They all have the same salary and the same website template. Here's what's actually different.
BigLaw Bear · 3 min read

From the outside, BigLaw firms look interchangeable. Same salaries, same blue-chip clients, same stock photos of diverse associates staring at laptops. But firms are meaningfully different in ways that will affect your daily life. You just have to know where to look.
This is the single biggest differentiator. Some firms are litigation powerhouses. Others are built around M&A and private equity. Some have dominant regulatory practices. The practice mix determines what kind of work dominates the firm, which clients they attract, and what the culture feels like.
A firm where 60% of revenue comes from corporate transactional work has a fundamentally different rhythm than a firm built on complex litigation. Check the firm directory to compare practice area strengths side by side.
An 800-lawyer firm and a 3,000-lawyer firm operate differently. Larger firms tend to have more formal structures, more specialization, and more institutional clients. Smaller BigLaw firms often offer broader exposure earlier and a less hierarchical culture.
Our post on whether firm size matters digs deeper into this.
Where a firm was founded still shapes its identity. A firm headquartered in New York has a different culture than one based in Chicago, DC, or Texas, even if they all have offices everywhere. The headquarters city usually gets the most resources, the biggest deals, and the most partnership opportunities.
How a firm pays its partners affects you as an associate more than you'd think. Lockstep firms (everyone at the same level earns the same) tend to be more collaborative. Eat-what-you-kill firms tend to be more entrepreneurial but also more competitive internally.
You won't find this on the firm's website, but it's discussed on legal industry forums and sometimes on platforms like Chambers Associate.
Some firms run formal training academies with structured curricula. Others believe in learning by doing. Neither approach is wrong, but they suit different personalities. If you want mentorship and guardrails, look for firms with strong associate development programs. If you prefer autonomy, a platform firm might be a better fit.
This one's harder to measure but worth investigating. Chambers Associate publishes associate satisfaction surveys. You can also look at attrition patterns, firms where associates leave quickly often have systemic problems.
The firms that look identical from the outside are often quite different once you start paying attention. The key is knowing which differences matter to you.
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