Jobs in Windsor Hills, CA
277 positions found — Page 10
There's a version of California employment law that only exists in the Bay Area, and you're either doing it or you're watching it from the wrong seat.
The companies here don't look like the rest of the country. They're pre-IPO startups doing their first RIF and realizing they have no severance framework. They're public tech companies navigating board-level investigations into workplace culture. They're growth-stage businesses acquiring competitors and discovering the target has wage & hour exposure baked into its contractor model. The employment issues in this market are woven into corporate transactions, regulatory risk, and C-suite strategy in ways that most BigLaw L&E groups never touch.
But at your current firm, you're doing California employment defense and nothing else. Wage & hour class actions, PAGA, single-plaintiff claims — the work is real, but it's the same playbook on repeat. You aren't advising on the employment dimensions of an acquisition. You aren't counseling founders on equity compensation disputes. You aren't getting pulled into the boardroom when a workforce restructuring needs to happen in 72 hours.
An AmLaw 50 firm is building out its employment and labor team across its California offices, with a strong preference for San Francisco and Palo Alto. They want someone who can litigate California employment matters and advise on the transactional and counseling side. This isn't a class action factory — it's a practice that sits at the intersection of employment law and corporate strategy.
The work includes:
- Defending complex wage & hour class actions, PAGA claims, and single-plaintiff matters in California state and federal court
- Advising on employment aspects of M&A transactions and corporate restructurings
- Counseling tech and growth-stage companies on California employment compliance, workforce planning, and executive employment matters
- Class/representative action strategy from pre-litigation through resolution
What you bring:
- 2+ years of California employment litigation experience at a major law firm
- Interest in or exposure to transactional employment work (M&A diligence, workforce restructuring, executive employment)
- Strong legal writing and analytical skills
- California bar admission
What you get:
- A practice that blends litigation and transactional employment work — not just one or the other
- Clients that are tech companies, PE-backed platforms, and high-growth businesses, not a random docket of retail wage & hour cases
- Cravath scale ($260K-$390K depending on class year)
Apply here directly or send your resume confidentially to
Job Title : Bomb Technician (EOD) Category / Component : Enlisted • Active Overview Explosive Ordnance Disposal Technicians locate, identify, render safe, and dispose of explosive threats on land, at sea, and underwater, using advanced robotics, diving, and explosives skills to protect forces and civilians and support fleet and joint operations worldwide.
Key Responsibilities Detonate and demolish hazardous munitions, pyrotechnics, and outdated explosives; neutralize ordnance including sea mines, torpedoes, depth charges, and improvised explosive devices; remotely disable unsafe ordnance using robotic and diagnostic technology; conduct parachute and helicopter insertion operations; clear waterways of mines in support of ships and submarines; provide explosive ordnance support to law enforcement agencies and organizations such as the United States Secret Service and Department of State.
What to Expect Global missions in every environment, from parachuting into remote terrain to arriving by small boat on foreign shores; majority of time spent in the field conducting high risk, time critical tasks with strict safety and risk management; regular integration with Special Operations, fleet units, and interagency partners; intense physical and mental demands with a culture that values precision, calm decision making, and discipline.
Work Environment Operate worldwide on land, at sea, and underwater from EOD Mobile Units and detachments; insert via parachute, helicopter, and small boats; work from ships, shore commands, and forward locations; serve in small team based units that balance training, readiness, and operational tasking with limited administrative overhead compared to field work.
Pathways, Training & Advancement Recruit Training followed by an EOD preparatory course at Great Lakes, Illinois, that builds swimming, conditioning, small boat skills, and risk management fundamentals; EOD Assessment and Selection Course that evaluates aquatic adaptability, running, swimming, academics, professionalism, and teamwork; Navy diver training at the Naval Diving and Salvage Training Center; Naval School Explosive Ordnance Disposal, which covers demolition, conventional ordnance, underwater mines, missiles, landmines, and chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear threats; Basic Parachute Training and ongoing advanced training and qualifications throughout a career.
Apply for the Navy Warrior Challenge contract for EOD during initial enlistment, then pass the EOD Physical Screening Test and diver medical screening; complete required assessments and receive recommendation and screening from an EOD officer or senior enlisted EOD technician; additional in service accession requirements may include minimum time on board, performance standards, and command endorsement.
Qualifications All Navy jobs require meeting general enlistment or commissioning standards, which typically include: Eligibility to serve in the United States Navy, which may involve United States citizenship or other legal residency and work status, depending on the program and current law and policy A high school diploma or equivalent for enlisted positions, and a bachelor's or qualifying professional degree for officer positions Meeting age limits that vary by program and are set in law and Navy policy.
Some communities have more restrictive age ranges Meeting medical, vision, and dental standards, including body composition and physical fitness requirements, with some jobs requiring more demanding standards Meeting character and conduct standards, including background screening Achieving required test scores for your program, such as the Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery for enlisted roles or officer qualification tests for officer programs Eligibility for a security clearance when required for your rating or designator Additional qualifications can include specific skills, education, licensure, or experience that are unique to a job or community and will be reviewed with you by a recruiter.
Additional qualifications for this job may include: Eyesight correctable within EOD diving standards, with no color blindness; qualifying ASVAB scores using combinations such as arithmetic reasoning and verbal expression or general science, mechanical comprehension, and electronics information; age typically 30 or younger at accession; United States citizenship and eligibility for a security clearance; excellent physical condition and swimming ability, with the capacity to perform detailed technical tasks under stress and in hazardous environments.
Education Education benefits are available through standard Navy programs such as Tuition Assistance, the Post-9/11 GI Bill, ACE-recommended college credit for Navy training, Navy COOL-funded certifications, USMAP apprenticeships, and other Navy College Program opportunities.
Specific options depend on the Sailor's status, training, and current Navy policy.
Pay, Benefits & Service Pay, benefits, and service commitments follow standard Navy Active and/or Reserve policies for this type of role, including basic pay, allowances when eligible, health coverage, and retirement options.
Exact entitlements, special pays, and service obligations depend on program, component, years of service, and current law and Navy guidance.
Incentives Incentives such as bonuses, special pays, and loan repayment may be available at times for specific ratings or communities, but they change frequently and cannot be guaranteed.
Applicants must confirm current incentives and eligibility with an official Navy recruiter or authoritative Navy source.
Notes and Disclaimers This description is a general overview of typical duties, training, and opportunities in this community.
It does not replace official Navy instructions, policies, or contracts and does not guarantee specific assignments, training, incentives, or outcomes.
Actual opportunities depend on Navy needs, individual performance, screening results, and current law and policy.
Job Title : Aircrew Rescue Swimmer & Navy Diver Category / Component : Enlisted • Active Overview Join an elite community that operates in the air and under the sea as an enlisted aircrew member and Navy diver, performing helicopter sea rescues and underwater search, salvage, repair, and demolition to support carrier and expeditionary strike groups, mine countermeasures, special operations, and joint partners worldwide.
Key Responsibilities Operate as enlisted aircrew during flight operations; perform helicopter sea rescues and provide advanced first aid; execute underwater search, salvage, harbor clearance, and security missions; inspect, cut, weld, and repair ships and submarines; conduct deep and saturation diving using SCUBA, surface supplied and mixed gas systems, and rebreathers; operate and supervise hyperbaric chamber treatments; plan and conduct demolition; maintain and repair specialized flight, survival, and diving equipment while managing records and readiness.
What to Expect Highly physical, safety critical missions with rigorous performance standards; frequent operations in demanding environments such as heavy seas, cold and low visibility waters, flight lines, ship decks, and austere field sites; continuous training and qualification sustainment, with rapid shifts between precise technical tasks and field operations; small team culture that requires attention to detail, calm under pressure, and strong leadership potential.
Work Environment Worldwide assignments at sea and ashore with aviation squadrons, fleet replacement units, and expeditionary detachments; work in flight operations areas, rescue training pools, ocean training sites, dive lockers, recompression chambers, shipyards, ranges, and forward locations; frequent work aboard carriers and auxiliaries, on piers and flight decks, and alongside joint and interagency partners.
Pathways, Training & Advancement Recruit Training followed by Naval Aircrew Candidate School in Pensacola; Rescue Swimmer preparatory and Rescue Swimmer School for those in that specialty; Class A School in an assigned aircrew rating pipeline such as AWF, AWO, AWR, AWS, or AWV; Fleet Replacement Squadron training and survival, evasion, resistance, and escape instruction; ongoing qualification and advanced training in diving, rescue, and mission systems throughout the career.
Enlist under an advanced technical field or Warrior Challenge style contract that specifies the aircrew, rescue swimmer, or diver training pipeline; qualified Fleet Sailors may volunteer and request conversion into aircrew or diving roles after screening, physical testing, and command endorsement.
Qualifications All Navy jobs require meeting general enlistment or commissioning standards, which typically include: Eligibility to serve in the United States Navy, which may involve United States citizenship or other legal residency and work status, depending on the program and current law and policy A high school diploma or equivalent for enlisted positions, and a bachelor's or qualifying professional degree for officer positions Meeting age limits that vary by program and are set in law and Navy policy.
Some communities have more restrictive age ranges Meeting medical, vision, and dental standards, including body composition and physical fitness requirements, with some jobs requiring more demanding standards Meeting character and conduct standards, including background screening Achieving required test scores for your program, such as the Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery for enlisted roles or officer qualification tests for officer programs Eligibility for a security clearance when required for your rating or designator Additional qualifications can include specific skills, education, licensure, or experience that are unique to a job or community and will be reviewed with you by a recruiter.
Additional qualifications for this job may include: United States citizenship and eligibility for at least a Secret clearance; strong swimming ability, comfort in open water, and excellent overall physical condition; ability to pass an aviation flight physical for aircrew duties and a diving medical exam with Undersea or Diving Medical Officer approval; meeting Physical Fitness Assessment standards and passing the Physical Screening Test that includes timed swims, runs, and calisthenics; meeting age limits that are typically more restrictive than general enlistment standards.
Education Education benefits are available through standard Navy programs such as Tuition Assistance, the Post-9/11 GI Bill, ACE-recommended college credit for Navy training, Navy COOL-funded certifications, USMAP apprenticeships, and other Navy College Program opportunities.
Specific options depend on the Sailor's status, training, and current Navy policy.
Pay, Benefits & Service Pay, benefits, and service commitments follow standard Navy Active and/or Reserve policies for this type of role, including basic pay, allowances when eligible, health coverage, and retirement options.
Exact entitlements, special pays, and service obligations depend on program, component, years of service, and current law and Navy guidance.
Incentives Incentives such as bonuses, special pays, and loan repayment may be available at times for specific ratings or communities, but they change frequently and cannot be guaranteed.
Applicants must confirm current incentives and eligibility with an official Navy recruiter or authoritative Navy source.
Notes and Disclaimers This description is a general overview of typical duties, training, and opportunities in this community.
It does not replace official Navy instructions, policies, or contracts and does not guarantee specific assignments, training, incentives, or outcomes.
Actual opportunities depend on Navy needs, individual performance, screening results, and current law and policy.
Job Title : Aviation Electronics, Electrical & Computer Systems Technician (AE/AT) Category / Component : Enlisted • Active Overview Aviation Electronics, Electrical and Computer Systems Technicians keep Navy aircraft mission ready by maintaining, troubleshooting, and repairing the electrical power, avionics, and computer based systems that enable radar, communications, navigation, flight controls, and weapons at sea and ashore.
Qualified Sailors may also volunteer as Naval Aircrewmen and perform in flight systems operations and mission support.
Key Responsibilities Troubleshoot and repair complex aircraft systems including digital computers, fiber optics, radar, laser electronics, infrared detection, and communications and navigation suites; maintain aircraft electrical power generation and distribution systems; test and calibrate aircraft instruments and automatic flight controls; perform micro miniature circuit card repair for qualified technicians; install modifications and upgrades to aircraft avionics and electrical systems; use diagnostic equipment and interpret schematics and wiring diagrams to restore systems to full mission capability.
What to Expect A mix of hands on flight line maintenance and bench diagnostics in hangars, avionics shops, and aboard aircraft carriers; frequent troubleshooting under time pressure to return aircraft to service; work around high tempo flight operations with rotating shifts, nights, and weekends while deployed; strict adherence to safety, tool control, foreign object damage prevention, tag out procedures, and quality assurance standards; opportunities to qualify as a work center leader or collateral duty inspector as you gain experience.
Work Environment Assignments with squadrons at naval air stations and aboard aircraft carriers worldwide; work in hangars, avionics labs, and outdoors on flight lines in all weather conditions and high noise environments; close teamwork with other aviation ratings and aircrew in a structured maintenance organization; potential temporary duty with detachments and deployments supporting carrier or expeditionary operations.
Pathways, Training & Advancement Recruit Training followed by Class A School in Pensacola, Florida, covering aviation theory, electrical systems, electronics fundamentals, and technical skills; assignment after A School into either the Aviation Electrician's Mate or Aviation Electronics Technician rating based on performance and Navy needs; advanced platform specific schools for particular aircraft and mission systems; opportunities to qualify for micro miniature repair and, for volunteers who qualify, to attend Naval Aircrew training.
Enlist for the Aviation Electronics and Electrical pipeline, with final placement into AE or AT after A School based on performance and service needs; qualified Sailors may later volunteer for Naval Aircrew duty after initial rating qualification and screening.
Qualifications All Navy jobs require meeting general enlistment or commissioning standards, which typically include: Eligibility to serve in the United States Navy, which may involve United States citizenship or other legal residency and work status, depending on the program and current law and policy A high school diploma or equivalent for enlisted positions, and a bachelor's or qualifying professional degree for officer positions Meeting age limits that vary by program and are set in law and Navy policy.
Some communities have more restrictive age ranges Meeting medical, vision, and dental standards, including body composition and physical fitness requirements, with some jobs requiring more demanding standards Meeting character and conduct standards, including background screening Achieving required test scores for your program, such as the Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery for enlisted roles or officer qualification tests for officer programs Eligibility for a security clearance when required for your rating or designator Additional qualifications can include specific skills, education, licensure, or experience that are unique to a job or community and will be reviewed with you by a recruiter.
Additional qualifications for this job may include: United States citizenship and eligibility for a security clearance; normal color perception; interest in aviation and working around aircraft; strong aptitude in electronics, computers, and precision technical work; manual dexterity, good memory, and physical fitness sufficient to work safely on flight lines, in hangars, and on shipboard aircraft.
Education Education benefits are available through standard Navy programs such as Tuition Assistance, the Post-9/11 GI Bill, ACE-recommended college credit for Navy training, Navy COOL-funded certifications, USMAP apprenticeships, and other Navy College Program opportunities.
Specific options depend on the Sailor's status, training, and current Navy policy.
Pay, Benefits & Service Pay, benefits, and service commitments follow standard Navy Active and/or Reserve policies for this type of role, including basic pay, allowances when eligible, health coverage, and retirement options.
Exact entitlements, special pays, and service obligations depend on program, component, years of service, and current law and Navy guidance.
Incentives Incentives such as bonuses, special pays, and loan repayment may be available at times for specific ratings or communities, but they change frequently and cannot be guaranteed.
Applicants must confirm current incentives and eligibility with an official Navy recruiter or authoritative Navy source.
Notes and Disclaimers This description is a general overview of typical duties, training, and opportunities in this community.
It does not replace official Navy instructions, policies, or contracts and does not guarantee specific assignments, training, incentives, or outcomes.
Actual opportunities depend on Navy needs, individual performance, screening results, and current law and policy.
Riley Safer Holmes & Cancila LLP (RSHC) is a diverse, client-centric, and technologically sophisticated firm that is committed to providing legal service at the highest level. We have nationally recognized litigation and transactional practices. We currently have more than 100 lawyers in offices in Chicago, San Francisco, Irvine, Ann Arbor, and New York. Founded March 1, 2016, our partnership features leaders in many fields including class actions, white collar, real estate, intellectual property, labor and employment, mass tort & product liability, mergers & acquisitions, and general litigation. Our San Francisco office is in the heart of the Financial District and populated with a team of fun, smart, team-oriented and hard-working professionals.
About the Role
We are seeking an experienced mid-level General Litigation Attorney to join our growing practice. The ideal candidate will have courtroom and deposition experience, excellent writing and analytical skills, and experience working on complex litigation matters from intake through resolution. This role requires strategic thinking, sound judgment, and the ability to work collaboratively with diverse clients, colleagues, and staff.
Our recruiting process focuses on more than professional excellence. We hire only professionals with high emotional intelligence, resilience and track records of team-based success.
Compensation and Benefits
Compensation range: $210,000 to $250,000 annually. Compensation depends on qualifications and experience.
No calls or solicitations from recruiters accepted.
Our client is a well-established, full-service law firm with a long-standing presence in Silicon Valley and
the broader Bay Area. The firm operates as a true multi-service platform, offering clients comprehensive
legal solutions across practice areas while maintaining focused, subject-matter depth within each
department. They are a member of a premier network of independent law firms spanning more than 60
countries, the firm provides clients with both regional strength and international reach.
Requirements
· Juris Doctor degree from an accredited law school
· Active membership in the State Bar of California
· Strong working knowledge of the California Code Of Civil Procedure and Evidence Code
· Private law practice experience, with some experience taking responsibility for client matters (with
supervision)
· Excellent written and oral communication skills
· Desire to invest in building a future with a mid-sized law firm
Key Responsibilities
· Conduct thorough legal research and analysis to support case strategies and prepare legal documents
· Draft pleadings, discovery requests, and other legal documents with precision and attention to detail
· Prepare for and engage in settlement negotiations, hearings, and trials to achieve favorable outcomes for
client
Prominent defense litigation firm is seeking a general liability to join their downtown San Francisco team. The ideal candidate will have 2+ years of construction defect defense experience.
This position is hybrid remote, 3 days remote, 2 days in office per week. This is a partnership track position.
Competitive base salary 140k to 180k, bonus and benefits.
Resumes can be sent to for review.
Remote working/work at home options are available for this role.
Overview
Whistler Partners is partnering with to hire its first senior legal leader — a Head of Legal with the opportunity to step into a General Counsel title for the right candidate.
Owner provides a suite of tools designed to help local restaurant owners increase sales and strengthen their online presence. From mobile ordering and customer rewards to digital growth infrastructure, the platform empowers independent restaurants to compete and win. As the business expands product surfaces, navigates regulatory complexity, and enters increasingly strategic partnerships, legal leadership is now mission-critical.
This is a foundational hire at a high-growth, mission-driven SaaS company.
Why this role?
This is not an incremental legal hire. It's a build-from-zero seat.
You will own the full legal stack — corporate, compliance, employment, IP, litigation, regulatory, and commercial — and serve as a strategic partner to the executive team. You won't inherit a pre-built function. You'll architect it.
Success in this role means:
- Building scalable systems from ambiguity
- Knowing when to leverage outside counsel — and when to move internally
- Acting as DRI on the company's most sensitive initiatives
- Helping leadership move faster while strengthening risk discipline
The title is flexible and may include General Counsel for the right candidate.
This is ideal for a builder who wants true ownership, executive visibility, and the opportunity to shape Legal at a scaling technology company from day one.
Key Responsibilities
- Partner closely with Engineering, Product & Design, GTM, People, Finance, Ops, and the Executive team
- Act as strategic advisor to the CEO on negotiations, disputes, and sensitive matters
- Build and scale Owner's Legal function as its first full-time legal hire
- Serve as DRI on litigation strategy, regulatory posture, and complex commercial agreements
- Partner with Product and Engineering to ensure new products and pricing models are built with compliance and risk minimization in mind
- Design scalable systems across contracting, compliance, governance, privacy, employment, and IP
- Manage outside counsel across corporate, regulatory, employment, and litigation matters
- Support fundraising, board matters, corporate governance, and investor communications
- Proactively identify legal risk areas and implement preventive frameworks
About You
- 8–10+ years of legal experience across law firm and in-house environments
- Broad, "full-stack" experience across commercial, corporate, compliance, IP, employment, and litigation oversight
- Builder mentality — energized by creating structure from scratch
- Strong executive presence and business judgment
- Comfortable operating in fast-moving, ambiguous environments
- Able to partner closely with product and engineering teams
- Motivated to scale and eventually build a Legal team
Compensation
$250,000 – $325,000
Owner is open to increased compensation at the General Counsel level and may stretch beyond the posted range for the right candidate.
Perks
Comprehensive health coverage, Bay Area-based remote flexibility, unlimited PTO, and additional growth-stage benefits.
Interested?
This search is being led by Wolf at Whistler Partners. Please contact them for a confidential conversation.
About Whistler Partners
Matchmakers, Not Headhunters
Whistler Partners is a boutique matchmaking firm focused on counseling the best and the brightest attorneys over the course of their careers. We believe that the right move comes from working closely with talent to curate their long-term career paths. When it comes to career advice, what matters is not the size of the agency but the strength of your individual recruiter.
We readily admit that we are elite and only work with the best – after all, a little elitism is okay when it comes to your career. Employers love us because we are picky about whom we represent, and attorneys love us because we get them their dream jobs.
Segal McCambridge, a nationally recognized litigation firm, is seeking an Associate Attorney to join its Toxic Tort and Product Liability practice in San Francisco. This role offers a rare combination of meaningful responsibility, high-quality mentorship, and flexibility. You will be part of a collaborative team handling sophisticated, high-stakes litigation for national and Fortune 500 clients.
The Opportunity
At Segal McCambridge, associates are not siloed or relegated to support roles. From day one, you will play an active role in managing cases, developing strategy, and working directly with experienced trial attorneys who are invested in your growth. You will gain exposure to all phases of litigation, from inception through resolution and trial, while receiving guidance and mentorship from partners with deep experience in toxic tort and product liability matters.
This is an excellent opportunity for attorneys who want to sharpen their litigation skills, take ownership of their work, and build a long-term career within a growing national firm.
What You'll Do
- Manage an assigned caseload with partner oversight
- Draft pleadings, motions, and written discovery
- Conduct legal research and prepare substantive legal analysis
- Take and defend depositions
- Participate in mediations and arbitrations
- Communicate directly with clients and insurance carriers
- Collaborate with a team of experienced litigators on complex matters
What We're Looking For
- Active California bar license (dual licensure a plus)
- At least 2 years of civil litigation experience
- Experience with toxic tort or asbestos defense preferred
- Strong legal research, writing, and advocacy skills
- Ability to manage multiple deadlines and competing priorities
- A proactive mindset and ownership of assignments
- Strong interpersonal and presentation skills
- Experience with mediations or arbitrations is a plus
Compensation & Growth
Segal McCambridge offers competitive compensation, bonus opportunities, and credit for business origination. Associates benefit from clear paths for advancement and the chance to grow within a firm that values initiative, collaboration, and high-quality work.
Benefits
- 401(k) with employer match
- Health, dental, and vision insurance
- Health savings and flexible spending accounts
- Paid time off and parental leave
- Life insurance and employee assistance program
- Professional development assistance
- Referral and employee discount programs
About Segal McCambridge
Founded in 1986, Segal McCambridge has grown from a four-lawyer Chicago firm into a national litigation powerhouse with offices across the country. For nearly four decades, Segal McCambridge has been trusted by Fortune 500 companies and other clients to handle complex, high-exposure litigation in areas including asbestos, product liability, environmental, class action, employment, life sciences, insurance coverage, technology, and more.
If you are looking for hands-on litigation experience, real responsibility, and the support of a collaborative, experienced team, we invite you to apply and submit your resume.
Key Responsibilities
IP Strategy & Leadership
- Develop and execute a comprehensive global IP strategy aligned with business and innovation goals.
- Advise executive leadership and the Board on IP risks, opportunities, and competitive positioning.
- Identify opportunities to create competitive advantage through strategic IP portfolio development.
- Lead long-term IP planning in support of product pipelines and emerging technologies.
Portfolio Management
- Oversee the development, prosecution, maintenance, and optimization of global patent, trademark, copyright, and trade secret portfolios.
- Conduct regular portfolio reviews to ensure alignment with business objectives and cost efficiency.
- Manage invention disclosure processes and collaborate with R&D to capture innovation.
- Evaluate IP acquisition and divestiture opportunities.
IP Protection & Enforcement
- Develop and oversee global IP enforcement strategies, including litigation, opposition proceedings, and dispute resolution.
- Manage outside counsel and coordinate litigation strategy.
- Assess and mitigate infringement risks and freedom-to-operate concerns.
- Lead IP due diligence activities for mergers, acquisitions, partnerships, and investments.
IP Monetization & Commercialization
- Identify and execute licensing, cross-licensing, and strategic partnership opportunities.
- Structure and negotiate complex IP agreements.
- Develop revenue-generating strategies leveraging the company's IP assets.
- Support valuation of IP assets for financial and strategic purposes.
Risk Management & Compliance
- Establish policies and procedures for IP governance and protection.
- Ensure compliance with global IP laws and regulations.
- Oversee competitive intelligence and monitor third-party IP landscapes.
- Manage internal training programs on IP awareness and protection.
Team & Budget Leadership
- Build and lead a high-performing global IP team.
- Manage departmental budgets and external legal spend.
- Establish KPIs to measure portfolio strength, enforcement outcomes, and ROI.
Qualifications
Education
- Juris Doctor (JD) required.
- Admission to at least one state bar in good standing.
- USPTO registration (preferred for patent-focused organizations).
- Advanced technical degree (preferred for technology-driven industries).
Experience
- 12+ years of progressive experience in intellectual property law, including significant in-house leadership experience.
- Proven track record of building and managing global IP portfolios.
- Demonstrated experience in IP litigation, licensing, and strategic transactions.
- Experience supporting M&A due diligence and integration activities.
- Executive-level leadership experience with direct reports.
Core Competencies
- Strategic thinking and business acumen
- Executive presence and influence
- Strong negotiation and litigation management skills
- Deep understanding of global IP laws and regulatory environments
- Financial literacy related to IP valuation and budgeting
- Cross-functional collaboration and stakeholder management
Exemption Status: Hourly Non-Exempt
Remote Options/Office Hours: Hybrid or Fully In-Office
Classification: Paralegal
Summary: The Senior Trusts & Estates Paralegal must have at least five (5) years of recent experience in Trusts & Estates including complex and high net worth estate planning, trust administration and probate. Tax background and understanding is preferable, ideally with knowledge and preparation of Form 706 and Form 709. Litigation experience is also helpful. The Trusts & Estates Paralegal must be able to work independently and, on a team, manage their cases, and be relied on for follow-up and accountability. The Senior Trusts & Estates Paralegal is expected to prepare legal documents, filings, and/or general correspondence with accuracy and adhere to the JKZ formatting guidelines. This position requires that the Senior Trusts & Estates Paralegal be extremely detail-oriented, organized, critical about accuracy, spelling and grammar and possess the ability to prioritize and follow up. This is a very fast-paced environment, and the Senior Trusts & Estates Paralegal must be able to multitask and manage a voluminous caseload. This role requires a self-starter who is willing and open to learning new skills as well as taking initiative and being proactive.
In addition to the above, the Senior Trusts & Estates Paralegal may be responsible for delegating assignments, mentoring, training, etc. of any legal support personnel in their practice area.
Direct Reports: N/A
Essential Duties and Responsibilities, Including but Not Limited To:
- Performing legal research
- Preparing trust accountings
- Preliminary drafting of trusts and memos
- Drafting documents
- Calendaring appointments and deadlines
- Managing and organizing client files as well as keeping client database and document management systems up to date
- Prepare Forms 706 and 709
- Maintaining a billable hour requirement
Requirements:
Education and Experience
- At least 5 years' experience working as a Trusts & Estates Paralegal
- Must have paralegal certificate or equivalent
Knowledge, Skills & Abilities
- Bilingual preferred;
- Proficient in the MS Office Suite with an emphasis on Word, Excel and Outlook;
- Solid command of English including excellent spelling, grammar, punctuation, form and style;
- Organized and detail oriented; and
- Ability to communicate clearly.
Senior Analyst or Associate, Financial Advisory (Talent Pipeline)
Confidential Multi-Family Office & Investment Advisory Firm
Overview
As a Senior Analyst or Associate within our Financial Advisory team, you will operate at the intersection of legacy and innovation, serving as a trusted partner to some of the world's most influential individuals and families. You will help clients navigate the complexities of their financial lives with precision, empathy, and exceptional care — ensuring that every element of their balance sheet, investment strategy, and long-term plan is managed with clarity and foresight.
You will join a collaborative advisory team that values learning, partnership, and shared ownership. We work closely across levels and alongside internal specialists so that every client benefits from the full strength of our integrated platform.
This role is designed for professionals energized by complexity, motivated by service, and driven to make a lasting impact. If you take pride in anticipating needs, delivering exceptional outcomes, and making complexity feel seamless, this is an opportunity to join a team built on trust, care, and excellence.
Please note: This posting is intended to build a pipeline of high-quality candidates for future openings. We will reach out as opportunities align with business needs.
Core Responsibilities (All Candidates)
You will support clients across a broad range of investment, planning, and relationship management activities, including:
- Preparing and analyzing balance sheets, asset allocations, investment performance reports, and other financial materials.
- Assisting with investment operations, including trade coordination, cash flow monitoring, and private investment updates.
- Conducting financial and estate planning analyses such as liquidity modeling, lending evaluations, and gifting illustrations.
- Partnering with accountants, attorneys, and external advisors to gather information and support planning discussions.
- Preparing client meeting materials, managing follow-ups, and maintaining accurate data in CRM and portfolio reporting systems.
- Collaborating closely with Investment Strategy, Legal, Compliance, and Operations teams to ensure seamless client service.
Senior Analyst
Senior Analysts take on increasing ownership, judgment, and communication responsibility.
Additional Responsibilities
- Own key deliverables such as asset allocation reviews, rebalancing recommendations, and planning analyses.
- Support advanced planning work, including Monte Carlo simulations, executive compensation summaries, and scenario-based modeling.
- Develop working knowledge of trusts, estate strategies, and gifting structures.
- Participate in client meetings and proactively identify opportunities such as refinancing, liquidity needs, and strategic planning considerations.
- Mentor Analysts on processes, systems, and best practices as you grow into a leadership mindset.
Qualifications
- Bachelor's degree required.
- 3+ years of relevant experience in financial services, wealth management, or multi-family office environments.
Associate
Associates deepen their role as strategic advisors and trusted client partners.
Additional Responsibilities
- Lead client relationships in partnership with senior team members, helping clients interpret investment results, plan across generations, and make informed decisions.
- Drive portfolio discussions, rebalancing recommendations, and investment rationale with a strong understanding of asset classes and the firm's investment philosophy.
- Guide trust and estate planning conversations and coordinate with attorneys on structures, gifting strategies, and long-term planning.
- Manage complex client processes such as 10b5-1 plans, lending evaluations, private investment coordination, and other high-impact deliverables.
- Coach junior teammates, strengthen team workflows, and elevate the quality and clarity of client deliverables.
Qualifications
- Bachelor's degree required.
- 5+ years of experience working with high-net-worth or ultra-high-net-worth clients.
Who You Are
Across both levels, successful candidates demonstrate:
- Strong analytical and communication skills, with the ability to explain complex topics clearly and simply.
- Exceptional attention to detail and commitment to accuracy.
- Intellectual curiosity, proactive thinking, and a passion for client service.
- High integrity in handling confidential and sensitive information.
- A collaborative mindset and enthusiasm for teamwork.
Location
Applicants are expected to work onsite in our New York or San Francisco offices in accordance with our hybrid working policy.
Compensation
In accordance with applicable law, we provide a reasonable estimate of the salary range for this role. Compensation decisions consider factors such as skill set, experience, training, certifications, and business needs. We apply a total rewards philosophy in determining overall compensation.
- Senior Analyst: $110,000 – $120,000 base salary
- Associate: $130,000 – $150,000 base salary
Both levels are eligible for a discretionary bonus and comprehensive benefits.
Robert Half is seeking a Trademark Paralegal to join the litigation department of a global law firm, working from one of their Bay Area offices (San Francisco, Silicon Valley, or Walnut Creek). This is a hybrid role, requiring 2–4 days per week in‐office.
Job Duties:
- Assist attorneys throughout all phases of TTAB inter partes matters, including oppositions, cancellations, motions practice, trial preparation, and potential appeals.
- Prepare, draft, and file core TTAB pleadings such as Notices of Opposition, Petitions to Cancel, Answers, amended pleadings, counterclaims, and related Rule 11/Rule 15 materials.
- Manage service requirements, maintain TTABVUE records, and ensure internal files remain fully aligned and up to date.
- Draft and file routine TTAB motions (consents, extensions, suspensions, stipulations) as well as litigation documents including subpoenas, deposition notices, and templates for discovery and motion responses.
- Support all discovery phases by drafting requests/responses, assisting with deposition preparation, and helping manage litigation support resources.
- Oversee document production, including review, organizing exhibits, preparing outlines, and creating privilege and e‐discovery logs.
- Assist with pre‐trial and trial preparation, including exhibit management, deposition designations, maintaining trial exhibit logs, coordinating logistics, and attending hearings or trial as needed.
- Conduct legal research and trademark enforcement investigations, including review of USPTO filings and investigation of unauthorized common‐law trademark uses.
Requirements:
- Bachelor's degree and/or paralegal certificate.
- Minimum 5 years of relevant litigation experience within a law firm.
- Strong proficiency with Westlaw, PACER, electronic filing systems, and litigation support tools (e.g., Everchron, Case Notebook, CaseMap).
- High level of technology skill, including Microsoft Office and Adobe Acrobat.
- Highly organized, detail‐oriented planner who can prioritize, meet deadlines, and perform well under pressure.
- Reliable, respectful team player with strong written and verbal communication skills; able to maintain strict confidentiality.
- Able to work independently, take initiative, and drive projects to completion.
About Higgsfield
Higgsfield AI is the leading video AI company redefining synthetic media on socials. The company is entering its next stage of scale with $200M+ run-rate sales in just 9 months after launch, and a fresh $130M Series A.
Role Overview
We are hiring an Associate General Counsel, Product to serve during a period of hypergrowth. This role reports directly to the General Counsel and will focus on product, privacy, AI, and other regulatory matters. It is an opportunity to shape and scale an emerging Legal function that also serves as a business thought partner and guide. A successful candidate will be a high-energy problem-solver who consistently drives results.
This role is hybrid and based in the San Francisco Bay Area (preferred) or Los Angeles.
Key Responsibilities
- Work closely with the company's design, engineering, and research teams to provide to legal and strategic risk-mitigation advice on a variety of topics including privacy, data security, safety, copyright, AI regulations, and consumer protection laws.
- Grow and operate a global privacy and data protection compliance program.
- Build out legal and operational infrastructure so risk is managed in an efficient and scalable way.
- Stay current on legal developments relevant to AI companies and translate the potential risks into actionable advice.
- Contribute to urgent company initiatives that may be outside of your core expertise.
Knowledge, Skills, and Qualifications
- Strong knowledge of state and international privacy, data protection, and online safety laws.
- Working knowledge of copyright, secondary liability, and emerging AI regulations. Curiosity and discipline to learn new areas of law to meet business needs.
- Some knowledge of marketing and consumer protection laws as applied to digital platforms and ecommerce.
- Low-ego, "doer" attitude. Someone who eagerly tackles projects large and small. Not an equivocator, mere delegator, or someone overly reliant on outside experts.
- Comfort in a very fast-paced, demanding, results-oriented environment with colleagues in distant time zones.
- Crisp, business-friendly communications skills.
- J.D. and active membership in at least one state bar who can practice in-house in California.
- 6+ years of experience practicing law.
- Strongly preferred: meaningful in-house experience at a high-growth tech company with AI-powered products.
About the Company
Global Investment firm is seeking an attorney to join their Legal and Compliance team.
About the Role
This role will advise investment and client service teams on various investment advisory matters, support legal and compliance functions, and assist covering a diverse array of regulatory, corporate, fund, contract and investment legal matters across various strategies and business lines. This role will also work on various compliance matters related to the Investment Advisers Act of 1940.
Responsibilities
- The ideal candidate will have strong knowledge of the Investment Advisors Act and relevant securities laws.
- Will provide counsel on compliance with U.S. securities and investment advisory laws, including matters arising under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940.
- Support securities law matters in international jurisdictions (UK and Singapore) as needed.
- Advise internal stakeholders on securities and investment advisory-related matters, including compliance with federal and state securities laws and policy implementation.
Qualifications
- J.D. qualified to practice law.
- 4+ years of relevant experience at a leading law firm and/or in-house legal department.
Required Skills
- Expertise in the Securities Act of 1933, Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and/or the Investment Advisors Act of 1940.
Job Title : Bomb Technician (EOD) Category / Component : Enlisted • Active Overview Explosive Ordnance Disposal Technicians locate, identify, render safe, and dispose of explosive threats on land, at sea, and underwater, using advanced robotics, diving, and explosives skills to protect forces and civilians and support fleet and joint operations worldwide.
Key Responsibilities Detonate and demolish hazardous munitions, pyrotechnics, and outdated explosives; neutralize ordnance including sea mines, torpedoes, depth charges, and improvised explosive devices; remotely disable unsafe ordnance using robotic and diagnostic technology; conduct parachute and helicopter insertion operations; clear waterways of mines in support of ships and submarines; provide explosive ordnance support to law enforcement agencies and organizations such as the United States Secret Service and Department of State.
What to Expect Global missions in every environment, from parachuting into remote terrain to arriving by small boat on foreign shores; majority of time spent in the field conducting high risk, time critical tasks with strict safety and risk management; regular integration with Special Operations, fleet units, and interagency partners; intense physical and mental demands with a culture that values precision, calm decision making, and discipline.
Work Environment Operate worldwide on land, at sea, and underwater from EOD Mobile Units and detachments; insert via parachute, helicopter, and small boats; work from ships, shore commands, and forward locations; serve in small team based units that balance training, readiness, and operational tasking with limited administrative overhead compared to field work.
Pathways, Training & Advancement Recruit Training followed by an EOD preparatory course at Great Lakes, Illinois, that builds swimming, conditioning, small boat skills, and risk management fundamentals; EOD Assessment and Selection Course that evaluates aquatic adaptability, running, swimming, academics, professionalism, and teamwork; Navy diver training at the Naval Diving and Salvage Training Center; Naval School Explosive Ordnance Disposal, which covers demolition, conventional ordnance, underwater mines, missiles, landmines, and chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear threats; Basic Parachute Training and ongoing advanced training and qualifications throughout a career.
Apply for the Navy Warrior Challenge contract for EOD during initial enlistment, then pass the EOD Physical Screening Test and diver medical screening; complete required assessments and receive recommendation and screening from an EOD officer or senior enlisted EOD technician; additional in service accession requirements may include minimum time on board, performance standards, and command endorsement.
Qualifications All Navy jobs require meeting general enlistment or commissioning standards, which typically include: Eligibility to serve in the United States Navy, which may involve United States citizenship or other legal residency and work status, depending on the program and current law and policy A high school diploma or equivalent for enlisted positions, and a bachelor's or qualifying professional degree for officer positions Meeting age limits that vary by program and are set in law and Navy policy.
Some communities have more restrictive age ranges Meeting medical, vision, and dental standards, including body composition and physical fitness requirements, with some jobs requiring more demanding standards Meeting character and conduct standards, including background screening Achieving required test scores for your program, such as the Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery for enlisted roles or officer qualification tests for officer programs Eligibility for a security clearance when required for your rating or designator Additional qualifications can include specific skills, education, licensure, or experience that are unique to a job or community and will be reviewed with you by a recruiter.
Additional qualifications for this job may include: Eyesight correctable within EOD diving standards, with no color blindness; qualifying ASVAB scores using combinations such as arithmetic reasoning and verbal expression or general science, mechanical comprehension, and electronics information; age typically 30 or younger at accession; United States citizenship and eligibility for a security clearance; excellent physical condition and swimming ability, with the capacity to perform detailed technical tasks under stress and in hazardous environments.
Education Education benefits are available through standard Navy programs such as Tuition Assistance, the Post-9/11 GI Bill, ACE-recommended college credit for Navy training, Navy COOL-funded certifications, USMAP apprenticeships, and other Navy College Program opportunities.
Specific options depend on the Sailor's status, training, and current Navy policy.
Pay, Benefits & Service Pay, benefits, and service commitments follow standard Navy Active and/or Reserve policies for this type of role, including basic pay, allowances when eligible, health coverage, and retirement options.
Exact entitlements, special pays, and service obligations depend on program, component, years of service, and current law and Navy guidance.
Incentives Incentives such as bonuses, special pays, and loan repayment may be available at times for specific ratings or communities, but they change frequently and cannot be guaranteed.
Applicants must confirm current incentives and eligibility with an official Navy recruiter or authoritative Navy source.
Notes and Disclaimers This description is a general overview of typical duties, training, and opportunities in this community.
It does not replace official Navy instructions, policies, or contracts and does not guarantee specific assignments, training, incentives, or outcomes.
Actual opportunities depend on Navy needs, individual performance, screening results, and current law and policy.
- $1,377 per week and is dependent upon qualifications and experience.
Benefits include: California Paid Sick Pay, Repeat DSM Bonus Program, DSM Seasonal Incentive Program.
Bonus and Pay programs subject to qualifications.
Brand: Spirit Halloween ?The District Sales Manager is a seasonal position, which starts in July and typically ends in November.
The District Sales Manager is responsible for all aspects of the store operation (average 3 stores) including, sales, payroll recruiting, training, employee relations, expense control, shrink and all related functions.
Duties also include the construction and opening, operating and closing/tear down of the assigned Spirit stores.
Applicants must be at least 21, have a flexible schedule and have 2 to 5 years experience in a multi-store supervisory position.
The physical demands of the job require in excess of 8 hours of standing, walking, climbing ladders, setting up fixtures, lifting and moving up to 50 pounds.
Job Title : Aviation Electronics, Electrical & Computer Systems Technician (AE/AT) Category / Component : Enlisted • Active Overview Aviation Electronics, Electrical and Computer Systems Technicians keep Navy aircraft mission ready by maintaining, troubleshooting, and repairing the electrical power, avionics, and computer based systems that enable radar, communications, navigation, flight controls, and weapons at sea and ashore.
Qualified Sailors may also volunteer as Naval Aircrewmen and perform in flight systems operations and mission support.
Key Responsibilities Troubleshoot and repair complex aircraft systems including digital computers, fiber optics, radar, laser electronics, infrared detection, and communications and navigation suites; maintain aircraft electrical power generation and distribution systems; test and calibrate aircraft instruments and automatic flight controls; perform micro miniature circuit card repair for qualified technicians; install modifications and upgrades to aircraft avionics and electrical systems; use diagnostic equipment and interpret schematics and wiring diagrams to restore systems to full mission capability.
What to Expect A mix of hands on flight line maintenance and bench diagnostics in hangars, avionics shops, and aboard aircraft carriers; frequent troubleshooting under time pressure to return aircraft to service; work around high tempo flight operations with rotating shifts, nights, and weekends while deployed; strict adherence to safety, tool control, foreign object damage prevention, tag out procedures, and quality assurance standards; opportunities to qualify as a work center leader or collateral duty inspector as you gain experience.
Work Environment Assignments with squadrons at naval air stations and aboard aircraft carriers worldwide; work in hangars, avionics labs, and outdoors on flight lines in all weather conditions and high noise environments; close teamwork with other aviation ratings and aircrew in a structured maintenance organization; potential temporary duty with detachments and deployments supporting carrier or expeditionary operations.
Pathways, Training & Advancement Recruit Training followed by Class A School in Pensacola, Florida, covering aviation theory, electrical systems, electronics fundamentals, and technical skills; assignment after A School into either the Aviation Electrician's Mate or Aviation Electronics Technician rating based on performance and Navy needs; advanced platform specific schools for particular aircraft and mission systems; opportunities to qualify for micro miniature repair and, for volunteers who qualify, to attend Naval Aircrew training.
Enlist for the Aviation Electronics and Electrical pipeline, with final placement into AE or AT after A School based on performance and service needs; qualified Sailors may later volunteer for Naval Aircrew duty after initial rating qualification and screening.
Qualifications All Navy jobs require meeting general enlistment or commissioning standards, which typically include: Eligibility to serve in the United States Navy, which may involve United States citizenship or other legal residency and work status, depending on the program and current law and policy A high school diploma or equivalent for enlisted positions, and a bachelor's or qualifying professional degree for officer positions Meeting age limits that vary by program and are set in law and Navy policy.
Some communities have more restrictive age ranges Meeting medical, vision, and dental standards, including body composition and physical fitness requirements, with some jobs requiring more demanding standards Meeting character and conduct standards, including background screening Achieving required test scores for your program, such as the Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery for enlisted roles or officer qualification tests for officer programs Eligibility for a security clearance when required for your rating or designator Additional qualifications can include specific skills, education, licensure, or experience that are unique to a job or community and will be reviewed with you by a recruiter.
Additional qualifications for this job may include: United States citizenship and eligibility for a security clearance; normal color perception; interest in aviation and working around aircraft; strong aptitude in electronics, computers, and precision technical work; manual dexterity, good memory, and physical fitness sufficient to work safely on flight lines, in hangars, and on shipboard aircraft.
Education Education benefits are available through standard Navy programs such as Tuition Assistance, the Post-9/11 GI Bill, ACE-recommended college credit for Navy training, Navy COOL-funded certifications, USMAP apprenticeships, and other Navy College Program opportunities.
Specific options depend on the Sailor's status, training, and current Navy policy.
Pay, Benefits & Service Pay, benefits, and service commitments follow standard Navy Active and/or Reserve policies for this type of role, including basic pay, allowances when eligible, health coverage, and retirement options.
Exact entitlements, special pays, and service obligations depend on program, component, years of service, and current law and Navy guidance.
Incentives Incentives such as bonuses, special pays, and loan repayment may be available at times for specific ratings or communities, but they change frequently and cannot be guaranteed.
Applicants must confirm current incentives and eligibility with an official Navy recruiter or authoritative Navy source.
Notes and Disclaimers This description is a general overview of typical duties, training, and opportunities in this community.
It does not replace official Navy instructions, policies, or contracts and does not guarantee specific assignments, training, incentives, or outcomes.
Actual opportunities depend on Navy needs, individual performance, screening results, and current law and policy.
Job Title : Aviation Electronics, Electrical & Computer Systems Technician (AE/AT) Category / Component : Enlisted • Active Overview Aviation Electronics, Electrical and Computer Systems Technicians keep Navy aircraft mission ready by maintaining, troubleshooting, and repairing the electrical power, avionics, and computer based systems that enable radar, communications, navigation, flight controls, and weapons at sea and ashore.
Qualified Sailors may also volunteer as Naval Aircrewmen and perform in flight systems operations and mission support.
Key Responsibilities Troubleshoot and repair complex aircraft systems including digital computers, fiber optics, radar, laser electronics, infrared detection, and communications and navigation suites; maintain aircraft electrical power generation and distribution systems; test and calibrate aircraft instruments and automatic flight controls; perform micro miniature circuit card repair for qualified technicians; install modifications and upgrades to aircraft avionics and electrical systems; use diagnostic equipment and interpret schematics and wiring diagrams to restore systems to full mission capability.
What to Expect A mix of hands on flight line maintenance and bench diagnostics in hangars, avionics shops, and aboard aircraft carriers; frequent troubleshooting under time pressure to return aircraft to service; work around high tempo flight operations with rotating shifts, nights, and weekends while deployed; strict adherence to safety, tool control, foreign object damage prevention, tag out procedures, and quality assurance standards; opportunities to qualify as a work center leader or collateral duty inspector as you gain experience.
Work Environment Assignments with squadrons at naval air stations and aboard aircraft carriers worldwide; work in hangars, avionics labs, and outdoors on flight lines in all weather conditions and high noise environments; close teamwork with other aviation ratings and aircrew in a structured maintenance organization; potential temporary duty with detachments and deployments supporting carrier or expeditionary operations.
Pathways, Training & Advancement Recruit Training followed by Class A School in Pensacola, Florida, covering aviation theory, electrical systems, electronics fundamentals, and technical skills; assignment after A School into either the Aviation Electrician's Mate or Aviation Electronics Technician rating based on performance and Navy needs; advanced platform specific schools for particular aircraft and mission systems; opportunities to qualify for micro miniature repair and, for volunteers who qualify, to attend Naval Aircrew training.
Enlist for the Aviation Electronics and Electrical pipeline, with final placement into AE or AT after A School based on performance and service needs; qualified Sailors may later volunteer for Naval Aircrew duty after initial rating qualification and screening.
Qualifications All Navy jobs require meeting general enlistment or commissioning standards, which typically include: Eligibility to serve in the United States Navy, which may involve United States citizenship or other legal residency and work status, depending on the program and current law and policy A high school diploma or equivalent for enlisted positions, and a bachelor's or qualifying professional degree for officer positions Meeting age limits that vary by program and are set in law and Navy policy.
Some communities have more restrictive age ranges Meeting medical, vision, and dental standards, including body composition and physical fitness requirements, with some jobs requiring more demanding standards Meeting character and conduct standards, including background screening Achieving required test scores for your program, such as the Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery for enlisted roles or officer qualification tests for officer programs Eligibility for a security clearance when required for your rating or designator Additional qualifications can include specific skills, education, licensure, or experience that are unique to a job or community and will be reviewed with you by a recruiter.
Additional qualifications for this job may include: United States citizenship and eligibility for a security clearance; normal color perception; interest in aviation and working around aircraft; strong aptitude in electronics, computers, and precision technical work; manual dexterity, good memory, and physical fitness sufficient to work safely on flight lines, in hangars, and on shipboard aircraft.
Education Education benefits are available through standard Navy programs such as Tuition Assistance, the Post-9/11 GI Bill, ACE-recommended college credit for Navy training, Navy COOL-funded certifications, USMAP apprenticeships, and other Navy College Program opportunities.
Specific options depend on the Sailor's status, training, and current Navy policy.
Pay, Benefits & Service Pay, benefits, and service commitments follow standard Navy Active and/or Reserve policies for this type of role, including basic pay, allowances when eligible, health coverage, and retirement options.
Exact entitlements, special pays, and service obligations depend on program, component, years of service, and current law and Navy guidance.
Incentives Incentives such as bonuses, special pays, and loan repayment may be available at times for specific ratings or communities, but they change frequently and cannot be guaranteed.
Applicants must confirm current incentives and eligibility with an official Navy recruiter or authoritative Navy source.
Notes and Disclaimers This description is a general overview of typical duties, training, and opportunities in this community.
It does not replace official Navy instructions, policies, or contracts and does not guarantee specific assignments, training, incentives, or outcomes.
Actual opportunities depend on Navy needs, individual performance, screening results, and current law and policy.
Top tier San Francisco based VC fund is looking to add to their growing team! The firm's GC/CCO is targeting a 3-5yr funds attorney who is able to dig in across legal and compliance. Given the lean structure, having the ability to role up your sleeves is very important.
- 3-5yrs
- Funds attorney by background with compliance experience
- To sit in their downtown SF office 3-4x per week