NEW PROVIDENCE, N.J. & NEWTOWN SQUARE, Pa.–LAWFUEL Law Job Alerts -…

NEW PROVIDENCE, N.J. & NEWTOWN SQUARE, Pa.–LAWFUEL Law Job Alerts – Sign Up at LawFuel.com –The 2006 Altman Weil Law Department Compensation Benchmarking Survey of U.S. corporate law departments has just been released. The survey, published in partnership with LexisNexis® Martindale-Hubbell®, shows base salaries up across the board for in-house lawyers in 2006.

“Corporations have two tools to set in-house cash compensation – guaranteed base salary and at-risk, performance-based bonus dollars,” noted Altman Weil principal James S. Wilber. “Each year we see a balancing act between these two components. Last year, salaries rose slightly, augmented by big bonuses. This year, we’re seeing bigger salary increases reflecting greater corporate confidence, along with a mixed bag of bonus levels which seem designed to catch up some of the more junior in-house positions that were overlooked in past years.”

“Increased mobility between law firms and law departments forces corporations to compensate more competitively in the war for talent, especially at the senior level,” remarked Barry Solomon, Esq., Vice President and General Manager of LexisNexis Martindale-Hubbell. “As a result, corporations will reward their top law department officers first, and only later adjust compensation for junior managers and staff lawyers.”

Base Salaries Rise

Median salaries for all positions in law departments increased between 2.2% and 9.5% in 2006. Chief Legal Officer (CLO) salaries were up 8% and Division General Counsel (mid-level management lawyers) took home 7.1% more. Lawyers in non-management positions also saw increases, with High Level Specialists up 9.5%, Senior Attorneys (non-managers with eight or more years experience) up 8.5% and Staff Attorneys (attorneys with at least one year of experience) reporting an increase of 3.5%. Recent graduates reported a modest 2.2% raise.

All trend comparisons are drawn from a super-group of over 200 law departments that have participated in the survey over sequential years.

The survey reports national median salary for Chief Legal Officers in 2006 at $280,000. The Senior Attorney position drew $140,000, while a new law school graduate earned a starting salary of $65,000.

Bonuses a Mixed Bag

Bonuses were up across the board for non-management positions in law departments – in some instances dramatically. Senior Attorneys reported bonus increases of 14.4% while more junior Attorneys and Staff Attorneys received bonus increases of 62.5% and 71% respectively. In the management ranks, Division General Counsel bonuses went up 20.29% and Managing Attorneys 25.32%. Chief Legal Officers and their Deputies received bonuses that were down from the prior year.

The national median bonus for Chief Legal Officers was $132,000, according to the Survey. Division General Counsel received $104,000 in bonus dollars, and Senior Attorneys took home a $29,200 bonus.

Stock Options

Stock options for Chief Legal Officers had a median fair market value of $919,400 in 2006, more than twice the same group’s’ total cash compensation. Deputy CLOs received $230,100 in stock options, Senior Attorneys $87,900 in options, and Staff Attorneys $24,700.

Other Variables Affect Compensation

Size of law department is a key factor in the top officer compensation. Chief Legal Officers in departments with over 25 lawyers took home 88.9% more than the national median in total cash compensation. Deputy CLOs in large law departments earned 57.5% more than the national median.

The survey reveals a significant difference in CLO compensation by industry. Median total cash compensation for CLOs in the Information / Telecommunications sector was 75% more that their colleagues in the Service sector and 39.9% more in total cash compensation than their peers nationally.

In non-management positions, practice specialty is also a significant differentiator. High Level Specialists with a Mergers & Acquisitions specialty earn top dollar, 23.8% more than the national median in total cash compensation. For Senior Attorneys and Attorneys (with four-plus years experience), a Patents specialty is the most lucrative, at 22% and 33% above the national norms, respectively.

Survey Methodology

The complete Law Department Compensation Benchmarking Survey, 2006 edition contains data from 277 law departments providing compensation data for 6,255 lawyers. Information on an additional 41 one-lawyer departments is included separately.

The Survey reports data on nine in-house positions: Chief Legal Officer, Deputy Chief Legal Officer, Division General Counsel, Managing Attorney, High Level Specialist, Senior Attorney, Attorney, Staff Attorney and recent law school graduate. Data are analyzed by industry, company size (revenue and employees), law department size, region, metropolitan area, years of experience and other key parameters. Data are reported as of March 1, 2006.

Compensation trend analyses, that compare 2006 survey results to 2005 survey results, utilize a unique subset of participants. Only companies with data submissions in both years are analyzed to determine the percentage change between years.

About Altman Weil

Founded in 1970, Altman Weil, Inc. (www.altmanweil.com) provides management consulting services to law firms, law departments, government legal offices, and legal vendors throughout North American, Latin America, the U.K. and Europe. The firm is independently owned by its professional consultants who have backgrounds in law, industry, finance, marketing administration and government. Altman Weil offers a broad range of consulting services, including strategy, management, governance, M&A, compensation, marketing, finance, organization and training.

Altman Weil Publications, Inc. (www.altmanweilpubs.com), a subsidiary of Altman Weil, Inc., has collected and published management information for law firms and corporate law departments for over thirty years. The company conducts market research and publishes numerous surveys of the legal profession including the Law Department Metrics Benchmarking Survey, the Paralegal Compensation Survey and the Survey of Law Firm Economics. Altman Weil surveys are the industry standard and are often utilized in courtroom expert testimony.

About LexisNexis

LexisNexis® (www.lexisnexis.com) is a leading provider of information and services solutions, including its flagship Web-based Lexis® and Nexis® research services, to a wide range of professionals in the legal, risk management, corporate, government, law enforcement, accounting and academic markets. A member of Reed Elsevier Group plc (NYSE:ENL)(NYSE:RUK) (www.reedelsevier.com), LexisNexis serves customers in 100 countries with 13,000 employees worldwide.

LexisNexis Martindale-Hubbell (www.martindale.com) provides client development solutions for the legal profession. An integral part of Martindale-Hubbell’s service to the legal community is its Peer Review Rating system, which evaluates lawyers and law firms in the U.S. and Canada based on peer review. Peer Review Ratings attest to a lawyer’s legal ability and professional ethics, and reflect the confidential opinions of members of the Bar and Judiciary. The Martindale-Hubbell database of more than 1 million lawyers and law firms, accessible at www.martindale.com and www.lawyers.com, is the number-one lawyer directory on the Internet (as measured by Nielsen//NetRatings). The company provides lawyers, business executives and consumers with detailed information to help them identify, evaluate and select legal counsel.

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