Current ranking: #11
Signature move
The argued case. Wolfe’s strongest posts pick a position on something that matters to junior lawyers, such as Gen Z work culture, all-nighters, vocational vs academic routes into law, and argue it without hedging. The posts are first-person, the stance is clear, and the comments are usually evenly split between agreement and pushback. That mix is exactly what the algorithm rewards.
Topic fingerprint
- Corporate culture in law. All-nighters, hand-holding, Gen Z’s expectations vs the profession’s reality.
- Pathways into the profession. First-in-family, vocational routes, the stories behind the qualifications.
- Women in law. Less explicit than some, but consistently present.
- Mentorship and content creation. She runs Law With Chrissie alongside the legal practice and the audience knows it.
- Public commentary on news cycles. She picks the law story everyone’s reading and rewrites it as a structural argument.
Best post of the quarter
A 3 March 2025 post asking at what point we accept that corporate culture is the problem and Gen Z might be the solution. 2,609 likes, 247 comments. Provoked by an article suggesting a junior lawyer was “entitled” for refusing more than two all-nighters in a week, Wolfe’s response is a structural argument about how the legal industry treats junior talent. It is the most-read post in the entire top-fifteen dataset.
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Firm context
Nexa Law is the same firm at the top of this list, with Steven Mather at #2 and Wolfe at #11. Nexa’s combined tracked power score is 697,624 across 108 individuals. Wolfe’s 10,742 is 1.5% of that. Nexa’s federated model means the firm’s LinkedIn footprint is unusually wide, but the per-person power scores at the top are some of the most concentrated in the dataset.
Why follow her?
- If you want to see how to take a clear position on a contentious industry issue without losing the room.
- If you advise or hire junior lawyers and want a live feed of what they’re reading and reposting.
- If you’re testing whether long-form opinion posts still work in 2026. This feed says yes, by a wide margin.
If you only read one of her posts, read this
The “At what point do we accept that corporate culture is the problem” post. The 2,609-like post is the canonical Wolfe argument: a single industry story, a structural reading, a clear position. Read it and notice how rare that combination still is on legal LinkedIn.
Source: TBD Marketing LinkedInfluencer dataset, Q1 2026 Top 200. Posts sample window: 27 January 2025 – 1 April 2026.

