Survey provides positive news for legal professionals

The legal field is expected to see an increase in hiring in the months ahead, with litigation driving the greatest job growth.

According to Robert Half Legal’s State of Legal Hiring research, nearly six in 10 U.S.-based lawyers, or 59 percent, said their law firm or company plans to expand their legal teams in the second half of 2019, up 12 percentage points from the last time the survey was conducted.

More than one-third of lawyers, or 36 percent, anticipate staffing only vacated positions, while two percent said they would neither staff vacated positions nor create new ones.

Only one percent expected staffing reductions.

More than one-quarter of lawyers, 27 percent, predicted litigation will generate the most employment opportunities during the next six months, followed by general business/commercial law, which received 21 percent of the response, and privacy, data security and information law at 15 percent.

Within the litigation specialty, commercial litigation is expected to yield the greatest number of legal jobs, according to 44 percent of lawyers surveyed.
Securities and corporate governance ranked second, with 33 percentg of the respondents expecting to hire in that area, followed by employment law at 31 percent.

Other Research Findings:

• Nearly nine in 10 lawyers (87 percent) said finding skilled legal professionals is somewhat or very challenging.

• Almost half of respondents (47 percent) said that a shortage of qualified candidates is the greatest challenge their law firm/company faces when hiring, up three percentage points from the last time the survey was conducted.

• The top full-time positions being added by law firms/companies in the second half of 2019 are lawyers (80 percent), legal secretaries (60 percent) and paralegals (45 percent).

• Aside from legal knowledge, practice area expertise and industry/sector knowledge are the two most important criteria to employers when hiring lawyers.

• Among those planning to expand their legal teams, 21 percent said that 11-20 percent of the open positions at their law firm/company will be staffed on a
temporary, project or consulting basis. Eighteen percent planned to staff one to 10 percent of vacant roles on an interim basis.

• Three-fourths of lawyers were concerned about losing top performers to other opportunities in the next six months.

• Other than compensation or bonuses, lawyers cited professional development opportunities (33 percent), flexible work arrangements (29 percent) and challenging work or variety of assignments (18 percent) as the top incentives for retaining employees.

“Class action filings, regulatory requirements and cybersecurity challenges continue to grow and are intensifying competition for specialized legal professionals with litigation, compliance and data privacy backgrounds,” said Jamy Sullivan, executive director of Robert Half Legal. “Many law firms and companies are reassessing compensation packages to offer competitive pay and bonuses that in-demand candidates are seeking from prospective employers.”

Law firms and companies also recognize the importance of improving retention strategies, Sullivan added.

“By expanding professional development programs and offering perks to enhance work-life balance,” he said, “employers are better able to stem attrition and boost employee engagement.”

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