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How To Become Practical In House Lawyer

 

Becoming a practical in-house lawyer is less about theory and more about business mindset, judgment, and execution. Here’s a clear, step-by-step roadmap used by successful in-house counsel worldwide.

1. Shift your mindset: from law to business

In-house lawyers are not paid to write long memos. They are paid to help the business move forward safely.

What this means in practice:

Think in terms of risk, cost, time, and strategy
Give clear “yes / no / yes but” answers
Understand commercial goals before giving legal advice

Always ask yourself:
What does the business want to achieve, and how can I help them do it legally?

2. Master core in-house legal skills

Focus on areas that companies deal with daily:

Contract drafting and negotiation
NDAs, service agreements, employment contracts, MOUs, SLAs

Corporate and commercial law
Company formation, governance, resolutions, shareholder issues

Employment law
Hiring, termination, disciplinary actions, policies

Compliance and risk management
Regulatory obligations, internal policies, audits

Basic IP knowledge
Trademarks, copyrights, confidentiality, data protection

You don’t need to be the deepest expert, but you must be practical and accurate.

3. Learn to draft, not just review

Many lawyers struggle because they only “review” documents.

To become practical:

Draft contracts from scratch
Create internal templates (NDAs, employment offers, vendor contracts)
Learn fallback clauses and negotiation positions

Tip:
Study real company contracts, not textbook samples.

4. Understand the business model

A strong in-house lawyer knows how the company makes money.

Learn:

Revenue streams
Cost structures
Sales process
Key risks (legal, financial, reputational)

If you don’t understand how the company earns profit, your advice will be theoretical.

5. Communicate like a business professional

Avoid legal jargon.

Instead of:
“There is potential exposure under clause 12 subject to indemnity limitations…”

Say:
“This clause could cost the company money if X happens. I recommend option A because it reduces risk.”

Executives value clarity, not complexity.

6. Build commercial judgment

Practical lawyers know when:

To push back
To accept risk
To escalate
To compromise

Not every risk needs to be eliminated. Some risks are acceptable if the business benefit is high.

This judgment improves with:

Experience
Learning from senior in-house counsel
Reviewing past disputes and mistakes

7. Get real in-house exposure

The fastest way to become practical:

Internship or secondment in a company
Junior in-house role or legal officer role
Work closely with procurement, HR, finance, sales

If you are in a law firm:
Ask to work with corporate clients as if you were internal counsel, not just external advisor.

8. Develop internal value, not billable value

In-house lawyers succeed by:

Preventing problems
Creating efficient processes
Enabling deals
Protecting reputation

Examples:

Creating contract approval workflows
Training staff on legal basics
Reducing dependency on external law firms

9. Think like a problem solver, not a gatekeeper

Bad in-house lawyers block business.
Great in-house lawyers guide business safely.

Always aim to say:
Here is how we can do this safely — not just why it’s risky.

10. Continuous learning (practical, not academic)

Focus your learning on:

Real cases and disputes
Regulatory updates affecting your industry
Contract negotiation strategies
Internal investigations and compliance trends

Avoid spending too much time on purely academic law.