M&A Lawyer

Job number: 0006
Company introduction: Our client is an independent international German law firm. They provide comprehensive commercial law advice to medium-sized companies, major corporations and industry groups as well as the public sector. With appr. 320 lawyers and tax advisers in 13 locations in 6 countries they are able to provide comprehensive legal and tax advice in national and international matters throughout the world.

They provide comprehensive advice through their German network of offices as well as internationally, in Eastern Europe, China and in Europe’s administrative capital, Brussels. In other important markets they cooperate closely with internationally active law firms, from whom they expect the same standards of quality as they set themselves.

Job Title: Lawyer (M&A)
Job Description:

Report To: Head of SH office (German people)
Location: Shanghai

– Handling FDI legal and business advice matters.
– Communicating with clients to obtain requirements and maintain updates.
– Anticipate and communicate on legal and administrative requirements & opportunities.
– Provide advise with clients for legally sites’ management and review contracts.
– Able to maintain and develop a solid client base.
– Work accordingly with central government and local administrations.

Job Requirements: – LLB or LLM of Law with PRC BAR is preferred.
– At least two years working experience in the legal field either from multinational company or law firm.
– Familiar with general related legal concepts and relevant legal experience including ability to conduct legal research and work with external parties in case management.

– Familiar with the operation of a foreign legal or advisory firm.
– Excellent organization and communication skills; .
– Excellent oral/written English skills.
– Can work independently, result oriented, self motivated and self reliable with high ethical standards.
– Good organizational skills and are methodological in approach;
– Good team player with good interpersonal skills;
– Be flexible and willing to travel.

Email to:legal-candidate@dacare.com

Ip Lawyer

Company introduction:Our client is an independent international German law firm. They provide comprehensive commercial law advice to medium-sized companies, major corporations and industry groups as well as the public sector. With appr. 320 lawyers and tax advisers in 13 locations in 6 countries they are able to provide comprehensive legal and tax advice in national and international matters throughout the world.

They provide comprehensive advice through their German network of offices as well as internationally, in Eastern Europe, China and in Europe’s administrative capital, Brussels. In other important markets they cooperate closely with internationally active law firms, from whom they expect the same standards of quality as they set themselves.

Job Title: Lawyer (IP)
Job Description:

Report To: Head of SH office (German people)
Location: Shanghai

– Handling FDI legal and business advice matters.
– Communicating with clients to obtain requirements and maintain updates.
– Anticipate and communicate on legal and administrative requirements & opportunities.
– Provide advise with clients for legally sites’ management and review contracts.
– Able to maintain and develop a solid client base.
– Work accordingly with central government and local administrations.

Job Requirements: – LLB or LLM of Law with PRC BAR is preferred.
– At least two years working experience in the legal field either from multinational company or law firm.
– Familiar with general related legal concepts and relevant legal experience including ability to conduct legal research and work with external parties in case management.

– Familiar with the operation of a foreign legal or advisory firm.
– Excellent organization and communication skills; .
– Excellent oral/written English skills.
– Can work independently, result oriented, self motivated and self reliable with high ethical standards.
– Good organizational skills and are methodological in approach;
– Good team player with good interpersonal skills;
– Be flexible and willing to travel.

Email to:legal-candidate@dacare.com

Fdi Lawyer

Fdi Lawyer

Job number: 0004
Company introduction:Our client is an independent international German law firm. They provide comprehensive commercial law advice to medium-sized companies, major corporations and industry groups as well as the public sector. With appr. 320 lawyers and tax advisers in 13 locations in 6 countries they are able to provide comprehensive legal and tax advice in national and international matters throughout the world.

They provide comprehensive advice through their German network of offices as well as internationally, in Eastern Europe, China and in Europe’s administrative capital, Brussels. In other important markets they cooperate closely with internationally active law firms, from whom they expect the same standards of quality as they set themselves.

Job Title: Lawyer (FDI)
Job Description:

Report To: Head of SH office (German people)
Location: Shanghai

– Handling FDI legal and business advice matters.
– Communicating with clients to obtain requirements and maintain updates.
– Anticipate and communicate on legal and administrative requirements & opportunities.
– Provide advise with clients for legally sites’ management and review contracts.
– Able to maintain and develop a solid client base.
– Work accordingly with central government and local administrations.

Job Requirements: – LLB or LLM of Law with PRC BAR is preferred.
– At least two years working experience in the legal field either from multinational company or law firm.
– Familiar with general related legal concepts and relevant legal experience including ability to conduct legal research and work with external parties in case management.

– Familiar with the operation of a foreign legal or advisory firm.
– Excellent organization and communication skills; .
– Excellent oral/written English skills.
– Can work independently, result oriented, self motivated and self reliable with high ethical standards.
– Good organizational skills and are methodological in approach;
– Good team player with good interpersonal skills;
– Be flexible and willing to travel.

E-mail to:legal-candidate@dacare.com

Environmental Lawyer

Job number: 0003
Company introduction:Our client is an independent international German law firm. They provide comprehensive commercial law advice to medium-sized companies, major corporations and industry groups as well as the public sector. With appr. 320 lawyers and tax advisers in 13 locations in 6 countries they are able to provide comprehensive legal and tax advice in national and international matters throughout the world.

They provide comprehensive advice through their German network of offices as well as internationally, in Eastern Europe, China and in Europe’s administrative capital, Brussels. In other important markets they cooperate closely with internationally active law firms, from whom they expect the same standards of quality as they set themselves.

Job Title: Lawyer (Environmental Specialist)
Job Description:

Report To: Lawyer (Environmental Specialist)
Location: Shanghai

– Handling environmental related legal and business advice matters.
– Communicating with clients to obtain requirements and maintain updates.
– Anticipate and communicate on legal and administrative requirements & opportunities.
– Provide advise with clients for legally sites’ management and review contracts.
– Able to maintain and develop a solid client base.
– Work accordingly with central government and local administrations.

Job Requirements: – LLB or LLM with PRC BAR is preferred, Engineering degree or engineering background is a must.
– At least two years working experience in the legal field either from multinational company or law firm.
– Familiar with general related legal concepts and relevant legal experience including ability to conduct legal research and work with external parties in case management.

– Familiar with the operation of a foreign legal or advisory firm.
– Excellent organization and communication skills; .
– Excellent oral/written English skills.
– Can work independently, result oriented, self motivated and self reliable with high ethical standards.
– Good organizational skills and are methodological in approach;
– Good team player with good interpersonal skills;
– Be flexible and willing to travel.

E-mail to: legal-candidate@dacare.com

China Tax Lawyer

China Tax Lawyer

Job number: 0002
Company introduction: Our client is an independent international German law firm. They provide comprehensive commercial law advice to medium-sized companies, major corporations and industry groups as well as the public sector. With appr. 320 lawyers and tax advisers in 13 locations in 6 countries they are able to provide comprehensive legal and tax advice in national and international matters throughout the world.

They provide comprehensive advice through their German network of offices as well as internationally, in Eastern Europe, China and in Europe’s administrative capital, Brussels. In other important markets they cooperate closely with internationally active law firms, from whom they expect the same standards of quality as they set themselves.

Job Title: China Lawyer (Tax)
Job Description:

Report To: Head of SH office (German people)
Location: Shanghai

– Handling tax legal and business advice matters.
– Communicating with clients to obtain requirements and maintain updates.
– Anticipate and communicate on legal and administrative requirements & opportunities.
– Provide advise with clients for legally sites’ management and review contracts.
– Able to maintain and develop a solid client base.
– Work accordingly with central government and local administrations.

Job Requirements: – LLB or LLM of Law with PRC BAR is preferred.
– At least two years of tax experience either in an accounting firm or law firm.
– Broad knowledge of HK/mainland China tax agreements.
– Good knowledge of international tax treaties, VAT, corporate income tax and personal income tax.
– Familiar with general related legal concepts and relevant legal experience including ability to conduct legal research and work with external parties in case management.

– Familiar with the operation of a foreign legal or advisory firm
– Excellent organization and communication skills;
– Excellent oral/written English skills
– Can work independently, result oriented, self motivated and self reliable with high ethical standards
– Good organizational skills and are methodological in approach;
– Good team player with good interpersonal skills;
– Be flexible and willing to travel.

Email to:legal-candidate@dacare.com

China Legal Counsel

Company introduction: Our client is a leading, innovation-driven corporation committed to developing a growing portfolio of best-in-class and first-in-class pharmaceutical products that help people live longer, healthier and more active lives. Their products treat depression, schizophrenia, attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, diabetes, osteoporosis and many other conditions. They are committed to providing answers that matter – through medicines and information – for some of the world’s most urgent medical needs.

In light of their business expanding, they are looking for a China Legal Counsel in Shanghai.

Job Title: China Legal Counsel
Job Description:

Report To: China General Counsel
Location: Shanghai

– Support and provide advice on routine business operations and commercial transactions.
– Review and draft commercial contracts relating to consulting services, procurement, distribution, clinical research, business collaboration and other business activities.

– Counsel on corporate governance and compliance issues, advise on and handle governmental inspections.
– Take a coordinative role and working with US patent team and China external litigator for IPR litigation cases.

Job Requirements: – 3 to 5 years of solid experience acquired in a major foreign/local law firm and/or within the legal department of a multinational company.
– Excellent legal academic credentials. First degree must be in law.
– Confident to offer comments and thoughts at legal and business meetings. Self-motivated. Team player with excellent interpersonal and communication skills. Flexibility to work and communicate with colleagues in different time zones. Prepared to travel one to two times a month within China.

– Able to integrate easily on the basis of a highly developed, open and practical communication style
– Assertive and able to play an active role as a partner to the business team and as negotiator; ability to make difficult decisions and stand behind them. Should be able to work independently.

– Knowledge of the healthcare sector is not mandatory but would be a definite asset.

Email to : legal-candidate@dacare.com

China’s new employment law gets negative response from multinationals – survey

BEIJING (XFN-ASIA) – China’s proposed employment contract law has created growing feelings of uncertainty and pessimism among foreign-invested enterprises, according to a survey conducted by law firm Baker & McKenzie and HR consultants Hewitt Associates .

The draft legislation was submitted to the National People’s Congress this week for its third and final reading but the survey found that the majority of respondents had a negative view of the new law.

‘Almost no company expects an overall positive impact,’ said Susan Derkach, senior consultant at Hewitt Associates, Beijing.

‘Over one-half of participants believe that when implemented, the new labor contract law will have a negative or very negative impact on their daily business,’ Derkach said.

After he first draft of the law was published last year it prompted 191,000 comments from the public to the government.

This prompted amendments to the second version including changes, such as an increased emphasis on open-term contracts, non-compete and confidentially agreements, training contracts and probationary periods, restrictions on fixed-term contracts, more specific definitions and limitations concerning mass-layoffs.

‘Overall, there seems to be a great degree of uncertainty among the participants about the potential implications of the new law on their companies. Similarly, the majority of participants do not seem to be sure how they should prepare for passage of the law,’ Derkach said.

‘We believe that companies should aggressively pursue the following three actions: a comprehensive review and redrafting of the work force planning process and strategy; a comprehensive audit and redesign of all HR policies, manuals, collective agreements and employment contracts; strategic decisions on employee representation and collective bargaining,’ she said.

The new law is expected to take effect from Jan 1, 2008, but implementing it will challenge most companies, other experts said.

‘The law as it stands is very opaque and it is unclear as to how it will actually be implemented,’ said Andreas Lauffs, head of the employment group at Baker & McKenzie, Hong Kong.

‘So far there has been no mention of grandfathering or of any transition period,’ Lauffs said.

Further concerns of respondents to the survey related to trade unions and employee representation.

‘This could be an issue in the face of recent moves by China’s trade federation to unionize some high-profile multinationals,’ Lauffs said.

Both McDonald’s and KFC recently came under pressure from the state-controlled All China Federation of Trade Unions to cooperate with the formation of unions in their outlets.

The survey showed that almost half of the 436 participants have no employee representation while 89 pct are not covered by a company or industry collective agreement.

‘Only a small number of companies seem to have specific plans to address the potential new requirement to negotiate a collective agreement with their workforce,’ Susan Derkach said.

Those surveyed included wholly owned foreign enterprises, join ventures, representative offices, non state-owned enterprises and state-owned enterprises.

China: China Employment / Labour Contract

The Labour Law of the People’s Republic of China (“Labour Law”) is applicable to all employment relationships between individuals and enterprises in China. However, local governments of provinces, autonomous regions and municipalities may, and most of them do, issue detailed measures and rules for the implementation of the Labour Law. Such detailed measures are promulgated based on the Labour Law, with changes and specific details made in light of the local conditions. Thus, when dealing with China labour or employment matters, reference should always be made to the local regulations (in addition to the Labour Law), particularly as regards social insurance benefits and welfare benefits.

The Labour Law requires the establishment of an employment or labour contract (“Contract”) between the employer and employee for the purposes of recording an employer-employee relationship. The Contract is required to be made in writing and must necessarily be based on the principles of equality, voluntariness and mutual consent. If the Contract is not concluded based on such principles or is otherwise in violation of any PRC laws, administrative rules or regulations, the Contract may be treated as invalid in its entirety, or as regards the affected parts only, depending on the seriousness and nature of the violations.

Any dispute over the validity of the Contract or otherwise should in the first instance be referred to the relevant labour dispute arbitration committee (being part of the labour tribunal) for determination, and if the employer or employee concerned does not find the arbitration outcome acceptable, either side may refer the matter to the relevant People’s Court for a judgement to be made.

The Contract should deal with the following:
1. term or duration of the Contract;
2. job description or the scope of work to be performed;
3. labour/employment protection and working conditions;
4. labour/employment remuneration;
5. labour/employment disciplines;
6. conditions for termination of the Contract; and
7. responsibilities for breach of the Contract.

The parties are free to agree on other matters for inclusion in the Contract. It is in fact common to agree on a probationary period, the employee’s duty to observe confidentiality or non-disclosure obligations, non-competition covenants, etc.

The Contract may be terminated at any time by mutual agreement between the employer and employee. Severance is generally payable to the employee on termination of the Contract, save in the case of a summary dismissal or where termination is due to the employee’s resignation.

Where severance is payable, it is calculated with reference to the:
• number of years of service rendered; and
• average monthly income based on the employee’s income for the 12-month period immediately preceding the date of termination (and “income” includes base salary, bonus, subsidy, allowance, commission, etc., paid to the employee).

The severance amount payable equals the average monthly income multiplied by the number of years of service. In most localities, an incomplete year of service is treated as a full year for purposes of calculating the severance.

Smaller Firms Are Finding Ways to Get Started in China

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Sponsor Link: DaCare Legal Search (China)
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While some of Philadelphia’s largest firms are still looking for ways to navigate the onerous path to entering the Chinese legal market, two smaller firms have quietly found their place in the booming economy thousands of miles away.

White & Williams has had a China business practice group since 2003 and has had an informal alliance with the Chinese-based Xue Law Firm since the summer of 2006.

The two firms made official last month a strategic alliance, which White & Williams said it hopes will facilitate its existing work in the region and create opportunities for representation of Chinese companies.

“We have been assisting our U.S.-based clients with their China operations, and the Shanghai alliance will provide us with a vehicle to serve Chinese companies looking to the U.S,” firm Chairman George J. Hartnett said in a statement. “We believe the Shanghai alliance will make the Chinese market a two-way street for us — we and the Xue Law Firm can help companies coming and going.”

Beyond the alliance option, one local firm is looking to be on the ground in China.

Benesch Friedlander Coplan & Aronoff, which expanded beyond its Ohio roots for the first time last month with the addition of Philadelphia and Wilmington, Del., offices, will have one of its attorneys in China in a few months. The firm received its license from the Chinese Ministry of Justice on Feb. 7, and is now set to open a Shanghai law office.

Partner Yanping Wang will serve as chief representative in the office and will move to Shanghai this summer, firm Managing Partner James M. Hill said.

Wang practices in the firm’s corporate and securities practice group and is admitted to practice in both the United States and China. Her practice focuses on assisting clients who are entering the Chinese market through mergers, joint ventures and strategic alliances.

Hill said the firm started a subsidiary, Benesch Pacific, about two and half years ago to help clients with business needs in China. He said it was staffed by one person with a master’s in business administration who handled nonlegal needs.

The firm began its application process for a license to practice in China about a year later, and Hill said it was tedious but not problematic.

Benesch Friedlander saw a gap in the market, and Hill said the firm thought it would be able to service its clients from Chicago to the East Coast through a Chinese office.

Most companies, regardless of size, are forced to use the largest of law firms when doing work in China, he said.

“You’re not really important to them as a $350 million manufacturing company,” he said.

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Sponsor Link: DaCare Legal Search (China)
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Despite how the manufacturing industry may be portrayed in the media, Hill said the industry becomes a larger part of the gross domestic product each year and those are the types of companies that abound in the Midwest.

Several of the firm’s clients, such as the Eton Corp., have become globalized over the years, he said.

“We saw there was a big opportunity there,” Hill said, adding that the firm’s typical clients range from $50 million to $1 billion companies.

White & Williams’ interest in the Chinese market started when partner Gary P. Biehn had a client who was looking to complete a joint venture there in 2003. The firm started to see a larger interest in the market from its existing regional and Pennsylvania-based clients, he said.

Many middle-market companies have larger customers who are working in China or are seeing their competitors move in that direction, Biehn said.

White & Williams is also representing Chinese companies who are involved with business and litigation matters in the United States, he said.

There are currently four attorneys within the firm who are dedicated to the China business practice. Biehn, associates Chunsheng Lu and Robert C. Maier and immigration group leader Robert C. Seiger III.

Thomas S. Clay of consulting firm Altman Weil said it would be unusual to find many firms the same size as White & Williams or Benesch Friedlander that had any sort of presence in China.

There are several firms with clients who have business opportunities in the country, but Clay said he applauds any who are even thinking about entering the market in some way.

Smaller firms need even more of a strategic reason to enter a new market than do larger firms, consultant Joel A. Rose said.

“Unless they had an opportunity to do work [within China], I cannot believe that they would just build the stadium and they will come,” Rose said of White & Williams and Benesch Friedlander’s decisions to enter the Chinese market.

When opening an office in a market like China, Clay said firms need to be sure they will “have enough oomph” with just one or two attorneys on the ground. In an alliance situation, he said firms have to work at making it successful and not just mention it on their Web sites.

White & Williams sent one of its associates, Chinese native Lu, to spend 10 weeks at the Xue Law Firm over the summer of 2006. Lu is a member of the Chinese National Bar and the Pennsylvania bar. Hartnett said Lu would spend part of his time working in the Xue firm.

According to the consultants who spoke to The Legal Intelligencer, the biggest concern for smaller firms entering China is whether the work is available.

“There’s been probably more money lost in London than you can shake a stick at” by U.S. firms who figured they would open an office and hope the work follows, Clay said.

The Chinese market is even more difficult, and firms need to be sure they will have work to do before opening an office there, he said.

While the market has traditionally seen firms from the West Coast or with particularly strong Washington, D.C., offices looking to enter China, Sandra Mannix of Abelson Legal Search said there are a few reasons why China might make sense for White & Williams.

The firm’s insurance defense work could mean it has clients who have coverage needs in China. And just by virtue of being an old, Philadelphia firm, White & Williams may have had clients who evolved into national or international companies with needs around the world, she said.

White & Williams’ alliance formed out of a relationship Lu had with the Xue Law Firm and has been almost five years in the making, Biehn said.

“Like anything in China, you have to do your research, be patient,” he said.

Hill said it would be helpful for the firm to have Wang in China because she can help recruit other attorneys. He said he hopes to build the office to about 10 or 15 attorneys.

Wang has family members in China who are in prominent political positions. In a country that is heavily based on relationships, Hill said that could help grow the firm’s contacts in the area.

The influx of Chinese companies interested in business opportunities in the United States has also increased in just the last year, he said.

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Sponsor Link: DaCare Legal Search (China)
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“Making Partner,” or Things To Do While Waiting for the Dream Job and the Dream Practice!

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Sponsor Link: DaCare Legal Search (China)
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As I sit before my computer monitor writing this short article, the window for my document is minimized so as to maximize my view of my desktop background—a view of our beloved, blue planet from two hundred miles above its surface. The stunning vista of creamy, white-blue clouds and indigo sea against a black, starless sky reminds me of the amazing richness of opportunities constantly before us卆nd of our regrettable inability to take advantage of all of them. Fortunately, leading full and joyful lives does not require that we take advantage of all opportunities but, rather, that we carefully choose the precious few possibilities that we can and will pursue. What a difference it will make in your law career if you seize those few opportunities and take full advantage of the doors they open!

No Such Thing as “Making Partner”

Candidates ask me all the time, “Which firms are making partners now?” I always respond, “None of them!” The dead silence is usually followed by nervous laughter. “No, really,” candidates say. “I know it seems like that, but where are associates really making partners?”

At this juncture, I usually let them in on a little secret: things have changed in the practice of law since the 1950s. Here’s the bottom line: there are no more firms where associates simply “make partner.” Instead, associates grow up, get clients, create practices, and only then are awarded partnership status.

What this means is that attorneys must know how to create thriving practices while maintaining heavy workloads, and most firms cannot or will not expend resources to teach lawyers how to do this. They are on their own. Well, almost.

Here are some pointers that will help you develop the personal and professional clout you will need to build your own book of business.

Start Building Partner Skills Now

Associates who are ultimately invited to join their firms’ partnerships are not created equally, yet there are several “types” of attorneys who possess skills that increase their likelihood of making partner. I once sat in on a lecture given by the chairman of a prominent law firm, in which he discussed three types of partnership-bound associates.

First, there is the “rainmaker” who spends all (or most) of his or her time networking, having lunches, meeting people, and bringing in business. Second, the “service partner” adds value to a firm by providing niche expertise in a specialized area of the law, thus meeting the needs of sophisticated clients in ways that a partner with general legal skills cannot. Finally, the “hybrid” brings good leadership skills, strong connections to the firm and within the local community, and the ability to supervise projects and associates with aplomb.

While I respect these distinctions, I see things a little more simply. The only kind of person who can make and remain a partner is a person who has developed and continues to nurture a large, quality network of friends, colleagues, experts, and clients with whom he or she is involved on a professional level. This means that a potential partner must be able to call upon the people within his or her network to meet the needs of existing clients, to refer and generate new clients, and to keep abreast of developments in his or her industry.

No matter what level of practice you may now enjoy, the levels of ability and interest you exhibit in maintaining such a network may well mean the difference between professional and remunerative success or failure.

The Core Competency of a Partner

The ability to develop successful professional relationships is one of the core competencies of a partner. Almost anyone can practice law, but only a few develop law practices. I always try to emphasize to younger lawyers that it is never too early to start the process of building a network of strong relationships. The fundamental difference between a partner and any other lawyer is leadership ability. Partners lead. That means that partners assume responsibilities, delegate tasks, and are accountable for meeting the needs of their clients. These leadership traits are not innate; they must be learned, and to be learned, they must be practiced.

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Sponsor Link: DaCare Legal Search (China)
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The only way to become a leader is to practice leadership in a thousand small ways. Sets of small acts tend to grow, of their own accord, into larger sets of responsibilities that eventually can develop into leadership over an entire case, with a large client, or in a 3,000-member law firm.

Furthermore, leadership does not begin with a “lucky break,” such as when, for instance, the senior associate on a matter calls in sick and you are named the lead attorney卭r when the lead partner suddenly realizes that you are brilliant卭r even if a client suddenly prefers that you take the reins. Rather, leadership begins with relationship management. In essence, every legal task can be broken down into a series of relationships that need managing. For example, an attorney must exhibit leadership in order to assign the appropriate people within a law firm to answer interrogatories, to find critical documents, to communicate key information about deals to clients, or to manage support staff and other associates in preparing filings or coordinating nationwide document collections and reviews.

Thus, to build the confidence, credibility, and leadership skills necessary to fulfill these responsibilities, attorneys must begin by cultivating as many meaningful relationships as possible. To do this, they must actually meet people.

Get Out There, Meet People, and Make Friends

Networking is just a fancy way of describing the process of intentionally making friends. Every lawyer in the country should be a member of at least three organizations and should contribute to each of them. It is often the case that the most effective, highest-functioning attorneys are those who are members of scores of organizations that they have joined over the courses of their careers.

For starters, however, any professional—and every lawyer—should join one organization within each of the following genres: professional, service-oriented, and fraternal or social. At the most basic level, every lawyer should be closely involved with some sort of professional organization of lawyers dedicated to furthering the practice of law. This might be a subcommittee within a state bar association, the American Bar Association, the Association of Trial Lawyers of America, or even your local Barristers Club. There is no substitute for meeting and interacting with new lawyers in settings devoted to their respective practices. Successful lawyers have hundreds of colleagues who are essentially professional acquaintances with whom they have developed familiarity. Although meeting people and getting to know colleagues is incredibly easy to do, many lawyers dread it. It doesn’t have to be painful. Go out and meet someone new today!

For the Socially Challenged: A Step-by-Step Guide to Creating Your Network

Here is a step-by-step primer for developing a network of professional colleagues that even a partner would envy:

Join the “[fill in the blank]” club.

Actually go to a meeting.

Say, “Hello, how are you?” to five people. Be brave. Try to initiate some small talk. (For example, ask questions such as “Where do you practice?” or “What is your most interesting case right now?”)

Give a business card to each person you talk to. Ask for a business card from each of them, or write their names and phone numbers down on one of your own cards and hang on to it!

Once you get home or back to the office, enter their names in your Outlook folder (or some other location), and set up a reminder to call each person back in one week to follow up and say how much you enjoyed meeting him or her.

Actually call each person back.

Make it a practice to call each person on your list of contacts once every three months.

Follow where this leads you.

There. That wasn’t so hard! These are simple but invaluable steps. Every lawyer has some basic social skills, or he or she would not have survived the first year of legal practice. Begin naturally—but begin—and see where these proto-relationships take you. The point is that, just like in sales, there are only so many solid opportunities per “X” number of contacts. The only way to “get lucky” is to make sure that you make lots of attempts to build and maintain your personal network. Not every person is going to become a client, but the greater the number of personal contacts you maintain, the greater the resulting synergy between their accumulated sums of interactions, relationships, and experiences and your own.

Bringing It All Together

Once you have started down the path of generating a network of diverse professionals, you will be surprised at how it starts to take on a life of its own. Telling one colleague about an amusing vignette may lead him or her to do a small favor for you, such as sending over a client as a referral. Over time, that client or that colleague may lead you to significant business opportunities. All the while, you should be continuing to grow these and other relationships.

The key point to remember is that becoming a responsible leader depends on your ability to manage relationships. In every interaction, follow through with whatever you promise to do. If you offer to provide a reference, provide it! If you agree to get the name of someone who can serve as an expert, do it—and promptly! Demonstrating this kind of courtesy builds reputations and relationships—one small, solid step at a time. I absolutely guarantee that if you follow these practices, you will eventually succeed. You don’t have to be perfect all the time. You just need to be reasonably careful, reasonably reliable, and reasonably friendly, and you will be ahead of the majority of the pack.

Conclusion

The world is full of opportunities, but we cannot take advantage of them all; we can only capitalize on a few. To the extent that you can internalize this powerful principle, you will find that the world—and, in particular, your own practice—is as full of opportunities as a path strewn with gems. The key is to determine which gems to pick up, carry, and ultimately safeguard卋ecause you cannot take them all. If you follow this path, you may find that your biggest challenges lie not in finding opportunities, but in having sufficiently large pockets!

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Sponsor Link: DaCare Legal Search (China)
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by Peter L. Smith, Esq.