Welcome to my LinkedIn archive.
Categories: Dear 1L, Dear 2L, Legal Writing
By Year: 2026, 2025, 2024, 2023, 2022, 2021
Follow me on LinkedIn
Search by word to find what I’ve written on the topic of your choosing!
This is for law students who want to network on LinkedIn. It answers the question you asked,
What’s the difference between a connection and a follower?
🔹 When you “connect” with someone, it’s a 2-way relationship:
—You will show up in their network count (connections + followers)
—They will show up in yours
This post is for those taking the bar exam next week.
I’ve been in your position 3 times:
Every time, it was sheer hell.
The volume of material was prohibitive.
Unprecedented.
Abnormal, even.
And ohhhh, soooo painfully boring. 🥱
It’s not every day you get someone as renowned as Ross Guberman to feature your book in a LinkedIn post.
But yesterday, this happened: [see photo]
I truly am both humbled and honored.
I have always looked up to Ross and been in such reverence of his life work.
—Ross’s book, Point Made, is nothing short of extraordinary. I learn something new from it every time I read.
Dear Legal Writer: Before you give that partner the draft you’ve been slaving over, make sure you fix these WORDY ways to say “when”:
📍 At this point in time
✅ “Currently” is better
*
📍 At the present time
✅ “Now” is better
How to use “this” & “that” in legal writing
Dear Legal Writer,
Back when I was drafting briefs all the time, I often faced a “this” vs. “that” dilemma:
—It came up most when I needed to describe an argument made by the other side before I could explain that the argument didn’t work.
Dear 2L, Here are 10 best practices for your upcoming job interviews.
👉 Included is my favorite best pre-interview tip: Treat interviews like you did your recent oral argument.
—Get ready with 2-4 stories or past events that showcase your best attributes, just like you prepared 2-4 legal points to make about your case.
Three years ago, I started writing to 1Ls on LinkedIn.
It was Sept 2021–
very much still in the pandemic.
My initial posts were titled, “1L TIP TODAY,” and while they did not do too well, they started me on a weekly posting schedule.
Gradually, more and more 1Ls caught on.
Dear Legal Writer: Try to focus your “rule statements” around what one party must SHOW, as opposed to what condition must “exist” or “be shown.”
Here are 3 examples:
1️⃣
❌ Instead of:
"For a claim of negligence to be successful, it must be shown that a duty of care existed."
Dear 2L, If the job search isn’t going well through OCI so far, please don’t despair, but do be ready to pivot before it’s too late.
Here’s a recap of what’s happening plus some new thoughts for you.
⬇️
Things started out rough when BigLaw pulled the rug out.
🔸 Several prestigious firms:
I’m thrilled to report:
A most unexpected eventuality:
My book’s just hit #1 in the “Law” category!
Now, I’m not so naive.
Nothing’s guaranteed,
The rank is just for one day.
I’m up against a big corporation today.
My book came out on Amazon, but I’m panicked that no one will focus on it,
—> which will cause Amazon to bury it in their search results.
I’m just me here.
—I have no publisher or big team,
—I fear that I’m running out of steam.
But I REALLY believe the book will help so many new law students.
Dear 1L: Don't Be Part of the 95%.
I can’t stop thinking about this statistic:
▪️ Studies say 95% of 1Ls predict they’ll make the top half of their class.
While I love the optimism, unfortunately, the math doesn’t add: it’s statistically impossible.
Fortunately, though, there is a statistic you CAN control:
Dear 1L, You want to network with lawyers on LinkedIn, but you don’t want to sound stupid.
You also aren’t sure what to say.
Here are some things to avoid and some guidelines on what to say:
🔴 PHRASES THAT HAVE LANDED FLAT:
🔻 “I ‘noticed’ that you practice __ law.”
♥️♥️ 𝐃𝐄𝐀𝐑 𝟏𝐋 — the BOOK — is live on Amazon!!! ♥️♥️
Kindle: https://lnkd.in/gecBqjGd
Paperback: https://lnkd.in/gJHmkWKs
Both versions will “publish” in 4 DAYS:
👉 Tues, June 25, 2024
Order TODAY to lock in promotion-week pricing!
4 Ways to Cut Words Without Cutting Substance
Monkey see. Monkey do?
Take 4 sentence-snippers to the zoo:
🔪 “there are”
“Four monkeys play at the zoo today.”
—is shorter than—
“There are four monkeys playing at the zoo today.”