As lawyers continue to debate about the continued use of billable hours, its effects on women legal professionals are becoming more apparent. This is only part of a larger issue of inequalities women face in the legal industry. According to a 2022 Legal Profile by the American Bar Association (ABA), it found that 38% of all lawyers are women. But while the numbers are inching up, less than 30% of women are in leadership roles at law firms.
On top of all of this, there’s the gender pay gap. It’s well known that women lawyers are being paid less than men. Women make only 83 cents compared to a man's dollar. When you add in the number of billable hours and non-billable hours women must work (which they’re not compensated for), especially during the pandemic, the numbers are staggering. These are among the many reasons attrition rates among women in law are high.
Let’s take a deeper look as to why women are leaving Big Law and how billable hours may play a role in it, as well as what steps firms can take to ensure the success of their women employees.
Women lawyers face a number of obstacles in their careers. They often have to navigate highly competitive, toxic environments that favor their male colleagues. In the ABA’s report, In Their Own Words: Experienced Women Explain Why They Are Leaving Their Firms and the Profession, women respondents and interviewees report several incidents of sexist and racist behavior in the workplace. Many of these incidents involve ignorant assumptions made by their male employers and associates about their family responsibilities. Women of color face the worst biases, from being mistaken for holding entry-level positions such as administrative staff to having coworkers feel threatened by their success.
Due to such discrimination, women feel isolated in what often seems like a “boys’ club” at their law firms. The lack of representation of women in higher-up positions doesn’t help either. According to research conducted by Law.com surveying the top U.K. law firms, women make up over 58 percent of trainees compared to men. This number starts to fall after they reach three years PQE, ultimately dropping dramatically to 27 percent once they hit partner level. If women are not able to see someone like them in top roles and must overcome greater hurdles to get there, then it’s no surprise why retention rates among them are so low.
In an already stressful environment, women in Big Law are often given a heavy workload, both at work and at home. It’s work that they’re not always compensated for, made worse by the gender pay gap. In a 2021 McKinsey report, women took on extra hours of work before and during the pandemic, in addition to their normal job responsibilities. However, tackling more tasks doesn’t necessarily result in promotions, nor does it lead to salary increases.
So how do billable hours play into this? For starters, the billable hour model has been utilized over the years as a way to measure success at law firms. The more hours a lawyer can bill, the greater the chance they’re seen as successful. However, it’s been argued that this model can have negative impacts on lawyers, particularly women. In comparison to men, women are disproportionately impacted due to multiple factors, with family responsibilities being cited the most. Due to this, many women find themselves having to make schedule adjustments or change careers/career paths altogether.
Along with having to maintain billable hours, women are often tasked with work outside of what’s billable in order to receive compensation. Unfortunately, not all of this work is compensated, nor is it always seen as valuable by law firms. In her article for Bloomberg Law, Akima Paul Lambert, a litigation partner at Hogen Lovells in London, writes that while her firm recognized the value in the extra work she did, other firms that she polled did not. This is troubling, as internal efforts benefit firms and other legal organizations greatly.
Women contribute tremendously to the legal industry. Here are just some ways that firms can create more fair standards for their women employees: