Corporate work is not just for big firms anymore.
A growing number of solo corporate attorneys and small corporate boutiques have emerged in the last two years to fill what they see as a gap in the Philadelphia legal market.
A growing number of solo corporate attorneys and small corporate boutiques have emerged in the last two years to fill what they see as a gap in the Philadelphia legal market. Solo corporate attorney Keith S. Marlowe says that especially since the recession, Philadelphia has seen more corporate attorneys with large-firm and in-house pedigrees venturing out on their own or in very small groups to attract business from smaller private companies and startups and to capture some work normally reserved for megafirms.
April 14, 2010 at 12:00 AM
1 minute read
The original version of this story was published on Law.Com
Corporate work is not just for big firms anymore.
A growing number of solo corporate attorneys and small corporate boutiques have emerged in the last two years to fill what they see as a gap in the Philadelphia legal market.
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