horrible economy, and as a result of the media's infatuation with the current administration, the true state of businesses and the firms that services thoses businesses isn't being accurately reported. This is going to be rough.
Comment removed by moderator.
I am a Seton Hall summer at Orrick. No partner has hit on me yet. Should I be scared?
anyone know which practice groups are getting hit?
The ship be sinking...
7 - Don’t you mean what happened to the former Hale & Dorr? I didn’t even know Wilmer Cutler existed until it merged with Hale & Dorr back in 2004.
S&S Management looking into big cuts.
Oh my lord. That memo reaches new heights of bad-management-bullshit.
"Transition"? Who the hell came up with THAT? What, transition onto the unemployment line? For chrissakes, treat your (former) employees with enough respect to call it what it is: they are LEAVING THE FIRM, not "transitioning out." Please god let this horrible horrible word be left on the trash pile when whomever in the HR deparment came up with it is appropriately fired, er, transitioned out, in this economic downturn.
"Chief Legal Talent Officer" - what in the F&CK is that?? Legal Talent? Are you kidding me? Some total lackey fills the position of "outside consultant" the firm used to hire (when it had enough spare cash) to "downsize" the relevant departments. Give me a break. What absolute wuss is actually going to be willing to add that bullshit title to his resume? Excuse me? Is that like "Chief Sexual Talent Officer" in a bordello? (He wishes.) How does he develop that skill, anyway?
"several related initiatives were splintered between different areas of the Firm" -- please god FIRE the person who came up with "splintered." (The same person who came up with "transitioned out", no doubt.) What, everyone needs a pair of tweezers now, because we've all been splintered between (or should that be "among") the Firm's body parts?
Upward Evaluations - by no means the only firm that has stopped doing upward evaluations because of a lack of meaningful (*cough cough positive cough cough*) feedback. Elie, please do a survey. MANY firms have stopped the 360 of the theoretical 360-degree reviews.
/end rant.
Is it me, or is Lat's tone more pro-associate than Mystal?
How many WH staff attorneys have been laid off? I find that they serve quite well as the "canary in the coalmine."
The person posing as Michael Ray Richardson is the biggest tool in America.
Anyone dismissive of self-entitled, overpaid associates is a friend to me.
Death to BigLaw! Rise of the proletariat, doc reviewers unite!
19 = PE
And after having spoken to attorneys at WH, the firm apparently has now blocked its employees from posting comments on ATL.
I lost my iPhone in downtown Bayonne, NJ on Saturday night. It is a 16GB with a purple silicone case. I have some highly proprietary information on the device, hence this notice. Please post here if you found it, and I will let you know how to get in touch with me. There is a MAJOR REWARD involved. Thanks!!!
"[T]his process is affected by the reality of current economic conditions, as performance issues sometimes come to light more when business is slower."
Right, because when I have only one decent assignment in six months it's so much easier to judge my performance.
I live and work in Houston.
Locke Lord associate
23,
It's not that you are easier to assess when you have fewer assignments---it's that your flaws are no big deal in good times, but if you need to cut someone during bad times, you look for those who didn't perform as well as their peers.
If the firm, for whatever reason, thinks that you eventually won't make partner, why keep you around until your 4th and 5th year until they suggest you leave?
Was the "phase" poor attention to detail?
22=LaTTT
22=LaTTT
This exact same thing happened to me at Dewey & LeBoeuf as well as many other of my associate colleagues at Dewey & LeBoeuf. It is still happening there so do not believe that layoffs from that firm are just due to performance issues. They are not. Of course, some people are just terrible and are told to leave but that is not mostly the case. It is really terrible when you have received excellent reviews all along from a broad range of partners and then all of a sudden you are let go based upon the decisions of maybe one or two controlling partners, some of which you have never worked with. Utter bullshit and deceitful lies. When asked to provide evidence of the negative comments in a review, the partner doing the layoff said that they could not provide the information of who said the one negative, generalized comment that was leading to the layoff. No evidentiary support is provided for the review. What kind of operation is that! Then, it becomes completely evident that the decision was made by only a few people when the majority of the partners you worked with are informed after the fact and you have to go into their offices to tell them you were let go.
Nasdravi.
Get off it, 25. At this point, firms are not cutting people because times are a little harder and "why keep someone around as a fifth year who isn't going to make partner"?
Rather, firms are cutting people just to survive. It doesn't matter if the associates that were cut had flaws or not, the firms just can't afford to keep paying them. Firms like WH might survive this bust, but they will be half as large as they were in the boom times. Many others will simply fail.
Biglaw is out of money, people.
Every single person in a big firm that gets sacked is getting fired because of poor attention to detail. But the funny thing to see, when you get more senior, is the manner in which certain classes of attorneys attention to detail is characterized as poor while others are simply young attorneys learning the ropes. I'm talking nearly identical mistakes, here people.
Chief Talent Officer = hatchet man the partners can hide behind, that is all. We've had them, but only when times were bad and folks needed firing.
I've always wondered how much this type of non-job pays. Be a shame to lose a revenue source (attorney who bills) for a cost that can never make money.
31,
Yes, but they are also cutting those who aren't going to make it at the firm. They aren't going to lay off their big superstars. Those will be the last associates they choose to lay off. But yeah---they are out of cash.
33, I'm positive that the CTO is making well into the six figures.
I agree with 15. It is definitely one of those movies where the performances are more memorable than the film itself. It is, however, worth pointing out that the wrestling scenes were incredibly authentic. I attended a small-time wrestling event in Bayonne, NJ last weekend and can say with authority that the film captured that world. It will be interesting to see if Mickey Rourke will make a real comeback now.
YOU ARE ALL PERFORMANCE-RELATED IDIOTS.
WHITE & CASE SECURE
31, are you implying that there is no more Kash?
"Transitionees." Excellent. Orwell called it.
32,
"I'm talking nearly identical mistakes, here people."
roflcopter, i get it.
"It is really terrible when you have received excellent reviews all along from a broad range of partners and then all of a sudden you are let go based upon the decisions of maybe one or two controlling partners, some of which you have never worked with."
Every law student and associate should read this again...this is how it works folks.
How does that hundreds of thousands of $$$ in debt sound now?
The use of the term "transition" in this context just makes me ill. It's so pathetically mealy mouthed and weasely. And seriously -- does it fool anyone?
Honestly, I don't think less of WH for having to let people go. These are tough economic times. But I hold them in utter contempt for lacking the courage to describe what they're doing in plain English.
Firms decide who to layoff based on who is a better ass kisser. I heard that at Hunton & Williams some of the associates that were laid off had more billable hours and better reviews than other associates who sat on their butt doing nothing but knowing well that years of ass kissing partners that they do not respect or like would protect them from unemployment. What a sad way to make a living.
43, you are so on the money. Those who sucked up to the controlling partners at Dewey & LeBoeuf but who were fucking idiots in many respects and would be embarrasing if put in front of high end investment banking or private equity clients (not stellar credentials, inarticulate, not the most polished in appearance, not even the hardest working or most ambitious), were always spared. Yet, it was always those who acted deferential to the controlling partners but did not stroke their undeserved egos in a slavish way, who were let go. It is as if those partners needed there minions of little kiss ass associates just to feel better about themselves. So pathetic!!
this is straight out of the Latham playbook
will they also be hiring DBM to fuck up these peoples' "transitions?"
History lesson! Hale and Dorr was based in Boston and primarily dealt with capital management, investments, etc. Wilmer Cutler was based in DC had dealt with high profile wonky matters. The idea of the merger was to marry H&D money with the WCP name. Now, I would guess that H&D would have gone out of business due to concentrating on financial service law. WCP had the bright idea of moving from a bum location (2445 M) to a 3 conjoined buildings right near the metro. I can't imagine thats a good move, even if they're making more from regulation work.
25, the point is well-taken as such, but the memo says "come to light." It didnt say "issues that were there before are now less tolerable due to declining revenues." It's double-speak intended to address the paradox reviews finding more evidence of performance flaws when there is much less work on which to evaluate the associate. The paradox is still there.
Partners are being asked to leave as well. Sandra Poe was pushed out and went to Reed Smtih.
Why won't the "affected Wilmer associate" disclose the "one half of one sentence that mentioned something [he/she] could improve on"?
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/us_obama
Hope. Change.
This whole thing sounds like a lot of over-hype and speculation to me.
I'm sure the CLT Officer is making $250k+. Maybe significantly more.
and as the ship get lighter here are my wise words!
The Ship be Rising!!!
Quite a place.
What happened to Gerry Cater?
Hmmm... where are all those cranky, whiny PHJW people?
This is what's happening at Hogan and HarTTTson, too. NY already fired a bunch of their associates. I guess it's DC's turn.
The persons most deserving at the firm of a performance based dismissal : the entire HR department. They have handled this whole situation with zero tact. I won't name names - but man am I tempted to.
The tipster is right. The same thing happened to me. Pages of good remarks from multiple partners - and one sentence from one partner with a suggested "improvement." It was some vague comment about how I could strengthen my writing skills. Funny thing is, in my prior evaluations, I was praised for my writing - and was even praised for my writing in this evaluation by two other partners. Apparently, they weren't involved in the decision. That comment was simply pasted onto the front of the evaluation with "go find another job" language - with all other comments ignored.
I'm fine with the firm getting rid of people too. It is necessary in a bad economy. There is no work right now to be had at the firm. However - the firm should have had the decency to call a spade a spade.
Posted by guest | Permalink
Tuesday, July 14, 2009 11:03 AM
7 - Don’t you mean what happened to the former Hale & Dorr? I didn’t even know Wilmer Cutler existed until it merged with Hale & Dorr back in 2004.
12 - I'm not 7, but um, try again. Wilmer was a much higher Vault-ranked firm that Hale & Dorr when they merged back in '04, so unless you were from Boston or were an avid fan of A Civil Action, if you had a clue about either of these firms, it would likely have been Wilmer.
@50 - probably because WilmerHale has blocked its employees from commeting on ATL. Notice how few comments there are on this thread from WilmerHale people?
59 - me too. The key is in the "below the line" comments where the partners put what they REALLY think, including whether they'll ever work with you again. The firm is supposed to give you the comments (by law) if you ask, but I asked the last two evaluation cycles and they refused to give them to me.
61 - Did WH really block its employees from commenting on ATL? Seems like an underhanded way to silence the masses. Do other firms block commenting ability?
hm
no- no blockage
WH has changed in the last 6 months, and not for the better. Hard to put my finger on it, but the atmosphere is different. Lots of marketing stuff and new initiatives that feel forced.
56 - no one is talking about Gerry Cater (partner who "passed away")
the WH PR department is damn good
fear has been palable for months...this memo only confirms what everyone has been talking about for a few months, now
Hale & Dorr was such a great firm - Wilmer probably was too - but the combination is just too big.
I heard they aren't doing upward evaluations because so many partners and counsel are being pushed out the door in the next 6 months that they don't want to waste money giving those people upward evaluations.
60 is right. WH blocked employees from posting comments on here. Seems like the firm was a little miffed with the comments in June.
hey has anyone heared about the scandal over at ph
i hear one of the top dogs is stepping down because he is a female attorney groper
gees dude get a pet
59,
Did it occur to you that the negative comments were the part where the firm was "calling a spade a spade," while the positive comments were insincere?
You assume for no good reason that the good comments were truthful and the bad comments were dishonest. Could be the other way around.
David,
You have to either run more stories with your name on the byline or else cut these annoying underlings you've enlisted to post in your absence (and I do not mean Kashmir).
How do I get a job as a Chief Talent Officer? That seems to be the most secure position at the moment.
Hopefully Wilmer will hurry up and tell everyone who is getting laid off that they are getting laid off - and be upfront and honest about it. The firm can then move on from all this as a lean legal powerhouse without anyone that is left feeling like the axe is dangling above their heads. Pull the band-aid off quickly people!
WH can block ATL at work, but most attorneys have separate internet connections at home - come on associates (or partners), tell us more about what is going on!
WH prides itself on "opaqueness". Honestly, if you keep your head down and work hard, it can be a decent place to work. Seriously, every firm is the same. Don't let the secrecy of WH fool you. Everyone wishes they'd just swing the axe far and wide and out in the open.
72 - We are hearing that "Barry B" is stepping down as NY chair. It seems that the little fuckin' bean counter thought he was entitled to stick his tiny little johnson into anyone, or anything for that matter.
77
Nobody will miss him. Barry is evil incarnate.
WH used to pride itself on being honest with associates, but these days everything has a justification that is obviously fabricated. Like saying upward evaluations are more effective every 2 years. If that's true, why do they do associate evals every 6 months? Or saying associates can have the not for attribution comments in their reviews if they ask, when in fact, if they ask, they are told they cannot have them. Or saying assigning 15 associates (against their will) to a pool of 3 secretaries will somehow improve efficiency. Or saying that associates get "credit" toward billable hours for non-billable contributions. It's all a load of B.S. Oh, did I mention that PPP were up last year?
WH used to pride itself on being honest with associates, but these days everything has a justification that is obviously fabricated. Like saying upward evaluations are more effective every 2 years. If that's true, why do they do associate evals every 6 months? Or saying associates can have the not for attribution comments in their reviews if they ask, when in fact, if they ask, they are told they cannot have them. Or saying assigning 15 associates (against their will) to a pool of 3 secretaries will somehow improve efficiency. Or saying that associates get "credit" toward billable hours for non-billable contributions. It's all a load of B.S. Oh, did I mention that PPP were up last year?
Does anyone else find it ironic that the one thing the IS department managed to do right was block commenting on ATL? Bet Bill Perlstein put them up to it. He's lost his sunny disposition as of late.
"with one half of one sentence that mentioned something I could improve on... from one partner out of [many] that evaluated me. I was let go based on that one phase..."
The single phrase?
Come on, don't leave us hanging.
Steals food in bulk from the break room?
Rude to GC of client Y?
Consistantly leaves before 5:00 pm?
What cluld have been so bad to hang a firing on?
This is exactly what happened to me at WilmerHale.
Two partners I had never worked with "commented" on my review, while two counsel (one I had worked closely with and one I had worked barely with, but who is close with one of the two partners that commented) gave my "review."
Most of the people I had done my work for were excluded.
The two partners ripped me to shreds, as did the barely worked with counsel.
Only the counsel I had actually worked with gave me good reviews on my review.
The main counsel I had worked with who gave me fantastic reviews all along was wholly excluded.
When I got my "get lost" notice, I was told, "You still have to come in for the next few months," and, btw, "In past years, people have been given a few months to look, and, if they don't find anything, we give them more time, but we aren't doing that this time."
And then I was told how WilmerHale is SUCH a humane firm, even though it is common knowledge inside the firm that one of the partners committed suicide after getting fired.
Great job, guys.
This is exactly what happened to me at WilmerHale.
Two partners I had never worked with "commented" on my review, while two counsel (one I had worked closely with and one I had worked barely with, but who is close with one of the two partners that commented) gave my "review."
Most of the people I had done my work for were excluded.
The two partners ripped me to shreds, as did the barely worked with counsel.
Only the counsel I had actually worked with gave me good reviews on my review.
The main counsel I had worked with who gave me fantastic reviews all along was wholly excluded.
When I got my "get lost" notice, I was told, "You still have to come in for the next few months," and, btw, "In past years, people have been given a few months to look, and, if they don't find anything, we give them more time, but we aren't doing that this time."
And then I was told how WilmerHale is SUCH a humane firm, even though it is common knowledge inside the firm that one of the partners committed suicide after getting fired.
Great job, guys.
83/84 -- "... even though it is common knowledge inside the firm that one of the partners committed suicide after getting fired."
So that is what happened to the DC partner back in January?
Perlstein RUINED Wilmer, Cutler out of greed, simple as that. Most legacy Wilmer mid- to senior-level partners have abandoned that once stellar firm in droves, either willingly or not. Point is, the people who made Wilmer Cutler a respected firm are no longer there.
I give that hell hole and the HENCHMEN hired to do their dirty work of firing people and wrecking careers in order to save a few $$$ for a few GREEDY partners 5 years before it all goes down in flames.
I know their management is reading this blog, so here's a message: CHOKE ON YOUR G***MN PROFITS PER PARTNER.
" WH prides itself on "opaqueness" "
Truer words were never written about WilmerHale! The word "Transitionees" just about tells you everything you need to know about WH. I would be more angry if the violent spin at WH wasn't making me so dizzy that I want to throw up. Associates and certainly the staff can expect no truth to be told, and certainly no fairness. No question that WH would rather let the leg slowly rot than admit the gangrene and make a clean cut. I can't even imagine how incredibly frustrating it must be for the empty souls that run the firm to read ATL!
Wilmer has always been, and will always be, a firm that portrays itself as open, welcoming and transparent and, in reality, is not.
How about the staff (non-lawyers)? Since the merger, legacy Wilmer employees have been systematically terminated due to "performance issues". These people have been with the company 10 years and above. When the merger happened, suddenly, these people are not up to par? What have they been doing all these years then? Talk about rewarding us for our loyalty and hard work. Blahh.
FIRST!
89. Face reality, there are a lot of staff at Wilmer who have been holding a position for many years, but not doing the job. Just because you have been in a firm for many years does not mean your job is secure...you need to grow and develop it is called job security.
It has become standard for employers to insist that evaluators always include some ground for criticism or possible improvement.
This is ostensibly done for the purpose of constructive feedback, on the theory that no one is perfect and that everyone has some room for improvement and can benefit from constructive criticism.
As a practical matter, however, when management makes an internal decision to get rid of X number or Y percentage of people, the constructive criticism comments (even if the reviewer included them only because he or she was told that such comments must be included, even as part of a review that was meant to be, on balance, strongly favorable) can easily be removed of context by managers who neither know nor care about the context and used to justify a decision that the person is being let go for performance-related reasons. That's the game. (And yes, I know that legally, at-will employees don't have a right not to be let go unless there's a good reason.)
Fish & Richardson is at it again. Yesterday they laid off more people.
Fish & Richardson is at it again. Yesterday they laid off more people.
The Chief Talent Officer (Scott) used to be the boss of the Executive Director (Green) who said the old boy network was dead?