
Salary Wars Scorecard: Which Firms Have Announced Raises?
Why hasn't your law firm raised salaries yet?
Why hasn't your law firm raised salaries yet?
Here are the top 25 Biglaw firms, ranked by visits to Above the Law since associate raises were first announced.
Proper trust accounting and three-way reconciliation are essential for protecting client funds and avoiding serious compliance risks. In this guide, we break down these critical processes and show how legal-specific software can help your firm stay accurate, efficient, and audit-ready.
Stop being so greedy, partners. It's time to spread the wealth!
It's raise time, b*tches.
If you aren't going to pay MoneyLaw salaries, maybe you should just admit you're a lifestyle firm.
What a nice way to start your three day weekend.
Explore 5 expert-backed reasons law firms are rethinking the billable hour and how legal billing software is leading the way.
It may not meet the Cravath scale, but it is still a nice payday.
Check out the update, is this firm giving its associates a raise?
Why haven't these firms raised salaries?
Not everyone is happy about these raises.
Tired of messy time logs? This free attorney time tracking template helps you bill with confidence and accuracy. Learn more in the full article.
This firm is paying market-rate salaries, as you'd expect from a firm with these credentials.
This table reflects all pay raises announced on or before June 23.
We are sure, now that this firm has met the Cravath scale, all is forgiven.
* The details behind the Trump campaign's non-disclosure agreements. [Associated Press] * Make sure you are getting paid for the legal work you are doing. [Reboot Your Law Practice] * A deep dive into the Supreme Court coalitions for dissents. [Empirical SCOTUS] * Your daily dose of lawyer jokes. [JSTOR] * Podcast with author James B. Stewart, New York Times best-selling author of Den of Thieves, about Wall Street arbitrageur Ivan Boesky and junk-bond king Michael Milken. [Hsu Untied] * Donald Trump has been hanging out with McCarthy-era lawyer Roy Cohn. What does that mean for the candidate? [Katz Justice] * $180,000 goes a lot further outside of New York. [Law and More]
Everywhere to $180K has a lot of repercussions.