Well-versed: Law student has background in writing, HR

Photo courtesy of TJ?Kulfan

By Sheila Pursglove
Legal News

TJ Kulfan originally set his sights on becoming a journalist, following in the footsteps of his father, sports writer Ted Kulfan, who covers the Detroit Red Wings for The Detroit News. 

“I wanted to be a journalist like him until I was a senior in high school,” Kulfan says. 

“I even wrote for my high school newspaper; I covered sports and other miscellaneous topics the editor would select for me.”

Kulfan’s mother Angela, a sales manager for AAA Living, previously was a Senior Sales Director for the Detroit News Media Partnership for 25 years, and so writing and journalism have always been around his upbringing.

“I was attracted to the idea of writing on big events and providing a voice to those that might not have the ability to speak on their own. However, I drifted away from that when I began my undergraduate studies and became far more attracted to the legal realm as I began to learn more about it,” Kulfan says.

“Having the privilege to represent another in order to find them justice was a challenge I was always attracted to. I always wanted to work in a profession I could be proud of, and working as an advocate for another would achieve that.”

When Kulfan was selecting an undergraduate program, Wayne State University was finalizing the plan to develop the Mike Ilitch School of Business campus in downtown Detroit. 

“I saw that new investment as an exciting opportunity to learn from some of the area’s best business minds right in the heart of Detroit,” he says. “My undergraduate experience opened doors for me to work both in global corporations and local non-profits, and the lessons I was able to learn from each have been invaluable as I make the transition into my legal career.” 

In 2016, Kulfan took a study abroad trip to China for four weeks, divided into two main portions. First, the class traveled to Shanghai, Beijing, and Suzhou and toured a number of factory plants and offices, met with company officials, and learned about their overseas operations. They then attended a two-week Global Supply Chain course instructed by WSU professors at Wuhan University, with a mix of WSU and Wuhan University students. 

“Without any doubt, the greatest highlight of the trip was collaborating with the students from Wuhan and learning about the culture of an undergraduate business student in China,” he says.

Kulfan’s first undergrad internship was in human resources..

“When I first started, I thought it would be rather bland and unexciting,” he says. “However, I was stunned at how many branches within an organization the HR department really does touch.” 

His two HR internships were vastly different. The Detroit Zoological Society experience in Royal Oak focused him towards employee relations and operations-based tasks, and a chance to see how the Zoo’s HR team navigated business obstacles that exist for nonprofits. 

At Bosch in Plymouth, he worked on projects that would improve employee retention, increase recruitment, or streamline communication between departments. 

“Both of these opportunities helped me develop an array of skills involving project management, detail orientation, and the ability to communicate effectively with people of all backgrounds.”

Kulfan then spent 11 months as an Immigration Coordinator at EPITEC in Southfield, an IT, engineering and professional staffing company. 

Now a 1L student at Detroit Mercy Law, where his particular interest is corporate law regulations and transactional practice, Kulfan’s career goal is to work in corporate law and assist with the legal regulation of industries that are still in their infancy stages and growing rapidly. 

“The overall goal would be to work in a position that allows me to be involved in shaping legislation that can help protect people from of those industries that we still hardly know anything about, autonomous driving and legalized gaming are specific areas of interest for me,” he says.


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