Welcome to my LinkedIn archive.
Categories: Dear 1L, Dear 2L, Legal Writing
By Year: 2026, 2025, 2024, 2023, 2022, 2021
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Search by word to find what I’ve written on the topic of your choosing!
LinkedIn is boring
here’s a radical idea—for law students, but all legal peeps might care—
⬇️
start following Jillian Richardson 👋and Nick Power
try it for kicks
because i predict your time on linkedin will get more fun fast
7 Things to do the summer before law school:
When I started helping law students 4 years ago I tried to read everything I could to learn. My daughter was applying to law school at the time, too, so I was really motivated. I asked for advice from lawyers on LinkedIn: what should she do to prepare?
Here are the top 7 tips I’ve distilled for you:
1️⃣ Enjoy it!
Is OCI Dead?
(And would that be good or bad?)
👉 Only 24% of 1Ls got their summer job offers through OCI last year!
That’s per a new report from the National Ass’n for Law Placement (NALP).
The report says instead of OCI, it’s been these 3 routes by which most 1Ls (56%) got offers:
♥️❤️ Dear 1L: Get my NEW template—IRAC essay
Dear 1L,
I created a new IRAC template for you.
(FYI: This is NOT in my book.)
The template shows how I structured my exam essays for EVERY course.
It worked on 3 winning bar exams, too.
In 1993, I got the lowest grade of my life during law school.
It was in the 1L legal writing course, and it was devastating to both my confidence and my GPA.
—I wasn’t prepared.
—I had no guide or mentor to help me.
—I experienced the worst academic time of my life.
I never want anyone else to have to endure the same.
Lawyers on LinkedIn sure do bash law schools a lot.
“They don’t teach students the practical skills to be a ‘real’ lawyer.”
Well, that is true in part, but I’ve got a different take when it comes to one skill:
That skill is legal analysis.
Here, it’s the law schools getting it right, and, too often, the “real” lawyers getting it wrong.
Dear 1L, Be careful with the verb “find.”
Do not use it to describe a court’s holdings in your brief this spring. “Find” and “hold” mean very different things.
“But Amanda,” you say, “many lawyers—even judges—use ‘find’ generically all the time to describe the actions courts take.”
—I know. You are right about that. But that does not make using “find” right.
Dear 3L, This is a mental-health check-in. Everyone assumes it’s the 1Ls with the most stress. But my 3L almost killed me.
On the outside, I seemed to have it all together:
—a top GPA,
—a job lined up for fall, and
—a law review Note ready to publish.
What could I be stressed about?
As it turned out, a lot.
We ought to do a better job explaining what it means to “take ownership” as an associate.
By the time you’re a mid-level associate, you’ve put in some tough time—
You’ve endured the early years of 0% control over your schedule.
—You’ve canceled social plans;
—you’ve sacrificed umpteen weekends; and
Dear 1L, When should the word “court” be capitalized?
Here are the rules, and I’ve also attached a chart you can save, print, and pin on your wall.*
RULES:
In addition to capitalizing the word “court” whenever you write out its full, formal name (obviously), only 3 other situations require or permit you to capitalize that word:
How a Pre-law Student Should Start on LinkedIn—
It’s the winter before you start law school.
You’re excited but nervous.
You’re not really sure what to expect.
You want to be prepared.
You want to do the best you can.
Dear Sir Mark C. Fava,
Your book is ridiculously good. I got up through page xiv and 5 and then died. I had to stop reading and pen this note.
No. 1️⃣: Your book is exceptionally written. Let me say that again. Your book is exceptionally written.
That is the highest possible praise I, Amanda Dealy Haverstick, could possibly say to an author.
Here’s a story I can’t stop thinking about: A job posting lists 10 qualifications.
A woman sees it & checks 9 of 10.
“I’m not qualified. I’ll never get it,” she tells herself.
—She slinks away and doesn’t apply.
A man comes across the same job listing.
He reads the 10 qualifications & checks off 3.
Should you start an email newsletter?
Perhaps you prefer the hand-written letter by snail mail.
We sure don’t get them often enough these days.
A good one can really make your day.
The email newsletter?
We get too many of them these days.
Lawyers—You tell me you want to “leverage” LinkedIn.
You’re making 3 big mistakes.
Here’s why, how you can fix them, and
some cool follow suggestions:
1️⃣ MISTAKE No. 1: You post with a FIREWALL.
You post an article you’ve written.
We can’t read it.