[2] Between 2001 and 2003 she was working as an auditor at the district court of Zurich in civil, labor, tenancy and criminal law.
She received a doctorate from the University of Basel, with a thesis on "The Termination of the Mandate", and passed the bar examination in the Swiss Canton of Zurich.
After graduation, Frick worked at a Zurich law firm, and then as legal director for a London-based human resources company.
After the 2013 parliamentary election, Frick was appointed to serve under the new government Prime Minister Adrian Hasler as head of the ministry of Foreign Affairs, Education and Culture.
[8] She refused to cooperate with the Landtag of Liechtenstein's audit commission, and on 2 July 2019 it passed a motion of no confidence against her, and she was expelled from her position.