Law Firm Layoffs – How’s the Legal Profession Doing?
0I’ve been hearing about of legal firms laying off people. I’ve also been hearing that law students are having a difficult time finding work. However, I haven’t seen many statistics. After a little digging, here’s what I found out about the state of the legal industry:
Total 2009 Active US Lawyers: 1,180,386 (also see bls.gov)
# of Lawyers laid off from Major Law Firms: 5,511 (also see St. Petersburg Times, Nov. 10, 2009 – 5,259)
# of Lawyers at Major Law Firms in 2009 (top 250 firms): 126,669
Doing a little bit of math and assumptions (i.e. assuming the same cuts across the board), it looks like the total legal industry may have shed 51,355 jobs.
Consider that in 2008, 56,537 people were admitted on examination and 7,888 were admitted on motion and you can see why the legal jobs have all dried up. We have double the amount of people looking for work.
If you are looking for work, I hope you find it. If you’re competing for a legal job, remember that you now have to beat twice the number of people. Polish that resume and do something different than the rest to stand out. Good Luck.
Personally, I’m grateful I still have a job with steady work. I wish that for you as well.
–Ben
User Login with Roles in Ruby on Rails
0I’m busy tapping away at my current Ruby on Rails project and have been overwhelmed by the number of options out there. Luckily I’m a member of URUG and we have some great discussions (and even better programmers).
I came across a discussion on role requirements for users. Tim Harper developed what seems to be a very clean implementation of user roles in RoleRequirement using Restful-authentication. I’ve installed both plugins and I like what I see.
I’m not that far into it, because I work as an attorney during the day. But in just the little I’ve been able to chip away at my project, I think you might like it too.
–Ben
Update: MerchantCircle Listens and Fixes Email Marketing
0I wrote a blog article about timing your email marketing, specifically calling out MerchantCircle for its sending of a lot of email marketing in the middle of the night. I unsubscribed from their email marketing because my shiny new Droid was going off in the middle of the night because I got a new work email. Yes, I could silence it, but I like being responsive to my clients. Its part of what makes us different from other firms.
So after unsubscribing, I thought I would write a post about how other marketers, like me for our firm, could reduce their lost email subscriptions by making an easy time change. I called out MerchantCircle because they were the most egregious of the bunch.
Imagine my surprise when Kevin from MerchantCircle writes in my comments that he’s fixed it. It not only tells me that he’s seeking to provide value to me, but that they also get social media. Bravo guys. You got me back and hopefully a few more.
–Ben
5 Mistakes in Job Interviewing with Examples
0I’ve been thinking about the people who apply for jobs and wonder, sometimes, what they were thinking. I’m actually shocked at the number of people who run off at the mouth and don’t consider what they’re going to say. I’m also shocked about the resumes and lack of thought that goes into them. Seriously, consider your market – what do they want to know about you. Here are some bad examples to learn from, from hiring people I’ve been talking to:
- Someone calls up and says something like “Oh, finally, I get to talk to someone. You know how it is, you send out 8,000 resumes and no one gets back to you.” No I don’t, and now you’re probably off my list.
- Someone puts their gradeschool to high school education on their resume. I don’t need to know that much. In fact, it actually says that you don’t have enough to tell me on the resume, so you need to pad it. And it wastes our time.
- Someone calls up and says they are attending law school and refers to themselves as a law student. However, the college they are attending does not have a law school. Maybe pre-law. But they are not a law student, yet. Stretching the truth in an interview puts you at the bottom of the list.
- Someone calls up and volunteers out of the gate, “You know I believe that if you go work somewhere and it doesn’t work out, you just need to cut your losses right away and move on.” I didn’t ask, and now I’m going to assume that it must be more than what you say because its bugging you more than it was bugging me.
- Someone applying for the job that lives really far away, but doesn’t mention it in the cover letter. Look, if I lived that far away, I would hate the commute. What motivates you to the contrary – tell me in the cover letter.
If I appear blunt, I apologize. These are all good people. The hiring people with whom I spoke have a job. Their job is to pick the most diligent and closest fit to our organization. If you haven’t done the research or have skeletons in the closet, you need to deal with it before you get to them. If you resume leaves questions in my mind, predict them and diffuse them in a cover letter. Its a lot easier to craft it in writing than it is over the phone off of the cuff.
Unfortunately, the people I was talking with can’t tell you why you didn’t get the job because they could say the wrong thing and get sued. However, look on the internet and the comments above, and learn from other’s mistakes.
–Ben
TiWi in the Car – Big Brother, Big Savings or Helping Teens Drive Safer?
0I just saw some information about TiWi last night. Its a little box that you stick in your car that “watches” the car’s movement. It vocally warns of speeding violations, fast corners, seat belts, and leaving parent designated zones through an onboard speaker. And if you don’t listen, it will rat you out to your parent’s cell phone via a text message. In fact it may rat you out to your parent anyways with its arrival notification feature (ie Daughter arrived at school at 8:17 text message). It looks like the introductory price is $599 plus about $30 a month.
Its pretty amazing the reaction it gets from folks. I’d call it pretty polarizing. Some people believe that its too invasive and discourages trust. Others seem to say that it allows them to give their kids more freedom because they know where their kids are. Personally, I’m of the camp that says “You can drive my car, but you follow my rules. Don’t like the rules, don’t drive.”
Now, whether or not I use the device? I’ve got a few more years to decide.
–Ben
Free Droid Apps – Free Recommended Must Have Apps
7Just a quick List of my Must Have Apps for Droid
- (Jan/5/2009 UPDATE: NO LONGER FREE) Locale – Make your phone context sensitive – turn off alerts during sleeping hours, or use gps to turn off the sound, but vibrate when you’re at the grandparents. Totally worth it.
- WiFi OnOff & SilentMode OnOff – Widgets on your homescreen that quickly turn features on or off, rather than through settings or holding down the home button. Also show status.
- RingDroid – Make your own ringtones from your music. Talk about Finally!
- AudioManager – See the status and change the volume settings individually. Has caused my phone to hiccup a few times. May want to be careful. However the status screen of each volume setting makes it worth it.
- Jewels – Bejeweled clone that works great. However, it now comes with ads at the bottom of the menu screen. Skip if you can’t stand adds.
- Cestos – Funny multi-player ball game, as in over the internet. Addicting.
- Color Flashlight – Don’t tell me you’ve never used your cell phone to see in the dark.
- Where’s My Droid – Send your droid a text message and the volume will kick back on and start ringing. You can even text your phone and activate the GPS. So if you use lattitude, you might be able to find it.
- Speed Test – I wanted to know how fast Verizon’s 3G really was.
- Barcode Scanner – Comparison Shop by scanning the barcode of an item.
- Astro – File Manager and Viewer (why does droid not have this built in?)
- Toddler Lock – If you let your kids play on your Droid (really?), Lock down your Droid and let them fingerpaint and make shapes.
- Touch! 4Kids – Animal shapes fly across the screen and the kids have to touch the shape.
–Ben
Total Cost of a Droid vs. iPhone vs. Palm Pre vs. My Touch
0BillShrink.com has a good graphic they gave permission to repost on the cost and features of each “App Phone” as it seems that the new classes of phones are called. Personally I would get an iPhone or a Droid. I love my Droid except for the stupid back battery cover. The reason I have a Droid is that I’m stuck on Verizon because of the free mobile to mobile to family (switching them was out). Anyways, see below for the comparison.
Find the best cell phone plans and more graphics at BillShrink.com
–Ben
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2009 Xmas Price Index – Christmas is up a Small Amount
0PNC has just released their Christmas Price Index again. The cost of one full verse is up 1.8% to $21,465.56. While the True cost of Christmas is up to $87,402.81 with all verses, a gain of 0.9%.
You can get just the“Xmas Stats” if you want.
–Ben
Unemployment During this Recession – Animated Map
0I came across this animated map (The Decline: The Geography of a Recession) the other day and I thought it was interesting to see which states and counties went from low unemployment to high unemployment over time. It almost appears as a creep from the coasts to the middle of America.
That does not mean that the coasts are what caused it (although I have some beefs with “too big to fail” banks and wall street firms and their reckless attitude). However it might suggest that more people are employed in discretionary spending outlets in the coast versus middle America.
I’ve been having some discussions with friends and its been interesting to get views. Some of them made the assertion that the failure came from liberal states and cascading into more conservative states. I’m not sure I buy that.
What do you think?
–Ben

