I'm trying to figure out what type of career to pursue. My goal is to be location independent and earn a good salary.
I applied to several law schools and have been offered scholarships for almost all my tuition. Though I have the grades to be admitted to a top 10 law school in the US, I refuse to take on any significant amount of debt.
I have absolutely no interest in slaving away in some corporate law firm to pay back 200k in debt, and that is if im lucky enough to land a job in today's economy. What a nightmare. I also don't want to be trapped in the dystopian hell that has become the anglosphere.
Instead i want something different,
my goal is simple: Location Independent Lawyer. I just want to be able to charge 30-80$ for legal work I can do online.
Im wondering if anyone has tried or knows of anyone who has done virtual lawyering?
Of course, this is completely new and largely untested strategy for location independent income. But it makes perfect sense because lawyers deal 100% in intangible goods. Like a programmer or web developer, there is no physical reason, provided that the person is trained in the said state and knows the law, cant do the work online. All the books and cases are available online now a days.
The obstacles are:
(1) BAR requirements to maintain residency and office in the said state.
(I know there was a recent decision in NY which found it unconstitutional for NY to force residency requirements on NY Lawyers. any other states like this?)
(2) BAR requirements to ensure confidentiality. will have to invest in good encryption technology no doubt. blackberry server would probably suffice.
(3) Existing Law firms not being okay with the location independence, and basically forcing you to stay if you want to keep be a lawyer at the firm which you need to gain some experience (I think starting my own firm is the way to go).
(4) Earning clients trust while abroad, I think this can be remedied by charging drastically less $$.
(5) Taxes, who gets to collect tax? the state where I am practicing law or The state or the place where I happen to be living.?
(6) Keeping student loans to a minimum to avoid debt slave situation.
My plan right now is to basically do the opposite of what everyone else is doing right now in law school to avoid being outsourced (focusing on pleading, going to court, etc...). I will focus on precisely everything that can be outsourced, so that I can ultimately outsource myself.
good or stupid idea? If anyone knows or has any experience in virtual lawyering, it would be gold.
I applied to several law schools and have been offered scholarships for almost all my tuition. Though I have the grades to be admitted to a top 10 law school in the US, I refuse to take on any significant amount of debt.
I have absolutely no interest in slaving away in some corporate law firm to pay back 200k in debt, and that is if im lucky enough to land a job in today's economy. What a nightmare. I also don't want to be trapped in the dystopian hell that has become the anglosphere.
Instead i want something different,
my goal is simple: Location Independent Lawyer. I just want to be able to charge 30-80$ for legal work I can do online.
Im wondering if anyone has tried or knows of anyone who has done virtual lawyering?
Of course, this is completely new and largely untested strategy for location independent income. But it makes perfect sense because lawyers deal 100% in intangible goods. Like a programmer or web developer, there is no physical reason, provided that the person is trained in the said state and knows the law, cant do the work online. All the books and cases are available online now a days.
The obstacles are:
(1) BAR requirements to maintain residency and office in the said state.
(I know there was a recent decision in NY which found it unconstitutional for NY to force residency requirements on NY Lawyers. any other states like this?)
(2) BAR requirements to ensure confidentiality. will have to invest in good encryption technology no doubt. blackberry server would probably suffice.
(3) Existing Law firms not being okay with the location independence, and basically forcing you to stay if you want to keep be a lawyer at the firm which you need to gain some experience (I think starting my own firm is the way to go).
(4) Earning clients trust while abroad, I think this can be remedied by charging drastically less $$.
(5) Taxes, who gets to collect tax? the state where I am practicing law or The state or the place where I happen to be living.?
(6) Keeping student loans to a minimum to avoid debt slave situation.
My plan right now is to basically do the opposite of what everyone else is doing right now in law school to avoid being outsourced (focusing on pleading, going to court, etc...). I will focus on precisely everything that can be outsourced, so that I can ultimately outsource myself.
good or stupid idea? If anyone knows or has any experience in virtual lawyering, it would be gold.