I have been tweeting about the Lawyers in Transition Seminar, but I haven’t written about it here. This seminar was created by a great group of people who worked very hard to bring it together in a short period of time. It began with a phone call to me from a co-chair of a law practice management division of a bar association with which my organization has ties.
The call, basically, went like this: Jennifer, can we do a course to help all the attorneys in the Philadelphia area who have found themselves unemployed or underemployed during this difficult time. And can we focus on helping them find jobs, market themselves and learn how to open a solo practice.
I loved the idea right away and said yes. I rarely actually work with this particular bar association, someone else in my organization does, but since I do a lot of law practice management seminars I was the logical choice, and I have a long standing relationship with one of the co-chairs of the division (the person who called me.)
The panel turned out to be a diverse mix of attorneys and other experts who focused on the exact issues my colleague wanted to cover. What was really unique about this seminar is how much my organization subsidized it. We offered the program at a cut rate, probably about half price, to everyone. But to attorneys who are in transition, we offered the program for free.
This program was time-consuming but fun to plan. The faculty were wonderful, and since I love technology I found what they had to say very interesting. And I learned a lot about marketing yourself and handling a career. It was extremely useful.
In addition, the course planners and I encouraged the faculty to be very positive in their presentations. The last email I sent before the program was, please be positive, let the attendees know there good opportunities out there. It was also one of the last things I said to them before the seminar began. They delivered.
The energy of the faculty was wonderful. The energy of the audience was wonderful. The room was packed, about 200 people attended. The Chancellor of the bar came to say a few words, which was a great start to the seminar. At the end of the day I missed my train back home because so many people wanted to talk to the faculty I couldn’t get out of the room until a good 45 minutes after the seminar ended. And I was absolutely thrilled about that. People were excited, invigorated, and I believe, given a lot of hope.
This is exactly why I became involved in CLE. To help my colleagues in the legal profession.
Thanks to those of you involved in the seminar. You did a great job.
Thanks also to those of you who attended. You were wonderful and responsive.
I hope very much that the 200 people who attended the program found it useful. And I hope that when I replay the seminar around the Commonwealth, that other attorneys find it just as useful.
If you attended and have any suggestions about the seminar, please feel free to post them here, or email me.