Avoid - Anonymous employee Mayer Brown Employee Review

2.0
Oct 22, 2015
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good pay, amazingly talented attorney population, great medical benefits,respectful environment outside of HR

Cons

Micromanaging to the point of being oppressive, shameful level of turnover highlights miserable working environment which is a strong indicator of incompetent and/or unethical leadership. If you are interviewing here, be sure to zero in on turnover! Certain departments in HR have turned over completely, twice in 1 year. There is a core reason for people wanting to leave, after years, after only a couple of months.

Explore other reviews about Mayer Brown

5.0
Oct 5, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

very good Team and people

Cons

a lot Of work (just to full this space)

1.0
May 28, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Beautiful office space and decent perks. Provides solid industry exposure and can be a useful stepping stone early in your career to gain experience before moving to a more sustainable work environment. The benefits are good too. Parental leave options (18-weeks) which is rare nowadays.

Cons

Extremely poor work-life balance and a culture that often prioritizes billable output over employee wellbeing. Leadership and management can feel disconnected from the realities of staff workloads and operational challenges. Systems and internal processes are noticeably outdated, creating unnecessary inefficiencies and compliance concerns. Training is inconsistent, and support varies significantly by team. There is also a very noticeable hierarchy between attorneys and support staff, with accountability standards that do not always feel equitable. Many paralegals and support employees are expected to absorb unreasonable workloads with limited recognition or institutional support, contributing to high burnout and turnover. It is frustrating to see a firm generate significant revenue while continuing to rely on outdated systems and understaffed support structures instead of investing meaningfully in operational infrastructure and employee retention. Many of the day-to-day challenges staff face feel preventable with better resource allocation and modernization.

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