Illustration by Scott Bakal
They've endured a recession, layoffs, deferments, secondments, salary freezes, and even the loss of their spring bonuses. And yet, midlevel associates at the country's biggest law firms are happier with their jobs than they've been in years, according to our annual associates survey. The rising satisfaction level among midlevels showed up in almost every facet of this year's edition of our annual 85-question survey. Fifty-seven percent of respondents, for instance, described their firms as appropriately staffed, a 7 percent increase from 2011. Seventy-nine percent described their workload as manageable, a 2 percent gain over last year. Ninety-two percent said that if they had the choice to make again, they would again choose to come to their firms, a 2 percent increase from a year ago. Questions about how clearly firms communicate what it takes to make partner, training, and firms' openness about finances showed big year-to-year gains. The bottom line, according to one legal recruiter: "I think that this group of midlevel associates realizes that any gripes they may continue to have have less to do with any recession-related changes and more to do with whether Big Law fits into the lifestyle they want."
Previous Associates Survey coverage :: 2011 | 2010 | 2009 | 2008 | 2007
THE FEATURES
Their profession may be full of darkness and uncertainty, but midlevel associates at the nation's largest law firms are more content than they've been in years.
Year after year, a handful of firms do well on our associates survey. What's their secret?
A look at which firms on this year's survey rose the highest compared to last yearand which ones fell the furthest.
San Diego, Los Angeles, and Orange County take three of the top five spots when viewing midlevel satisfaction survey by market.
In a year when firms made few flashy technological advances, midlevel satisfaction stalls.
A note on how we tabulate the scores and rankings for our annual survey.














