Many lawyers can tell you about a moment in their law school career when, sitting in class, they dreamed what it would be like to have their own law firm, with their name on the top of the stationery and as synonymous with the law as the likes of Skadden, Cravath and Proskauer. For some it was constitutional law and for others it was legal writing.

Typically when they picture starting a firm it is seven to 10 years into their legal career, after clerking for a judge and working at a large law firm, learning and honing their craft.

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