Is it ever too early to go in house?
| Sickened sex offender tanning salon | 05/04/16 | | diverse base circlehead | 05/04/16 | | aggressive crackhouse | 05/04/16 | | impressive regret | 05/04/16 | | impressive regret | 05/04/16 | | Carmine Twisted Queen Of The Night | 05/08/16 | | maize mind-boggling deer antler | 05/04/16 | | impressive regret | 05/04/16 | | Histrionic State Toaster | 05/04/16 | | Pea-brained razzle kitchen | 05/04/16 | | irate saffron theater friendly grandma | 05/04/16 | | Sickened sex offender tanning salon | 05/04/16 | | thriller skinny woman | 05/04/16 | | irate saffron theater friendly grandma | 05/06/16 | | Sickened sex offender tanning salon | 05/06/16 | | glittery alcoholic den | 05/06/16 | | khaki french trust fund | 05/08/16 | | Sickened sex offender tanning salon | 05/08/16 |
Poast new message in this thread
|
Date: May 6th, 2016 4:35 PM Author: irate saffron theater friendly grandma
I'd take it unless you're talking about a shitty company that may possibly close its doors soon or you hate the environment/city.
Not sure what you'll be doing, but you may pick up other skills that will prove useful once you bounce to another in-house gig. Much of in-house, if its a big company, is navigating the internal policies and procedures (e.g., approvals, deal reviews, etc) -- that can be incredibly frustrating and cumbersome, which is why in-house attys prefer fellow in-house attys. The work isn't as complex as some of the stuff you'd handle in private practice, but you'll be exposed to some unique things that you wouldn't have seen otherwise (e.g., dealing with the business people directly, etc).
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3213946&forum_id=2#30422595) |
|
|