Top Workplaces: Small winner Kramer Rayson builds workplace where employees 'stick together'

Taking on a legal case takes a team, so you'd better like the players and the culture.

Everyone plays an important role at Kramer Rayson LLP, attorney Brandon Morrow told Knox News, and that's what produces results.

"There are certain things that my assistant and the paralegals do that I cannot do," he said. "I rely on them day in and day out."

This team effort has paid off in big ways.

In its sixth consecutive year on the Top Workplaces list, the 48-person law firm has placed first this year in the small business category.

Situated on the 25th floor of First Horizon Plaza on Gay Street, the private firm specializes in labor and employment law, corporate and commercial law, insurance defense, health care law, litigation and immigration.

Top Workplaces 2022: See the full list of winners from Knoxville and East Tennessee

Kramer Rayson LLP received first place in the Top Small Workplaces category, at Knox News and Knox.Biz’s Top Workplaces 2022 celebration at The Foundry, Thursday, July 21, 2022.
Kramer Rayson LLP received first place in the Top Small Workplaces category, at Knox News and Knox.Biz’s Top Workplaces 2022 celebration at The Foundry, Thursday, July 21, 2022.

"We want everybody to understand that we really do appreciate their efforts," managing partner Jackson Kramer said. "And that we care about them as people and not just as employees."

Not like the rest

While working for a different Knoxville firm, legal assistant Linda Crisp heard from a friend that Kramer Rayson had an open position. She was encouraged to apply and took the job. Almost 17 years later, she couldn't be happier.

"If I found this job 35 years ago, I'd still be here," she said.

Multiple employees in the Top Workplaces survey said their colleagues make Kramer Rayson a special place to work. The company values everyone, Morrow said, "from our runners who are college students all the way up to our senior partners."

Sure, it's been said a million times, but Crisp, Kramer and Morrow agree the people at Kramer Rayson feel like family.

"We're happy when things are good. And when things are bad, we all stick together," Crisp said. "You tough it out through the good, the bad and the ugly. It's kind of like you're married."

In 2011, Crisp had a total knee replacement. She was nervous and had to take eight weeks off to recover. But even though she wasn't in the office, her work family was there to take care of her.

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Jackson Kramer is photographed at Kramer Rayson's downtown Knoxville office on Friday, June 3, 2022.
Jackson Kramer is photographed at Kramer Rayson's downtown Knoxville office on Friday, June 3, 2022.

Twice a week for four weeks, Crisp said, co-workers brought her food.

"I was just blown away," Crisp said. "You don't normally get that. Maybe the first week, but four weeks ... that's the way they treat everybody."

The firm also shows it cares through the benefits it offers.

All employees receive family health care, life insurance and a 401(k) savings plan. But the smaller benefits are equally important in making Kramer Rayson a special place to work, from free downtown parking to monthly catered lunches to family outings at Smokies Stadium for minor league baseball.

"It's important to us to make sure that people feel that they have been treated very fairly," Kramer said.

Keeping it casual

Not just anyone can join a family, and a work family is no different. When it comes to hiring attorneys, Kramer said, the firm identifies and interviews promising candidates fresh out of school. The firm then offers a summer job to determine whether the hire fits in with company culture.

Part of that culture is keeping things light, especially considering the emotional weight that comes with working case after case.

"If you're goofing off or laughing, you won't get in trouble," Crisp said. "If someone's at your desk, they don't come by and say, 'Don't you have something to do?' Some places do that."

The informal nature of the office, as Morrow describes it, makes it easy to strike up a casual conversation with a coworker or to get advice on a legal matter. A lot of times, Morrow said, questions come up outside his expertise.

More: These Top Workplaces won special awards in 2022 for leadership, communication

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Legal assistant Linda Crisp of Kramer-Rayson poses for a photo in their Gay Street office, Thursday, May 19, 2022.
Legal assistant Linda Crisp of Kramer-Rayson poses for a photo in their Gay Street office, Thursday, May 19, 2022.

"I am fortunate enough to be able to walk down the hall and speak with one of my law partners or one of our associates about a particular issue that they know better than I do," he said.

Co-workers even socialize outside work and, once a year, attorneys and their spouses go on a retreat.

"It's a great chance to reconnect. Very little business gets done," Morrow said. "(It's) an opportunity for us just to come together, spend time and fellowship with one another — (to) catch up on how the kids are doing, what vacations have you all had. It is a truly enjoyable experience."

Staying power

Paralegal Shannon Stan works at her desk at Kramer Rayson's downtown Knoxville office on Friday, June 3, 2022.
Paralegal Shannon Stan works at her desk at Kramer Rayson's downtown Knoxville office on Friday, June 3, 2022.

If "like a family" is overused, then "if it ain't broke, don't fix it" could be the cliché of all clichés. But both ring true for employees at Kramer Rayson.

Kramer has worked at the firm 39 years, and he said the culture has remained largely the same during that time — and since the partnership launched in 1948, for that matter.

The big difference? More computers.

"Obviously, technology has played a big role in the way we approach our jobs and how we do our job," Kramer said. "But the interpersonal connections, I think, are still the most important part of this."

The firm doesn't have a lot of turnover, Kramer said. When people are hired they tend to stay for the long haul.

Attorney Brandon Morrow of Kramer-Rayson speaks in their Gay Street office, Thursday, May 19, 2022.
Attorney Brandon Morrow of Kramer-Rayson speaks in their Gay Street office, Thursday, May 19, 2022.

Morrow has been at the firm since 2010, spending two years as a legal assistant and 10 years as an attorney. It's the only place he's worked since graduating.

It's the place Crisp stayed the longest. She delayed her retirement  to mid-May for the firm, just a few days after her interview with Knox News.

Crisp, Kramer and Morrow can talk all day about why they love working at Kramer Rayson, but actions speak louder than words. Crisp couldn't help but tear up while talking about the work family she's leaving behind.

She feels needed and appreciated at Kramer Rayson. Among her colleagues, she's far from alone in that regard.

Second Place: Coulter & Justus, PC

Coulter & Justus PC received second place in the Top Small Workplaces category, at Knox News and Knox.Biz’s Top Workplaces 2022 celebration at The Foundry, Thursday, July 21, 2022.
Coulter & Justus PC received second place in the Top Small Workplaces category, at Knox News and Knox.Biz’s Top Workplaces 2022 celebration at The Foundry, Thursday, July 21, 2022.

The accounting firm has made Knox News' Top Workplaces list six years in a row and came in second place in the small employer category. The private company was founded in 1993 and has 58 employees in the Knoxville area.

"We are a relationship focused firm, with a mission to provide quality professional services and exceptional career opportunities," according to the company mission.

Employees of the firm praised the company's flexibility and friendly work environment in the anonymous survey conducted by Energage. Each year, employees enjoy a fall festival, group races and afternoon popsicle breaks. The team stuffs stockings for Stockings from US, a nonprofit that sends holiday gifts to deployed service members.

Third Place: Executive Building Solutions Inc.

Executive Building Solutions Inc received third place in the Top Small Workplaces category, at Knox News and Knox.Biz’s Top Workplaces 2022 celebration at The Foundry, Thursday, July 21, 2022.
Executive Building Solutions Inc received third place in the Top Small Workplaces category, at Knox News and Knox.Biz’s Top Workplaces 2022 celebration at The Foundry, Thursday, July 21, 2022.

This full-service janitorial building maintenance company has been family owned and operated for over 35 years, and has made the Top Workplaces list four years in a row.

The company has two locations in Knoxville, employs 79 people in the area and cares for more than 20 million square feet of office space. It offers everything from carpet care to private airliner sanitation.

The company said "teamwork starts with leadership. Our team is committed to a  sense of persistence and urgency. Our team members are motivated, trained, developed, and encouraged to take ownership of every task."

Silas Sloan: Covering growth and development in East Tennessee
Twitter: @silasloan| Email: silas.sloan@knoxnews.com
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This article originally appeared on Knoxville News Sentinel: Top Workplaces: Kramer Rayson law firm in Knoxville Tennessee

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