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How to Understand Your Personality and What Practice Area, Type

Firm, or Practice Setting You Should be Working in by Using DISC


Profiles
By Harrison Barnes from Los Angeles Office Managing Director

Summary: Learn how to find your ideal law firm, practice area, and more with the DISC Profile assessment.

I frequently see attorneys fail in the practice of law because they chose the wrong practice area, practice
setting, law firm, or are in the wrong profession entirely. This is understandable. If you do not know yourself
and where you are likely to be happy, you are bound to fail. By the end of this article, you are going to have
the ability to understand what sort of practice area you should be in, what sort of type of law firm (or practice
setting) you should be in and whether or not you should be practicing law at all. You will also take away with
you an excellent understanding of other people and why you do, or do not, get along with them and the sorts
of people you should and should not be working with.

I've recently started meeting with a man who runs a $150-million company painting houses and doing
construction work for HOAs around the country a few times a month to understand how he runs his company
and evaluates his people. The man is not a lawyer and is uneducated; however, he has become very
successful by some simple tools he uses to understand himself and others. This man is the third or fourth
incredibly successful entrepreneur I have spoken with over the past several years to use the same method to
understand himself and others. I used to use the same process for evaluating legal recruiters that I was hiring
and found it useful--but at some point, I stopped.

Attorneys will fit into different types of law firms and practice settings depending on how they see themselves
and the world. The sorts of jobs that others want to plug you into will also determine whether or not you are
successful as well. One of the biggest mistakes that attorneys make when searching for positions and looking
for new jobs is to believe they should be working with a particular group of people, or in a certain type of
environment when they really should not be. Law firms that are hiring associates, partners and others should
also keep several things in mind when doing their hiring.

One of the benefits of working with a legal recruiter is that they can help you narrow down what is the best
environment for you. The article below highlights that and other various benefits of working with a legal
recruiter.
Seven Things the Best Legal Recruiters Do that You Cannot Do Yourself
Choosing the Best Legal Recruiter

The analysis tool this man uses, as well as several people I have worked with in the past use, is called DISC
Assessment. DISCis a tool based on theDISCtheory of psychologist and attorney, William Moulton Marston,
which centers on the personality traits of Dominance (D), Influence (I), Steadiness--Supportive (S), and
Conscientiousness (C). Understanding how you fit in with these different personality traits can tell you a lot
about where you should be practicing.
THE MEANING OF DOMINANCE--THE "D" IN DISC PROFILES: To Succeed in Large Law Firms and
Markets You Generally Need to be Dominant

The "dominance" of this personality is often described by these words: Direct. Decisive. Driven. Results.
Demanding. Task-oriented.

A person that is a high D is highly focused on getting things done.

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They are very passionate and prefer to lead rather than follow.
They work hard to achieve goals.
They would rather be working than not working.
They are motivated by winning and thrive in environments where they are competing with others.
They often fear being seen as vulnerable and possibly being taken advantage of.
They want to be seen as successful and powerful.
They are goal and task oriented.

Most attorneys are high achievers, competitive and goal and task-oriented. They may set their sights on
going to the best college and law school possible and getting into the best law firm they can. They may also
be very motivated by being competitive with others and succeeding in competition with them. They get into
the best schools because they do better than those around them and stand out--they will often have the best
grades, most extracurricular activities and strongest looking backgrounds on paper.

Who knows why people are this way. In many cases, they have something to prove--to their parents, siblings,
self, or others. Regardless, these extremely driven personalities are perfect for major law firms, in major
cities. Unless you are very competitive, task-oriented and have something to prove, there is very little reason
to subject oneself to the sorts of hours and pressure of a large law firm. Getting on the competitive wheel of a
major law firm is a lot of pressure, and it is not for everyone.

Being driven and competitive is very important when succeeding as an attorney in a major law firm, but I think
there are other qualities that are important as well. The article below articulates those other traits that help
attorneys succeed.
How Important Are Intelligence, Work Ethic, Perseverance, and Social Intelligence to Succeeding in Large
Law Firms?

I meet attorneys and others all the time who I can tell have no business working in large law firms. They are
too nice. Not competitive enough. Not driven enough and have nothing to prove. They may be smart, have
gone to good law schools and have other abilities--but they do not belong in large law firms. Every year
countless people come out of the very best law schools--Harvard, Michigan, Columbia and others who,
frankly, may be good students and test takers but have no business working in major law firms: The major
law firms would eat them up alive. The same thing goes for many attorneys who choose to teach law and go
into academia, public service, clerkships and pursue other occupations. You need to enjoy competing with
others, want to get ahead and want to work hard and prove something to stay in most large law firms. You
need to want to make as much money as possible and achieve something.

Most major law firm attorneys are motivated by the competition with others and often concerned about their
hours, money and how they appear compared to others they know. They will often try and undermine others;
they will work harder than them; they will always try and be the best. The best law firms can channel this high
motivation into profit by using it to get lots of hours and the best work they possibly can out of their attorneys.
To get positions in the largest law firms, an attorney will often need to be extremely dominant. Law firms will
instinctively pick up this personality trait in interviews and use it to channel your motivation into lots of hours
and improved work product. Whether they realize it or not, law firms use the natural "dominant"
characteristics of attorneys and their need to feel important, better than their peers at smaller firms and desire
to feel successful to exploit them and make lots of money. Even partners are exploited by this system. As long
as you want to be ahead of others, you will believe you belong on the hamster wheel and need to keep
competing to find inner fulfillment.

This dynamic of competitiveness and exploitation can often lead attorney to become stressed and unable to
handle the mental ramifications that come as a result of such long hours and constant comparison among
peers. I've seen it happen many times to attorneys some of whom were close to me as well.

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25 Reasons Most Attorneys Hate the Practice of Law and Go Crazy (and What to Do about It)
Why Your Attorney Mind Self Sabotages Your Life and Career
How to Not Fail, Die or Go Crazy Practicing Law

If you want to be part of a large law firm, and remain there, you generally will need to be very dominant. You
will need to be motivated by competing with others and want to have the most hours compared to your peers.
You will be task oriented. As a partner in a major law firm, you will want to have as much business as
possible and be competitive with other partners and make the most money. If you do not feel you are making
the most money, you will leave. If you are high "D" you may also be motivated by the quality of law firm you
are in. The highest "Ds" tend always to want to be in better law firms, work with better attorneys and be
considered to be working in the most prestigious law firms.

The most motivated of high Ds often quickly conclude that working in a major law firm is not worth it. They
look around them and see other attorneys killing themselves working a lot of hours and not becoming
partners, or advancing meaningfully in their careers, and conclude that they could be more successful
elsewhere. High D attorneys also often find themselves in a position where they realize that they are so
competitive that it does not make sense for them to direct their energies inside of a law firm, but will direct it
elsewhere instead.

The most motivated of high D attorneys in large law firms generally make this leap--which is generally fatal to
them ever working in a law firm again. Someone running a business has more independence, more long-
term earning potential and more control over their time than an attorney in a large law firm. Someone with a
business has far more potential to become someone important, very rich and well-known in the world than an
attorney. Working in a law firm constrains you. You may not make partner; your future will be controlled by
outside forces (how much other attorneys decide you are going to make, whether or not the firm brings in
enough work and more). It is for this reason that law firms rarely hire attorneys who have started businesses
after some time practicing law. They know that this psychology will take over for them again.

Many high Ds who enjoy the practice of law also conclude that the business they should start is another law
firm. They believe they should get as many of the law firm clients as they possibly can and leave. This is
another reason that law firms have very little interest in hiring attorneys who are solo practitioners, or who
have left and started law firms. Law firms want "high D" attorneys but are not necessarily interested in
attorneys who are so high D that they are likely to leave again.

When law firms are hiring attorneys, they need to make a careful calculation of whether or not that person is
truly suited to practicing law in a large law firm. The law firm needs to understand whether or not the person
is motivated and high D enough to succeed--or so high D that they are unlikely to be a good fit in a major law
firm.
BEST PRACTICE SETTINGS: Large, competitive law firm
Solo practitioner or firm owner
Business owner
Leader of a company
Prosecutor
Firm in a major city
General Counsel of a company

The dominant personality wants to feel important, in control and like they are accomplishing something big.
These settings allow for this.
WORST PRACTICE SETTINGS: Routine government jobs

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Academia
Public Interest
Judicial
Small town legal practice
Most in-house jobs

The most dominant people are not happy in positions that do not allow them to be the center of attention and
feel like they are not accomplishing more than others. They want to make as much money as possible and be
seen as successful and powerful compared to their peers--something these sorts of positions do not allow
for. High D attorneys want to be in positions and around others where there is a high degree of motivation to
get ahead.
BEST PRACTICE AREAS: Litigation
Corporate
Entertainment
Criminal Law
Family Law
Labor and employment

These practice areas allow the attorney to be the center of attention, compete with others and get the sense
of winning and being the best. They also tend to attract many sorts of competitive attorneys as well.
WORST PRACTICE AREAS: Bankruptcy
Insurance Coverage
Real Estate
Tax
Patent Law
Trust and Estates

These practice areas (not always, but often) tend to be quite routine and not attract the most competitive
types of attorneys. These practice areas do not give attorneys the opportunity to draw a lot of attention to
themselves and shine compared to others. They tend to be more collaborative than involve people
competing with one another.
THE MEANING OF INFLUENCE--THE "I" IN DISC PROFILES: Different practice areas are more suited to
the influencer personality than others.

Someone who is an influencer has a desire to create their environment by influencing others. They can be
described by the words: Optimistic. Persuasive. Talkative. Emotional. Social.
An influencer enjoys being around others.
Influencers are not afraid to be the center of attention.
Influencers often have good senses of humor and are positive people in their environments.
Influencers are motivated by the approval of others.
Influencers are motivated by having the opportunity to verbalize their ideas.
Influencers do not like spending a lot of time alone.
High "I" influencers often do not like a lot of details and may be perceived as disorganized.

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Influencers are concerned with who is going to be around for various social and other events.

Influencers can and cannot work in certain law firm environments and practice areas.

The most suitable practice area for an influencer is, of course, being a litigator. As a litigator, the person can
write, express their ideas verbally and be heard. Influencers also can get the constant approval of others
when they succeed in court, in negotiations, and for their clients. Influencer attorneys enjoy going up against
well-known attorneys in court, being able to verbalize their idea and convincing clients and the other side
that a certain course of action is a good idea. Litigators like the idea that when they are working, they are
generally constantly interacting with others to get things done. Many of the best litigators I used to work with
enjoyed the idea that they singlehandedly won a case or a matter. High "I" litigators want to be the center of
attention.

The problem with high "I" litigators is that this personality is not always appropriate for the largest law firms.
The largest law firms want "soldiers" to do the work and not necessarily associates to take the spotlight.
There are different types of partners inside of law firms as well - there are service partners behind the scenes,
and there are those that are out in the limelight drawing attention to themselves, being seen and taking all
the credit. High influencers often have a difficult time surviving in large law firms if they are too eager for
praise and attention early in their careers. The most classic of high-influencer litigator moves is to state that
they need more "courtroom" experience or "trial experience" and want to move firms due to this. This sort of
reason for wanting to move firms means that the high influencer is unlikely to be happy in a major law firm.
High influencers are often happier in roles where they can be the center of attention--even if it means less
money. Also, high influencers will often feel constrained in large law firms. It is for this reason that many high
influencers do not do well inside of law firms. They need to have enough of an influencer personality to be
good writers and so forth; however, they do not need to be the center of attention.

It has always been interesting for me seeing litigators in some of the largest and most major law firms. They
are not high influencers and are most comfortable behind a desk and not in court. The large law firms like this
because the partners are the ones that have this personality--and not even the majority of them have it. When
doing work for major corporations, many lawyers in large firms are more technicians than influencers. They
spend their time on technical matters, finding fault and attacking the work product of the lawyers who tend to
be very high influencers.

In contrast, many other practice areas such as patent law, tax, ERISA, real estate, technology transactions,
trust and estates and even many types of corporate law--transactional practice areas--are much better suited
for attorneys who do not have influence-related skills. They may be more interested in being technicians and
not grandstanding and having the attention of other people, for example. In many law firms, the people who
do the work--even in litigation--tend to be people without influence-related skills. The people who interface
with clients and are in the limelight have this instead.

Different law firms also have different cultures. For example, the first law firm I ever worked in was comprised
only of litigators. The majority of litigators in this law firm tended to be influencers. The next law firm I worked
in was a general practice law firm that had litigators in it. The majority of the law firm was comprised of
corporate attorneys. Here, the litigators and most of the people inside of the law firm tended not to be
influencers. The culture of the law firm was built around servicing large institutional clients and being in the
background, and not on drawing attention to oneself.
BEST PRACTICE SETTINGS: Anywhere the attorneys can influence and be around others
Political office
Public interest
Many law firms that welcome this sort of personality

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Sales-oriented jobs that require a law degree
Academics

An attorney who is a high influencer wants to be around others and have the opportunity to shape them to
their point of view. They are social and crave environments where they can talk to others and influence them.
WORST PRACTICE SETTINGS: Anywhere the attorney is not around others and cannot influence them

Solo practitioner

Law firms that stifles creativity and debate about ideas

Many corporate environments where the attorney is faceless and nameless

High influencer attorneys want their ideas heard, and they want to be around people who will listen to them.
Any practice setting that prevents this sort of debate and does not welcome this from the attorney is likely to
make them feel like they are not doing well. It is not uncommon for an attorney who is a high influencer to
leave a firm when they feel their ideas are not taken seriously, or they do not have many friends to discuss
ideas with.
BEST PRACTICE Any practice area where the attorney gets to be around a lot of other people and
AREAS: influence them.
Litigation
Corporate
Entertainment
Criminal Law
Family Law
Trust and Estates
Labor and Employment

These practice areas allow the attorney to be the center of attention, compete with others and get the sense
of winning and being the best. They also tend to attract many sorts of competitive attorneys as well.
Any practice area where the attorney feels isolated and as if they are not
WORST PRACTICE AREAS:
connecting with and influencing others
Real Estate
Tax
Patent Law
ERISA
Many types of finance
Anything overly clerical, or transactional that does not involve people and
influencing them--even litigation can be this way if you are doing discovery or
document review, for example.
THE MEANING OF STEADINESS--THE "S" IN A DISC PROFILE: Most Attorneys Tend Towards Being
Steady and Desiring Supportive Roles

Someone who is steady is interested in cooperating with others to complete tasks that support others and
maintain stability. They can be described by the words: Cooperative. Collaborative. Stable. Consistent. Loyal.
Patient.

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A steady personality:
Does not like change.
Does not want to offend others.
Tends to be dependable.
Likes to be in a role where they support others.
Does not like being the center of attention and promoting themselves.
Feels secure following rules and in a role where they help others follow the rules.
Wants to be accepted by the group.
Likes working with teams and cooperating.
Values consistency.
Does not enjoy confrontation.

The steadiness personality is something that applies to a lot of lawyers. Lawyers like to be in a role where
they are supporting clients behind the scenes and not necessarily the center of attention. Most middle-class
professions--of which being an attorney is one--tend to attract people who value steadiness. Lawyers who
work in most major law firms, rather than on their own, value steadiness. The traditional idea of going to good
schools to get the best job possible and work for someone else (the middle class ideal) centers around
supporting the needs of someone else in exchange for a steady paycheck. Attorneys by their very nature are
representing the needs of others in the market--they are supporting them by protecting them from issues.
Most attorneys look out for their clients' interest and try and guard them against problems that would disturb
the status quo. Whether they are representing a client in a transaction, or a litigation matter, their goal is to
bring things back to a state of equilibrium for the client--complete the transaction, settle the case and so forth.

Some attorneys value steadiness more than others. The attorneys who value it the most will likely surround
themselves with other attorneys and be in the least adverse practice areas--transactional ones. These
attorneys want to work in firms where they are surrounded by lots of others; they have partners and feel like
they are cooperating with others. Natural attorneys also like rules, the law and helping their clients follow
these laws. People who are not natural attorneys do not look upon their role as to support others--they are
more concerned with themselves.

If you are going to practice law and enjoy what you are doing, you need to enjoy supporting others and
solving their problems. You need to feel you are contributing to the success of groups through your actions.
You need to be excited about solving the problems of others. Happy attorneys need to think this way and
prioritize the needs of others over their own. The best attorneys should also feel their actions are supporting
the group and believe in this.

If an attorney is not motivated by solving the problems of others they are going to be unhappy practicing law.
If the attorney is unhappy working in groups, they are going to be unhappy in most law firms.

One of the reasons so many lawyers are unhappy in law firms in the United States is because the law has
become so depersonalized compared to what it may have been 50+ years ago. The natural makeup of the
steadiness personality attorney is geared towards assisting others, cooperating with groups and not feeling
multitasked. In a large law firm, the attorney's natural need to support others is often pulled in many different
directions.
The attorney will find themselves in a position of working for a corporation it never interacts with on matters
that feel insignificant.
Instead of cooperating with others, the attorney will be working in an environment where their peers (other
attorneys) may be perceived to be out to get them.
The attorney will not be in a stable environment because attorneys will be leaving and losing their jobs all the
time and the attorney will never feel safe.

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All of this makes the modern, large law firm something that many attorneys detest because it is at complete
odds with their personality makeups. Instead of wanting to work in a large law firm, attorneys often want to go
in-house and say they want to do so "so they can work with just one client." They want to feel like they are in
a supportive role and making a direct contribution. They want to feel like they are someplace steady. They
want to feel like they are working with a group that gets along. While all of this is quite understandable, in
most cases, this is the exact opposite of what attorneys find once they arrive in-house. Companies go out of
business, merge, hire and fire CEOs, General Counsels, sell off business divisions, get sued, close offices
and more. Companies are even more unstable than most law firms.

What is an attorney seeking steadiness to do? One of the things that I have noticed is that attorneys who work
in smaller to midsized markets--think Madison, Grand Rapids, Rochester, Sacramento, Tucson, San Antonio,
Jacksonville, Charleston--tend to have much longer, happier careers than attorneys who try and practice in
major markets. Attorneys in smaller markets tend to huddle together and protect one another more. There is
less pressure to make a lot of money. People tend to work on smaller clients and have a bigger role in
solving their issues. I have noticed that attorneys--regardless of the law school they attended--are happier,
more well-adjusted and seem to enjoy the practice of law much more. They do not salivate like mad dogs at
the thought of going in house--or even have that as a goal. They tend to be much happier. I believe this is
because the smaller law firms in medium to smaller sized markets are a place where an attorney's natural
desire for steadiness is supported.
BEST PRACTICE
Anywhere the attorney can feel secure in their position
SETTINGS:
Government position
Support role in a noncompetitive law firm-they do exist
Public interest
Academia
Judicial environments
Support role inside of a company
Small, family-owned law firms-these often do not have a lot of turnover and minimal
conflict
Smaller to midsized markets without a lot of movement in them-these often do not have
a lot of turnover and minimal conflict

The steady attorney does well in positions that allow them to support others and at the same time feel secure
in their environments. People who are high in the support quotient want to be in positions where they feel
secure and are not under attack all the time. They value consistency. Consequently, they are more likely to
accept less money in exchange for consistency than they might otherwise make in the market. They are not
concerned about drawing attention to themselves and do not need to be in the limelight.
WORST PRACTICE
Anywhere the attorney does not feel secure
SETTINGS:
Law firms with a lot of turnover and conflict
Companies with a lot of turnover and conflict
Positions that require business generation to get paid
Positions where compensation is variable and unpredictable
Law firms in major cities--these typically have a lot of turnover

Steady attorneys do not like unpredictable legal environments or ones where they are likely to lose their

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position. They do not like conflict either. Larger law firms and markets tend to have a lot of conflict and
attorneys are unlikely to be happy in them.
Any practice area where the attorney is not in conflict with others--or is allowed
BEST PRACTICE AREAS:
to work behind the scenes--most transactional practice areas.
Tax
Patent Law
Many types of finance
ERISA

The classic supportive attorney enjoys a position in tax law, for example, where they are expected to sit down
at a desk each day and work a certain number of hours and know that if they can do this, they will be fine.
This makes them happy. Different personality types do not enjoy this sort of thing--the supportive attorney
does.
Any practice area where the attorney is in conflict with others, there are
WORST PRACTICE AREAS:
winners and losers and which is unpredictable by nature.
Litigation
Criminal Law
Family Law
Trust and Estates

These practice areas put the attorney in conflict with others, require them to hurt others and are unpredictable
by nature. These are not the sort of practice areas the typical attorney enjoys.

Are you in the right kind of law firm? Learn how the type of law firm you are in can make or break your legal
career. Do you think that these assessments are correct, do you agree or disagree? Please share your
thoughts and leave a comment below.
Which Type of Law Firm Is Best for You and Your Career: Main Offices of Large National Firms, Branch
Offices of Large National Firms, Midsized Firms, Boutiques, or Newer Fast-Growing Firms?

THE MEANING OF CONSCIENTIOUS--THE "C" IN THE DISC PROFILE: Almost All Attorneys Are
Conscientious by Nature

Someone who is conscientious is motivated by producing excellent work. They can be described by the
words: Accuracy. Careful. Cautious. Calculating. Objectiveness. Stability. Systematic. Critical.

The conscientious personality:


Wants to produce work that is not criticized.
Likes to challenge assumptions in thinking.
Likes to research and come up with the correct information.
Enjoys showing their expertise with the work they produce.

The conscientious personality is particularly suited to lawyers. To practice law in a major law firm, an attorney
needs to be conscientious--there is absolutely no doubt about it. The clients of large law firms expect well-
researched work that is delivered flawlessly (without typos, grammatical errors, formatting and other errors).
The best attorneys take a tremendous amount of pride in the quality of the work they produce, and it is
impossible to work in a major firm and be taken seriously unless you are conscientious. In fact, not being

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incredibly conscientious is a very quick way to distinguish the best lawyers from the poorest ones.

The larger the client you represent--and the larger the law firm--the more conscientious you will need to be.
At its lowest level, when you see the work produced by attorneys in the smallest law firms where individuals
are typically represented that do not have a lot of money (in low stakes family law, criminal matters, personal
injury, low-level insurance defense, and immigration, for example) the work will be littered with typos,
formatting errors, errors of law and more. Attorneys in the smallest law firms often do not have the time to be
conscientious because their clients are not paying them. Attorneys in larger law firms that work with the
largest clients are expected to be more and more conscientious. When judges evaluate the work product of
poor attorneys without resources behind them compared to the best attorneys, there is often no comparison.
The best lawyers are careful, their legal conclusions well-reasoned and more. You are more likely to win
negotiations, legal cases and do better with contracts and other legal matters when you are represented by
an attorney that is extremely conscientious compared to one who is not.

The best attorneys take a great deal of pride in their work, and their conscientiousness is natural--it is
something that is ingrained into them, and they do not need to be taught it. They enjoy marking up papers
and finding errors. They enjoy tweaking contracts and documenting transactions. They take pride in
researching material and coming up with novel conclusions. To be a good attorney and suited for the
profession of law, this sort of thinking and way of approaching problems must come naturally to you. If it does
not then you will have a difficult time being a lawyer and need to learn this way of thinking and approaching
problems immediately.

The reason that conscientiousness is so critically important for attorneys is that lawyers make a living finding
errors, researching errors, tricking their opponents into making errors and attacking the errors of other
attorneys. If an attorney is not conscientious, they will spend their entire career being beaten up by other
attorneys and lose most of the time. Their clients will get the bad side of deals. They will be in a position
where they are constantly on the defensive and cleaning up mistakes. They will quite often be sued for
malpractice and lose. The attorney who is the most conscientious is the one who wins most of the time.

The best attorneys are also quite calculating. Like chess players, they may withhold information selectively,
play games with deadlines, insert provisions into contracts at the last second when the other side is not
expecting it, and use the information to their advantage. To be a good attorney you need to enjoy and thrive
playing these sorts of games--it should come naturally. If these sorts of games do not come naturally to you,
then there is a good chance you are someone that is not well suited to be an attorney either. You need to be
able to be as calculating as possible at all points in time.

However, it is important to note that sometimes attorneys are overly calculating. These sorts of attorneys tend
to be very calculating and analyze most situations vis-a-vis whether or not they are getting the upper hand.
This is not an attractive trait and often demonstrates that an attorney is a narcissist that doesn't take pride in
their work and is playing the game. Here is an article that shows you how to identify these types of attorneys.
Narcissistic Entitlement Syndrome among Attorneys: Why Narcissism Destroys Young Attorney Careers

Attorneys who are not overly conscientious or calculating can go into practice settings other than large law
firms. Teaching law is a setting, for example, where debating ideas is rewarded, and thinking and detail do
not need to be as crisp. As stated above, the least conscientious attorneys often find themselves working in
more consumer-facing branches of law, or in professions where they can use their legal skills or law degrees
but not be expected to produce flawless work--or particularly enjoy doing so.

It is, as a general rule, the most conscientious attorneys who end up attending the best law schools.
Attorneys who go to the best law schools do so precisely because they are so conscientious.
BEST PRACTICE SETTINGS:Large, major law firms

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Most legal practice settings where work is done at a high level
Places where the attorney has a lot of money and time to do work well
Places where quality is highly valued
Structured legal environments with rules
Judges
Some government offices and environments
Some in-house environments
Legal environments composed of attorneys who went to top law schools
Law firms that do work for large corporations

The most conscientious and lawyer-like attorneys typically end up in the largest law firms or practicing for the
largest clients. They go where there is money to support their desire to be conscientious. Most lawyers in
major law firms are conscientious.
WORST PRACTICE
Legal environments without high work quality standards
SETTINGS:
Legal environments composed of poor attorneys
Most consumer-facing legal environments
Unstructured environments without a lot of rules
Legal environments composed of attorneys who went to poor law schools or
did not do well there
Small law firms in small towns
Consumer-facing law firms

The conscientious attorney wants to be around other attorneys who have high standards for the sort of work
that they do. All consumer-facing attorneys are not unconscientious; however, they are more likely to be less
conscientious than attorneys from major law firms.
Any practice area where the attorney can be a perfectionist with their work.
BEST PRACTICE AREAS:
This could be any practice area for the most part.
Any practice area where work is being done for clients that can afford to pay
for good work.
Tax
ERISA
Patent

The best attorneys tend to be the most conscientious. There are conscientious attorneys in every type of
practice area, and they tend to be the best ones practicing in those areas.
Any practice area where the attorney is less likely to have the money, or time,
WORST PRACTICE AREAS:
to be conscientious
Criminal Law
Family Law
Consumer bankruptcy

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Personal injury

Any practice is that requires the attorney to rush and not do the best work is not a good fit for the
conscientious attorney.

Conclusions

It is important to understand exactly the sort of attorney you are and what your personality style is. Think of
this in terms of how you choose the sort of firm you work in and the practice setting you are in. Your
personality traits will have a major impact on where you belong--and you are likely to know instinctively
where that is before you commit to a practice area, practice setting, or even location for your practice.
Share Your Thoughts

Are you in the right kind of law firm? Do you think that these assessments are correct, do you agree or
disagree?

Share your responses to these questions and your thoughts about how to find your ideal environment and
practice area as an attorney in the comments below.

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