Hello 7sagers,
Have you read the book "Tomorrow's Lawyers"?
http://www.amazon.com/Tomorrows-Lawyers-Introduction-Your-Future/dp/019966806XI don't even know whether I should recommend it to you before the LSAT since it is quite pessimistic about the legal profession.
In a nutshell, the writer predicts that in decades most law firms need to, if not be forced to, ultimately transform themselves to survive in the market due to the new technology. He also claims that the apogee of legal profession was in 2006, and most law firms charge much more than they deserve, merely because corporations used to pay since it seems only small percentage of a given deal.
The author's argument is that most well-paid lawyers currently only provide technical services, which is not as professional as it seems and can be replaced by new technologies.
Since I am not a lawyer and not familiar with the firm milieu, I can't tell whether it is true or not.
I believe that some of you like me don't pursuit the law degree just for a lucrative job, but I am still concerned about the future, especially when it comes to paying back loans.
I would love to hear any of your opinions, for the book, for future, etc.
Comments
The one upside I do see is that a lot of what lawyers do involves document review, where they spend most of their time looking at thousands of documents and trying to parse out relevant information for a case. It'd be awesome for a computer program to do that so that lawyers can spend more time on the analyses portion (which I think we all would think is the most fun). That being said, a lot of "knowledge" comes from friends who are working at firms at the associate level so perhaps their perspectives are limited because of their positions.
TL;DR: we're good for now, maybe not so good in the future but maybe yes.
Isn't this true of literally every industry at every point in time and in all periods of history? Except maybe ... like ... artisanal cheese making?