2021 was a year like no other in legal recruiting.
Law firms found themselves locked in a battle to recruit and retain lawyers in all practices, particularly in corporate and litigation.
In addition, the in-house market has experienced a hiring frenzy of its own. Companies, in virtually all industries, need to hire more lawyers, creating additional competition for law firms in talent war.
These changes would have taken at least a decade to cement in place, but they arrived due to the pandemic in record time. It is unlikely that huge shifts in behavior will occur in 2022 without such a push.
Our Jobs Program, which monitors more than 1000 law firms and 24 fortune 500 companies, hit a new high for legal openings in January 2022 reaching 12,000 open legal jobs. That is a 300% increase from July 2020.
We expect hiring to continue full tilt through the year. It takes significantly longer to recruit someone than it does for them to give notice and depart. The solution, then, is to immediately bolster retention while ramping up your recruiting efforts. We believe that firms then must continue to elevate the employee experience.
It's clear from our conversations with industry leaders during our research for the 2021 Leopard State of the Industry Report that the hyper-competitive market for law firm talent is showing no signs of slowing down in 2022.
Here’s what they had to say about what may happen in 2022 and beyond in the legal hiring market.
- Laura Leopard, the CEO and Founder of Leopard Solution cautions firms to “make talent a renewable resource by providing upskilling, reskilling and upward-mobility opportunities that can make a substantive and measurable difference to the success of the individual and the organization” in order to retain your people.
- Jeffrey Lowe, the Law Firm Global Practice Leader at Major, Lindsey & Africa expects that the lateral market will remain as hot in 2022 as it has been in 2021, and "blue-chip firms will accelerate their poaching of partners from one another. However, nearly two years of COVID has chiseled away the glue that binds lawyers together at BigLaw. Soaring profits have hidden the fractures, but what will happen when the market cools?"
- Phil Flora, the Director of Sales and Marketing at Leopard Solutions notes that, “Firms have pulled out all the stops to attract the top-level talent that they need. From raising salaries to offering signing bonuses to paying off law school loans to allowing lawyers to work remotely for the first time and hiring lawyers to work in cities where they did not have offices, firms were forced to step outside of their comfort zones in order to meet their hiring needs.”
- As David Lat, lawyer turned journalist who writes Original Jurisdiction, a newsletter on the Substack platform about law and the legal profession told us, "It's hard to imagine a return to the five-days-in-the-office work week. Any firm that insists on that will risk losing talent to peer firms that exhibit more flexibility. On the bright side for firms, more remote work will allow firms to continue to reduce their office footprints and real estate spending—a trend that was already underway pre-pandemic and has only picked up steam over the past two years."