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by sandworm101 3567 days ago
>> "the job of a lawyer is to persuade, which is part legal reasoning and part hard work. Since the ability to persuade directly affects litigation outcomes, participants are willing to pay highly regarded barristers upwards of $28,000 a day, and some law firm partners an hourly rate of over $1,000. In this post, we analyse data from 22,000 cases to measure the differential impact law firms and barristers have on litigation outcomes."

No. That's what TV lawyers are paid for. That's the equivalent of learning about doctors from watching MASH. Most doctors are not surgeons. Most lawyers are not litigators. Many great and valuable lawyers will never win any case. Imho the best lawyer is the one who's client never faces the uncertainty and protracted negativity that is modern litigation, just as a great and valuable doctor is one who's patients avoid the knife. (Apples and oranges but the point stands.)

Lawyering is, in my world, mostly about listening to clients and understanding how their realities fit into external standards such as laws and industry norms. It's about hedging, documentation and interpretations. And sometimes it's about holding the client's feet to a fire. Litigators only appear once all of that has failed. Litigators may have the highest hourly rates, but do not have the highest salaries overall. Those are reserved for corporate counsels and board members.

1 comments

Depends on the subject matter and the willingness of a plaintiff and defendant to negotiate a fair settlement.

In some areas, big money comes with big litigation.