Ramatsitsi Attorneys Inc
What does your company do?
We are a 100% BBBEE botique law firm that has been in business for five years with its eyes on providing turnkey solutions in the cyber law field. whilst we understand that cyber law is the future, our current areas of practice are Cyber law, Labour law, and civil litigation.
We believe in leadership and women empowerment. Our firm has employed three young black women from different backgrounds thus being a 100% black female owned and ran law firm. we have partnered up with the University of Pretoria to offer mentorship to six of their students by providing guidance into their career path within the law field.
One of our proud values is ubuntu. We believe in giving back to those who need the help the most. Our firm has a pro-bono division that offer free legal advise to orphans, widows, persons with disabilities and the elderly who cannot afford legal services.
The future is bright and we are proud to watch the youth come to the realization of who they are within the industry and how best they can help others. We champion competence, excellence and top tier professionalism. We are not the lawyers you can only when you have legal issues, we are part of your family structure.
What is your biggest success?
Being able to raise enough funds to register three candidate attorneys and being intentional about teaching, training and empowering them to become the lawyers they saw in themselves in university. Our firm is not a place to induce anxiety and to kill people's dreams but to help them fly high.
What has been your biggest hurdle?
Starting the law firm without any capital. Surviving the financial dry seasons of the firm. The hardest part is not starting but believing you can survive the storms you are not trained for. This year we celebrate five years of the law firm being in practice. Challenges came and we did not only survive but we are still standing with our chest held high. We are excited about the Future. Ramatsitsi Attorneys Inc is the type of law firm that will still be there 50 years from now.