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Corporate Lawyer

What are they and what do they do?
Tags: summer jobs, career
Apr 2, 2023

What does the term corporate lawyer actually mean?

To be honest, it is a vague term that isn’t really used by legal professionals in the same way it is by the general public. To the public it tends to mean any lawyer who wears a suit to work. 

If the term is used by an attorney it typically means one of two things. 

Either the attorney is using it colloquially to the general public in order to easily explain what they do for work because people’s eyes tend to glaze over when lawyers start talking about some complex thing they do every day. 

OR 

The attorney works nearly exclusively with corporations and practices corporate law. This might be at a private law firm, big or small, or might be as in house counsel for a corporation. A corporate lawyer is a legal expert who gives advice to businesses about their legal rights and duties. They represent the company as a whole, rather than its workers or shareholders. Companies work with corporate lawyers to make choices that follow laws and rules. Corporate law includes all legal matters related to starting, running, or owning a business. This job can be different based on the clients, who can include not just corporations, but also partnerships, limited liability companies, and business trusts.

The rest of this article goes into detail trying to explain what a corporate lawyer does, and discusses a corporate lawyer’s salary. 

What do corporate lawyers do?

Corporate lawyers help businesses follow laws and make choices based on those laws. They understand the rights of a company, review business activities, help with legal choices, and make sure business deals are legal. They may represent their clients in court or during meetings with regulators. Corporate lawyers also help start, run, and close businesses. Their job duties include:

  1. Contracts: Writing, reviewing, and making deals on legal contracts.
  2. Securities: Making sure companies follow laws about stocks and preventing fraud.
  3. Mergers and acquisitions: Helping companies merge or one company buy another.
  4. Venture capital: Helping businesses find money through financing.
  5. Corporate governance: Helping clients create ways to manage their company.

What are the requirements to become a corporate lawyer?

There aren't any special requirements above being a lawyer to become a corporate lawyer. It can help to have business experience or to have an undergrad degree that is business focused, but it isn't necessary.

To become a corporate lawyer, you need:

  1. Undergraduate degree: A bachelor's degree, that can get you into law school
  2. Juris Doctor degree: A law degree from a school approved by the American Bar Association.
  3. License: Passing a state bar exam or the Unified Bar Exam (UBE) to practice law in a state.
  4. Continuing education: Some states require ongoing education to keep a law license.

What are the top 8 skills corporate lawyers should have?

Corporate lawyers need both hard skills, like legal knowledge, and soft skills, like working with others. Examples of important skills for corporate lawyers are:

  1. Time management
  2. Problem-solving
  3. Research
  4. Analytical thinking
  5. Collaboration
  6. Persuasive communication
  7. Organization
  8. Written communication

What is work life like for corporate lawyers?

Corporate lawyers can work at law firms, government agencies, or as in-house lawyers for companies. They usually work in offices, and sometimes go to court. They may travel for their job and the typical work week can vary widely from as few as 40 hours a week to 80+ hours per week.

The work-life balance and culture that corporate lawyers face is dependent on a few factors, like the city they work in, the firm they work for, and their direct supervisor. 

What is the average corporate lawyer salary?

According to Indeed, in 2023 the average yearly salary for corporate lawyers is $132,690. 

This varies based on factors like location, experience, and employer. Extra education, like a Master of Law (LLM) degree, can also affect pay.

Corporate lawyer salaries tend to be bimodal with a long tail. This means that a lot of corporate lawyers make good money, but not a huge amount, and some corporate lawyers make a ton of money. A ton of money meaning in the hundreds of thousands or even millions of dollars per year. 

The corporate salaries that are on the high side are typically senior counsel at large corporations, or senior associates and partners at Big Law firms. 

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Windsor MIT '22, Harvard College Advisor

I am the half of LSD that didn't take the LSAT, or go to law school (Sorry about that). But I did go to MIT business school while surrounded by law students and lawyers, so I am somewhat qualified to talk about the intricacies of law school apps and finances.

Windsor (the dog) didn't write this but he WAS a Resident Tutor and career advisor at Harvard College with me, so deserves some credit.

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14:19
The great news is that I'll be a lawyer no matter where I go, and since I don't care for big law, I'll be good
have you sent UNT any LsOCI?
14:26
I have indeed!
zuck i love that youre willing to die on the LsOCI vs LOCIs hill
14:26
I sent one the same day they sent me the LOCI :)
14:26
sorry, not LOCI, the WL notification lol
14:29
The good news for SMU is I literally just need 2 more points on my LSAT to reach their median
yea, I just don't know how much WL movement they typically have. Hopefully there'll be spots open when you get your score back
14:37
Fingers crossed! Worst case, if my June score is good, I'll apply for Fall 2025
yea that's kind of the question I was getting at (whether it'd be possible for you to re-app). hope it works out
14:45
Thank you!
crazy car
Any HLS feelers since 1:00 pm?
15:05
^ Wondering as well. Hoping there are multiple waves of calls this week
ClassyPleasantHeron
15:05
Harvard is picking off their waitlist? Huh.
for those in schools and deposited have you started getting fasfa information yet
cant tell if its fasfa doing the holding up or my school or both
i only got it from a school i had already withdrawn from
no one else so far
its affecting my abiltiy to get an apartment cause DC spots want proof of 3x rent and i don't have that currently
rob a liquor store and deposit the proceeds in your checking account
15:35
ugh I need to do a practice section for the LSAT but I just cannot bring myself to do it
15:35
I have senioritis with teaching and now with LSAT stuff
you can do it and its going to be so worth it!
Ijustwannagetinman
16:02
I emailed a few days ago to withdraw from Georgetown and they just never responded to me lll
Ijustwannagetinman
16:02
Salty, I fear
oorrrrr, they are using actual admin time to focus on attending students and future admits
they have a intent to enroll form that they ask folks to utilize for withdrawals
ClassyPleasantHeron
16:07
Maybe GULC wouldn't have to spend so much admin time if they weren't trying to maintain fiftyleven different waitlists.
if they have a waitlist of 4000+ applicants they probably receive a lot of withdrawals and i wouldnt be surprised if they send any confirmations in batches
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