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Views on legal team in PSU: Worth joining?
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The worst part is the working environment. Incompetency and sycophancy go hand in hand. Moreover, people having powerful connections will get good postings and others will rot in unproductive and repetitive paper work. Every year, you'll ask yourself if you have learned anything at all. The answer would be that you have forgotten all the skills you had back in the day and have learned nothing new. Moreover, getting shouted at by incompetent bosses for no fault of yours, s*cks! Personally, I had reached a place where my younger brother made thrice my yearly income and used to be 10X satisfied with his work. PSUs are not the way forward. Merit is never almost never rewarded. Anyone who knows a minister/bureaucrat gets ahead in the line. Way Ahead.
My advice- Be very careful while making this decision. If you wish to stay at a PSU all your life (& suffer the consequences), then feel free to join. A change in career midway is almost impossible. The pay is attractive now but it will be insufficient to meet your expectations and relatively much less when compared to your peers who would have climbed up the ladder in Firms/Litigation. If you have an option of joining a firm, please join it asap. The PSU I had joined had made me sign a bond for 3 years. I thought I'd leave after that. But by then no one needs you! You'll be trapped. Sad but true! Hope, you guys save yourselves from this tragedy! Best.
but, like you said, these teams arent exactly known for their rigour. even compared to other in-house teams, the learning curve is much, much flatter. it's not so much legal work as managerial work. public works contracts are handled by the tech specialists, lawyers dont have much of a role. its more of managing licenses/clearances and managing ongoing arbitrations/litigations (hiring firms, empanelling counsels, collecting and producing relevant docs to them and coordinating with them etc).
tbh, i didnt mind even that. i was okay with it. my bigger problem was working in a government setup. it's a lot of trying to explain very basic things to people who dont want to listen to you. and promotions are hardly ever based on merit. in general, people in non-core departments at psus are sorta washed up, imo. i cant work with them. this is what kept me from going for it. otherwise the gig itself wasnt bad.
(oh and there was also the fact that to get into a psu, you have to get a rank in top 50 in clat pg. it isnt v difficult, but yeah requires at least 3-4 months of solid prep. i didnt want to put that much effort in for something i was so unsure about.)
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