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Posted on April 26th, 2007 by gail helen.
Categories: Work, Education, Sponsored Posts.
Growing up, I always felt there were only three legitimate professions — doctor, lawyer, professor. After seeing the stress my parents lived with as cardiologists, and believing that lawyers were usually slaves to convention, to the status quo, I chose to major in English. Perhaps if I’d had more contact with the kind of lawyers that Simmons Jannace & Stagg claim to be, I might have gone to law school instead. The firm has achieved the highest peer review rating by Martindale-Hubbell, which rates legal ability and ethical standards. Their clients include several of the largest companies in the world, including Home Depot, B of A, J.P. Morgan Chase, Kmart, Best Buy, WaMu, Coke, GMAC, Staples, Circuit City, and Foot Locker, among others. These Fortune 500 clients turn to Simmons, Jannace & Stagg for their “expertise and experience,” and because they are “widely recognized as a firm that thinks ‘outside the box.’” They claim their “attorneys are encouraged to approach each case with a fresh perspective and to look for opportunities to resolve conflicts in a cost-efficient and effective way,” including “alternative dispute resolution techniques and negotiations.” Of course, I’d much rather work with James Spader, but these guys sound okay, I guess.
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