This week in Young, Hungry & Committed, virtual office NYC attorney Vivian Sobers hires contract attorneys for the first time and learns that you really do get what you pay for.
Lately, there has been a lot of controversy about the amount of time that I dedicate to my law practice. Of course, the upside for all that hard work has been a significant increase in business.
As I have discussed before, I feel that a big reason for the success of my practice has been my being accessible to the other attorneys who refer cases and appearances to me.
However, over last summer, I started to notice that the amount of work I had to produce was keeping me from being as responsive.

I chose the latter, which necessitated my first foray into managing other attorneys working on my firm’s projects.
[Warning, self-serving pat on the back to follow…] Not bad, considering that a little over a year ago I was taking appearance work in Rochester (and making the 12 hour round trip drive) for other attorneys.Over the past few months, I have worked with three attorneys on a contract basis. I refer to them as my Three Little Bears. Here’s what I have learned:
Attorney A: Inexpensive & Inexperienced.

So, my first instinct was to hire Attorney A: a recent graduate whose admission to the bar was pending and who worked at the most affordable hourly rate.
What I found though was that what I saved in hourly wages, I spent in mentoring time and supervising work product. Every project needed to be explained in detail, and I ultimately found that, for I the amount of time I was spending with this attorney, I could have just produced the work I assigned to him myself.
Attorney B: Affordable, Experienced & Not a Good Fit

Attorney B didn’t have the “do whatever it takes to get it done” kind of attitude that my practice needs. She missed a few deadlines, but worst of all, never communicated with me that she was having a problem with the assignment until after the deadline had passed. That didn’t work for me.
Attorney C: Most Expensive, Most Experienced, Best Fit

But what I learned is that when it comes to hired help, the old adage is just as true: “you get what you pay for.”
Attorney C was able to deliver work product quickly and with little supervision. In fact, even at the higher rate, he could produce work so much faster than Attorneys A and B that he was actually less expensive to work with, especially when factoring the cost of my time.
A valuable lesson learned. Thriftiness is important, but not at the expense of efficiency when you are an army-of-one with a strong growth trajectory.
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Vivian Sobers is a commercial litigator pursuing a solo law practice right out of law school. She is a client in Law Firm Suites’ Virtual Office Program. Vivian’s weekly blog series “Young, Hungry and Committed” documents the trials and tribulations of a young attorney navigating her way through the challenging world of self-employed legal practice.



