turbo: Based on my personal experience, such broad generalized questions are impossible to answer. Answers to many of ur questions depend on too many factors. What is it you really want to know? FWIW, the following is my personal anecdote.
I started my career in IP law with a big internationally-known “corporate” firm that did IP. After a couple of years, I was recruited to join a large respected IP boutique. Thinking I would get exposed to and learn more stuff (and to cut my communte), I jumped ship.
Shortly after my arrival at the boutique, I had lunch w/ a senior associate w/ whom I’d had dealings ad firm #1. I learned that, as a 1st year at the first “corporate” firm, I was doing “stuff” that even 3rd years at the boutique didn’t get to do (e.g. being sent out, alone, to clients, drafting opinion letters). Over the course of time, I came to appreciate what a great teacher / coach / mentor I had at that 1st “corporate” firm. I had had the “right partner” at a firm with the “right culture” to let him run his “group” his way (as long as the financial results were there). Ten years later, I still thank him every time I see him. He may be sick of it, I'm not.
Pay? I got ‘year rate’ at both places. Adjusted for location, pay scale was comparable. But the “corporate” firm immediately bumped me up a year on the pay ladder as soon as I passed the patent bar, and gave me an additional “adjustment” bcs I hold a PhD.
Billable requirements at the boutique were only 50 hrs lower - and only if you were considered 100% prosecution - same #s if you were considered “litigation”.
Read the blogs. Firms who give-out megabonuses don’t tend to do much prosecution. If ur strictly a litigator, IMO it’s still a tough - maybe impossible - question.