Earlier this month the National Association for Law Placement (NALP) released its Perspectives on 2021 Law Student Recruiting report describing a surge in legal recruiting. The coupling of last year’s conservative hiring stance with strong industry-wide financial performance and a rebound in demand for legal services, has brought a resurgence in law firms’ hiring. James Leipold, NALP’s Executive Director, writes in the report that, “Law firms have been scrambling for talent at both the lateral and entry levels. As a result, recruiting activity in 2021 was robust, with offer rates for summer spots reaching their highest mark since 2007.”
Among second-year students with summer associate positions at law firms, 97 percent received offers for full-time associate positions post-graduation, and 89 percent—an all-time high— accepted the offers. Similarly, among first-year summer associates, 93 percent received an offer to return for a second summer and 72 percent accepted the offer. Additionally, in the fall, 53 percent of law schools reported an increase of more than ten percent in the number of firms participating in on-campus recruiting (in-person or virtual) for summer 2022 positions for second year students, compared to last year. And 73 percent of law firms reported that they made more offers for summer associate positions for this summer compared to last.
When it comes to entry into big law firms, prospective law students should review Law.com’s annual ranking of “go-to law schools,” which ranks schools according to the percentage of 2021 graduates that accepted associate positions at the 100 largest law firms (based on number of attorneys).
The top ten schools include: Columbia (64 percent), University of Pennsylvania (60 percent), Cornell (56 percent), Northwestern (52 percent), Duke (51 percent), NYU (51 percent), UVA (48 percent), UC Berkeley (45 percent), University of Chicago (45 percent), and Harvard (41 percent). While the top schools have seen some movement, notably Duke narrowly overtaking NYU for a spot within the top five, Columbia has been the top feeder into big law firms for the past nine years. Law.com’s article does note that the ranking excludes clerkships, which likely explains the absence of Stanford and Yale in the top ten. In addition to the go-to law school rankings for big firms, Law.com also publishes a list of “Firm Favorites” that can provide valuable insight into those law schools firms recruit most heavily from.