Unhappy in your law career? Sue your law school!

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Management consultant Peter Drucker once said, "Any time I have seen someone accomplishing something magnificent, they have been a monomaniac with a mission. A single-minded individual with a passion." Former advertising executive Donnie Deutsch has a program on cable called, "The Big Idea". Each week, Deutsch interviews entrepreneurs and business legends about their secrets to success. Without prompting, nearly every one names passion as the key to their success. I quoted a study about ten days ago that all but proves this.

And so as we embark on a new year, my question to you is, "Are you building your career around your passion?"

I’m guessing the answer is no.

I don’t know you, it’s just that statistically speaking, most people follow a career path based on something other than the call of their hearts. I’ve got to believe the numbers are even higher for lawyers.

I heard about an article today in the Wall Street Journal citing a growing number of attorneys who are disillusioned with the practice of law. That’s not news, really, but I was told the article also noted a number of new lawyers who are suing their law schools for misrepresentation about their prospects in the legal job market. Isn’t that special?

In the past, I have talked to many lawyers who were inquiring about my marketing program who I talked out of purchasing because I could hear in their voices their lack of enthusiam for their career. I told them I could help them bring in clients but given their state of mind, the clients wouldn’t stay.

Some people truly love practicing law. God bless you if that’s you. But I think many lawyers have convinced themselves that they love practicing when in reality, they would rather be doing something else. The worst place to be, however, is knowing you hate what you do but not seeing a way out.

There is always a way out. It might be painful–economically and emotionally–but the pain will pass. Five years from now at the outset, you could be happily engulfed in a new career, a new life. The sooner you take steps towards changing, the sooner your new life will appear.

I didn’t know where I was headed when I began this post, and I certainly don’t want to start the year with a downer. But I know this is a time when goals are set, resoulutions are resolved, and it’s not long before we are all caught up in the day to day of our careers, and before you know it, another year has come and gone. So I wanted to mention it once more and now I’m done with this topic (for now), so let’s get back to the business of bringing in clients and increasing incomes. After all, it’s better to be miserable with money than miserable and broke.

Happy New Year?

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Please don’t wait twenty years like I did

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A friend of mine says, "When you love what you do and you do what you love, you’ll never work another day in your life." We’ve heard it so many times, it must be true: The key to success and happiness in your working life is to find something you are passionate about.

A study of 1,500 people over twenty years shows how passion makes a significant difference in a person’s career:

At the outset of the study, the group was divided into Group A, 83 percent of the sample, who were embarking on a career for the prospects of making money now in order to do what they wanted later, and Group B, the other 17 percent of the sample, who had chosen their career path for the reverse reason, they were going to pursure what they wanted to do now and worry about the money later.

The data showed some startling revelations:

  • At the end of 20 years, 101 of the 1,500 had become millionaries.
  • Of the millionaires, all but one–100 our of 101–were from Group B, the group that had chosen to pursue what they loved! [Kriegel and Patler, If It Ain’t Broke. . .Break It!, p. 259, cited in Talent is Never Enough, p. 35, by John C. Maxwell]

But what if you’re not pasionate about your career? What then? It seems to me you have three choices.

  1. Change careers
  2. Change roles
  3. Live with it.

The third choice, living with it, should be unacceptable, but this is the choice I believe most people make. It is a recipe for unhappiness and illness and an unfulfilled life, and it is also the most difficult way to prosper (according to the above noted study), but it is certainly understandable. Lawyers have so much invested in their careers–time, money, energy and ego–it is difficult to contemplate significant change. "What would (fill in the blank) think?" "I don’t know how" and "I don’t have time" are common reactions.

Changing careers is becoming more common. I read recently that the attrition rate for new attorneys is at astronomically high levels. I changed careers (more than once) and I’m glad I did and very happy where I am now. I truly am passionate about what I do! But while changing careers may be the ultimate answer for an individual, it shouldn’t be the first choice.

Changing roles is the "best first option".

You can change roles by changing jobs. If you don’t like the people you work with, look for another environment. It might be that simple. If litigation isn’t where you want to be, perhaps you can draft documents.  And so on.

You can also change roles by finding some aspect of what you do that you are indeed passionate about. It might be only a small part of what you do, but if you focus on it, it might be enough to make up for everything else you have to do.

I know an estate planner who was an excellent draftsman but was all thumbs when it came to finding clients. He partnered with a rainmaker who did not possess the technical skills (or patience) of my friend, and now, the two are happy and making more money than each of them ever made on their own.

We’ve all known people who say they are "burned out". In reality, they probably weren’t on fire in the first place. I realized this was true for me very early in my law career, but it took me a very long time to give myself permission to change, and two decades before I allowed myself to make it permanent.

The purpose of life is joy, and if you are not passionate about what you do for a living, you are shortchanging yourself. As you comtemplate your career and goals for next year and beyond, my Christmas wish for you is that you will be honest with yourself about where you are and where you would like to be.

You can be happy and fulfilled and successful. You can have it all. The first step is slowing down long enough to think about this, and then accepting it. Only then can you begin the process of working towards it.

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Is your legal career deeply fulfilling?

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One of the hallmarks of a successful career, according to Steve Pavlina, is "making a meaningful positive contribution to others." Indeed, many lawyers say they went to law school in order to "make a difference" or "to help others." I know that was important to me when I started my career. Unfortunately, looking back on twenty years of practice, I can’t say I made the kind of difference I thought I would when I was starting out.

Pavlina is writing a series of articles on how to create a fulfilling career. He begins with the premise that no one should settle for anything less than complete satisfaction. We deserve to "have it all" and have it now, and we can, he says. "Almost" isn’t good enough, and neither is "working towards". Either our careers are fulfilling or they aren’t–there is no in between.

Someone once said that life follows three distinct phases: learning, earning, and returning. A deeply fulfilling career, the way Pavlina defines it, is one that combines all three elements right now. Contribution ("returning") is something we do every day, not just when we retire.

It took me a long time to admit that I wasn’t fulfilled in my career as a lawyer, and even longer before I was finally able to extricate myself. Oh, I know I played an important role in the legal lives of many people, and there were other aspects of my career that were satisfying (e.g., intellectually, financially), but, on balance, my career wasn’t anywhere near what I would call deeply fulfilling.

I like to tell myself I had to go through what I went through in order to get where I am today (and to appreciate where I am today), and I’m sure there is some truth to that. But only some. Today, I know you don’t have to settle. Now I understand that you can have it all, and you don’t have to wait. If you’re not completely fulfilled in your career, I hope you don’t take as long as I did to find that out for yourself.

If you are interested in making some changes, if you would like to be able to learn, earn, and return today, not someday, please contact me. I’m working on a project with several attorneys who feel the same way and it might be a good fit for you, too.

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