Someone here said that only 40% of law graduates become lawyers.
I believe that I had said something like that, quoted from one of my first year lectures. You have misunderstood though, I didn't say that 40% of grads become lawyers, I said that ' only 40% of grads go on to
practice as solicitors/barristers'.
There is a subtle but significant difference.
The definition of a lawyer is someone 'learned in the law', who presumably uses primarily that knowledge in their professional career. It follows that most law graduates will be assume the role of a lawyer in whatever they do...like working within a company/body of their interest (NGO, pharma, consulting, finance, gov department) as an adviser on legal aspects of activities, as a significant but perhaps not sole part of their job description. This is distinct from actually practicing formally as a solicitor in a law firm.
People do of course go on to do any number of jobs completely distinct from law (if that is possible): management (big one), teaching, entrepreneurship...pretty much anything really. But I actually think there would be very few graduates who go on to have nothing to do with 'lawyering' (addressing the legal aspect of an activity) in a broad sense.
If your not interested in being a solicitor, that is understandable and not cause for concern. However, if your not interested in being a lawyer as defined above, imo you shouldn't really do Law.