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  • My Biggest Financial Asset is My Career

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    January 22nd, 2010seejanegetrichCareer, Great Recession, Law School

    career streetAnd I need to start acting like it. 

    It’s time to dust myself off and launch a new career strategy. 

    Not getting an offer from the firm that I worked for last summer was an absolute blow to my confidence and my skills.  If I ever have been depressed in my life then it would have been from August to November.  Going home for a month allowed me to take a mental break from the big muddle that is my soon-to-be-career.   I am feeling better emotionally and last week I launched a difficult yet strategic move that may help my career. 

     Revised Career Strategy – 2020

    Goal: In ten years, become skilled at financial regulatory work and position myself to become a senior associate for a law firm or to obtain a senior position with a financial firm. 

    First, get in the game. 

    Get a job in the financial regulatory industry to obtain experience. 

     Second, find other good players to model myself after.

    Find engaging and skilled mentors with a pay-it-forward attitude. 

     Third, become a really good player.

    Build an expectation of excellence and continually deliver on that expectation.  Obtain skills by taking on challenging work.  Take advantage of all educational and training opportunities.  Build and strengthen the personal brand that is Jane. 

    Fourth, get true fans. 

    Build meaningful relationships not relationships simply for career advancement.  Obtain true fans also through personal branding, networking and mentoring others.  

    Fifth,  switch leagues.

    Jump ship to become a senior associate for a regional law firm or a senior position with a financial firm.

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2 responses to “My Biggest Financial Asset is My Career” RSS icon

  • Sounds like a good sound plan to me!

    It’s hard for me to understand what it’s like to be in your shoes in this current economic environment. I would have never guess that the recession would also affect future attorneys students.

    • @MoneyReasons
      A lot of law firm work comes from large corporations and when they are not doing well there is less work and of course, they try to avoid paying their attorney’s as well. Firms of all size including someo of the largest law firms in the country has problems with clients paying up.


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