San Francisco rent is so expensive that a law firm bought a $3 million plane to
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Date: December 12th, 2017 1:07 AM Author: Big-titted twinkling uncleanness
San Francisco rent is so expensive that a law firm bought a $3 million plane to fly its people in from Texas instead of having them live there
Tanza Loudenback
Dec. 6, 2017, 8:25 AM 192,603
private jet
"Rent is so high they can't even afford a car," a partner at Patterson and Sheridan told The New York Times. Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
San Francisco's median rent is $4,450, nearly three times that in Houston.
Instead of hiring expensive talent in the Bay Area, one Houston-based law firm flies its lawyers in on a private jet once a month to meet with clients.
The firm uses the jet — which costs $2,500 an hour to operate — as a tool for recruiting top talent.
Rent and home prices in the Bay Area are so high that one Houston-based law firm is using an alternative to hiring expensive local talent: a private jet.
Patterson and Sheridan, an intellectual-property law firm headquartered in Houston, bought a nine-seat plane to shuttle its patent lawyers to clients in the Bay Area once a month.
Though the jet cost $3 million, the Houston Chronicle's L.M. Sixel reports, it's cheaper than hiring local lawyers, and even less expensive than relocating the Texas lawyers with business in Silicon Valley to the area.
"The young people that we want to hire out there have high expectations that are hard to meet," Bruce Patterson, a partner at the firm, told The New York Times. "Rent is so high they can't even afford a car."
According to Zillow, the median rent in San Francisco is $4,450, while the median home price is just under $1.2 million. Rent in San Jose, a nearby city popular among Silicon Valley workers, while lower, is still more than double the median rent in Houston.
Each flight for the firm costs about $1,900 a passenger — adding up to $2,500 an hour in operating costs — but since the lawyers are working in-flight, the three-to-four-hour ride is billable, the Chronicle described Todd Patterson, a managing partner, as saying. Plus, private flights protect any confidential work and save the firm's lawyers about 36 collective hours they would spend arriving early, waiting in security, and checking bags on a commercial flight.
The firm says it's "still able to offer companies and inventors lower costs because most of the patent work is done in Houston, where commercial real estate is 43% cheaper, salaries 52% lower, and competition for technical talent far less fierce," according to Sixel, who rode on the jet last summer while reporting the story.
"We fly it full," Patterson said. "It's not a luxury item."
It's also "a selling point to recruit young lawyers" who want to work with top tech companies but can't afford Silicon Valley's cost of living, Sixel reported. The firm's frequent visits to California have also brought in new clients including Intuit, Western Digital, and Cavendish Kinetics.
Perhaps some companies looking for talent in Los Angeles, Silicon Valley's neighbor to the south, could benefit from this strategy.
A report from the University of Southern California and the Los Angeles Business Council published earlier this year found that exorbitant housing costs in Los Angeles were inhibiting employers from attracting "high performers" or top talent to their companies.
About 60% of the employers surveyed said Los Angeles' high cost of living affects employee retention, with 75% naming housing costs as a specific concern. And nearly all said they viewed high housing costs as a barrier to hiring new mid- and upper-level employees.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3825645&forum_id=2#34895939) |
Date: December 12th, 2017 1:13 AM Author: crawly razzle-dazzle athletic conference
"but since the lawyers are working in-flight, the three-to-four-hour ride is billable, the Chronicle described Todd Patterson, a managing partner, as saying."
Jesus christ.
Also, mid and "high" level employees can't even afford a place to LIVE.
Meanwhile that dude you went to middle school with who broke a pencil off in his ear is making BANK in flyover, no debt, with a house with a hot tub and he's got a huge lifted truck and jetskis and his wife has big fake tits and they drink bud light all the time.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3825645&forum_id=2#34895960) |
Date: December 12th, 2017 1:48 AM Author: Grizzly wonderful box office death wish
(1) what's median rent in nyc? no way it can be that high
(2) are these houston bros all CA licensed?
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3825645&forum_id=2#34896082) |
Date: December 12th, 2017 10:45 AM Author: Appetizing transparent cuckoldry theatre
not a horrible idea if the firm is big enough.
private jets are actually not THAT expensive if you live in the middle of the country, because the shorter range circle allows you to get a much smaller and cheaper jet.
living on the coasts requires you to get a much bigger plane in order to make it coast to coast, unless you want to stop and refuel which takes a lot of time and comes with extra costs.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3825645&forum_id=2#34897804) |
Date: December 12th, 2017 10:52 AM Author: slate slap-happy old irish cottage
GC has to figure out at some point that it's a gigantic waste to pay employee salaries and office space costs in expensive as fuck cities when they can just base them somewhere cheap and fly on the rare occasion they need to be somewhere in person.
they justify being in SF or NYC because they want to "attract talent", meanwhile the employees leave for lower paying, less prestigious jobs because they want to gtfo.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3825645&forum_id=2#34897857) |
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Date: December 12th, 2017 1:40 PM Author: Appetizing transparent cuckoldry theatre
Greenwich is particularly expensive though.
Could be in White Plains, Stamford, Darien, Nassau County, Northern NJ
what are psf rental prices in midtown manhattan now?
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3825645&forum_id=2#34899291) |
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Date: December 12th, 2017 2:48 PM Author: Appetizing transparent cuckoldry theatre
You'd need to have a certain number of partners with books move.
Look at it this way, if a set of partners in NYC moved their books and associates to Concord, NH, do you really think clients would demand 25% cuts in hourly rates just because they were now physically sitting in Concord?
Note also that I'm not advocating for drastic moves, but just cuts from extraordinarily expensive midtown office space to materially less expensive White Plains or Stamford office space.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3825645&forum_id=2#34899807) |
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Date: December 12th, 2017 3:02 PM Author: Appetizing transparent cuckoldry theatre
You're misunderstanding me.
I'm saying suppose those same lawyers from Sullivan & Cromwell moved their entire practice to Concord, NH as a satellite office of Sullivan & Cromwell.
I agree they'd lower their rates if they formed a new firm, but that usually ends up being a win-win because the clients simply pay for less overhead.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3825645&forum_id=2#34899894) |
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