|
|
|
By Sharon E. Sonnett, Esq. and Sabina B. Clorfeine, Esq.
|
 |
| |
Congratulations! You finished your first or second year of law school and landed a job as a summer associate at the firm, or as a law clerk somewhere else. What can you expect from your summer? How do you make sure to get that permanent job offer at the end of the summer?
The Summer Associate's Guide To A Permanent Job Offer will answer all these questions. Witty and engaging, this book offers many real life examples and provides an insider's perspective of what to expect, what's expected of you, and how to avoid common mistakes many law students make that can make the difference between a good and bad summer.
Click Here
|
The authors of The Summer Associate's Guide To A Permanent Job Offer are two practicing attorneys whose experience runs the gamut, from firms ranging in size from large to small, to government agencies, to the in house counsel position. Much of their collective career was spent at one of the largest New York-based firms in the country, which boasts an equally large formal summer associate program.
Every summer the authors have seen law students make mistakes that could easily be avoided if they had a guide book like The Summer Associate's Guide. Most of these blunders occur simply because students aren't familiar with a professional workplace setting.
To learn more about the book, or to purchase it, click here.
Click Here
|
Sharon E. Sonnett spent the majority of her career as a business litigator at Milbank, Tweed, Hadley & McCloy, and was most recently Of Counsel at Lewis, Brisbois, Bisgaard & Smith. Ms. Sonnett has been a frequent speaker at legal conferences and has written several legal articles. Sabina B. Clorfeine is in-house counsel at Sempra. Prior to joining Sempra, she spent several years as a litigation attorney at Milbank, Tweed, Hadley & McCloy. Before Milbank she practiced at Katten Muchin & Zavis. Ms. Clorfeine has published several legal papers, in different publications ranging from "Intellectual Property Today," to the "Daily Journal.
|
|
|
|