Work Somewhere Else - Anonymous employee Jackson Lewis Employee Review

1.0
20 Nov 2023
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Benefits, 401k, some friendly staff.

Cons

Jackson Lewis Los Angeles is so poorly managed. Support staff receives zero support and are overworked and underpaid. Lots of wasted talent and mistreated employees. Bonuses are only given to attorneys and upper management, and any employee who meets the impossible qualifications for the bonus is given several reasons why they do not qualify, including reasons that were never addressed in any review, meeting, etc. Management and attorneys never address employee concerns, yet constantly harp on employees for not meeting billable hour requirements, or managing their impossible-to-manage workloads. Secretaries are expected to support 4-5 attorneys at once and provide support to any other attorney that might need it. The office administrators never last, they either quit or are fired after creating inappropriate relationships with staff members and playing favorites. This place is a disaster and has been for several years. It is very unfortunate because there are a lot of very capable and talented employees wasting away at Jackson Lewis. There is no room for growth and if an employee expresses interest in advancing in their career they are shot down with "issues in their performance".

Explore other reviews about Jackson Lewis

5.0
4 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Plenty of resources, great attorneys and staff, focused on development and growth

Cons

Billable hours that are cut need to be made up.

1.0
9 Feb 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Remote work was the standard while I was there.

Cons

The culture toward non-attorney staff is deeply problematic. Non-attorneys are treated as expendable, overworked, and routinely disrespected by attorneys and management. Expectations are extreme and often unrealistic, with little regard for workload, boundaries, or basic professional courtesy. Training and onboarding are virtually nonexistent. Staff are expected to perform complex work with no meaningful guidance or institutional support, then blamed or punished when inevitable issues arise. Rather than coaching or problem-solving, management relies on a punitive, hostile approach. In my case, my management lacked the knowledge and experience required to perform or even fully understand the work they were overseeing, yet imposed rigid and unrealistic expectations on staff. This created an environment where employees were set up to fail and then disciplined for it. Questions or requests for clarification were not welcomed and were often treated as shortcomings rather than reasonable attempts to do the job correctly. The overwork is severe, particularly for non-attorney staff, with long hours treated as a baseline expectation rather than an exception. There is little acknowledgment of burnout, no meaningful support systems, and no genuine effort to improve conditions. Attorneys, by and large, do not view non-attorney staff as colleagues, but as tools to absorb pressure and blame. Overall This may be a tolerable environment for attorneys, but for non-attorney staff it is an unhealthy and demoralizing workplace. I would strongly caution anyone considering a non-attorney staff role here to think carefully before accepting an offer.

6
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