Employment Counsel
Plaid
Responsibilities
- Advise on Day-to-Day Employment Matters: Provide practical counsel to the People Team and managers on a broad spectrum of employment issues across the entire employee lifecycle.
- Policy Development and Scaling: Design and implement scalable employment policies, programs, resources, and processes to support Plaid’s growth and evolving legal requirements.
- Document Drafting and Management: Draft, review, and maintain global employment documents and templates – for example, offer letters and employment agreements, employee handbooks, codes of conduct, and separation agreements.
- Compliance and Risk Mitigation: Monitor developments in employment laws and regulations (federal, state, and local) and translate those legal changes into clear guidance and action plans for the company. Proactively identify areas of risk in employment practices and propose creative, preventative solutions.
- Employee Relations & Dispute Resolution: Collaborate with the People Team to handle sensitive employee relations issues and internal investigations with empathy and sound judgment.
- Cross-Functional Collaboration: Serve as the subject matter expert on employment law in cross-team projects (e.g. new office openings, policy rollouts, or organizational changes), providing clarity on legal requirements and practical implementation.
- Team Collaboration & Flexibility: Contribute as a team player in a lean legal team, willing to jump in on new legal issues or support colleagues in other legal domains as needed. This flexibility and eagerness to learn are key, as we value a growth mindset and collaborative spirit.
Qualifications
- 3+ years of experience practicing employment law (labor & employment) in a reputable law firm, government agency, or in-house legal department. A background that includes employment counseling (advising on HR/employment matters) is preferred.
- JD degree required.
- US Bar admission in at least one state.
- Ability to distill complex legal concepts into clear, succinct, and pragmatic advice for HR and business stakeholders. You should be adept at counseling non-lawyers on sensitive issues, demonstrating both sound judgment and empathy for the business context.
- High ethical standards and sound judgment. Able to handle confidential employee matters with discretion and integrity. You exercise good judgment in ambiguous situations and know when to escalate issues or seek outside expert help.