I'm going to apologise in advance if this isn't the right forum to be on but it seems like a very knowledgeable place! For context nothing about my educational background, situation or ambitions are the norm for this site; I don't have an LLB or PGDL; I'm a mature "career changer/not changer" and I have no desire whatsoever to work in a law firm, let alone one in the magic circle or silver circle. However, I am trying to navigate a path from my current role to that of an in-house legal counsel.
Allow me to explain as succinctly as I can! I am a company secretary and I quite like my job but increasingly people like me are getting pushed out by people who are lawyers. Many years ago I did a History degree and then I did the ICSA exams because back in the early 2000s, that is the kind of thing you did if you wanted to be a company secretary. However, quite soon after that the financial crash happened and in that carnage there was less legal work around, the lawyers started entering the cosec profession and I found it harder and harder to progress. However, there was plenty of compliance work in the banking sector. So for a decade, I happily did that instead, doing intricate work reviewing and summarising regulatory change and supporting various parts of the bank to implement the changes. Until I hit the "lawyer's only ceiling" in that profession too. I managed to eventually get a decent opening into the company secretarial world based on my compliance experience but I'm generally excluded from all the most interesting listed work because of my background.
To prove a point (that company secretaries don't need a law degree to understand the law), last year I did SQE 1. Compared to ICSA/CGI, it really wasn't a very hard qualification to get. I suspect it's also true that an LLB or a GDL is also much harder to achieve than SQE 1. And so to my dilemma.
With my background in financial regulation, my years of experience as a company secretary and now gaining SQE 1 combined with the fact that I genuinely enjoy this intellectual challenge, my question is whether there is any path towards eventually becoming the general counsel in a business without having to work for a law firm first? I know the mechanics of the SQE allow it - all sorts can pass as legal experience these days - but my question is more whether it is achievable in practice and if so how?
In particular, some questions I have are:
1) If I complete both parts of the SQE, is there any remaining merit in doing an LLB or GDL? Is there any danger in not doing so?
2) Similarly, would getting a relevant LLM be in anyway useful and if I was really keen to avoid doing an LLB or GDL (and I really am!) could an LLM be a good substitute to show I can cope with the academic side of the profession?
3) Are there any other particular skills in-house firms want that are unique to them?
Allow me to explain as succinctly as I can! I am a company secretary and I quite like my job but increasingly people like me are getting pushed out by people who are lawyers. Many years ago I did a History degree and then I did the ICSA exams because back in the early 2000s, that is the kind of thing you did if you wanted to be a company secretary. However, quite soon after that the financial crash happened and in that carnage there was less legal work around, the lawyers started entering the cosec profession and I found it harder and harder to progress. However, there was plenty of compliance work in the banking sector. So for a decade, I happily did that instead, doing intricate work reviewing and summarising regulatory change and supporting various parts of the bank to implement the changes. Until I hit the "lawyer's only ceiling" in that profession too. I managed to eventually get a decent opening into the company secretarial world based on my compliance experience but I'm generally excluded from all the most interesting listed work because of my background.
To prove a point (that company secretaries don't need a law degree to understand the law), last year I did SQE 1. Compared to ICSA/CGI, it really wasn't a very hard qualification to get. I suspect it's also true that an LLB or a GDL is also much harder to achieve than SQE 1. And so to my dilemma.
With my background in financial regulation, my years of experience as a company secretary and now gaining SQE 1 combined with the fact that I genuinely enjoy this intellectual challenge, my question is whether there is any path towards eventually becoming the general counsel in a business without having to work for a law firm first? I know the mechanics of the SQE allow it - all sorts can pass as legal experience these days - but my question is more whether it is achievable in practice and if so how?
In particular, some questions I have are:
1) If I complete both parts of the SQE, is there any remaining merit in doing an LLB or GDL? Is there any danger in not doing so?
2) Similarly, would getting a relevant LLM be in anyway useful and if I was really keen to avoid doing an LLB or GDL (and I really am!) could an LLM be a good substitute to show I can cope with the academic side of the profession?
3) Are there any other particular skills in-house firms want that are unique to them?