The person posting was just engagement baiting. No further discussion neededI’ve just seen a post on LinkedIn about how “You should not be working retail or hospitality if you want a top graduate job” in relation to training contracts.
I’d be interested to see what people think of this and the benefits of retail. Considering it’s been all I’ve known since I was 16, and it’s nerve wracking to think I’m more experienced in retail than law, however gaining legal work experience in any capacity has been extremely tough- especially throughout university and summer holidays.
Agreed. Infact a partner at a US firm said to me once she prefers candidates with this exact experience because it shows they have grit and are willing to work hard. My experience is mostly corporate and they did not make me an offer. So please ignore this Linkedin post @l789The person posting was just engagement baiting. No further discussion needed
Thanks for the advice…. I do feel torn between giving up working retail and taking on unpaid voluntary or unpaid internship roles… which would mean I have no income to survive but a good opportunity to pad out my cvAgreed. Infact a partner at a US firm said to me once she prefers candidates with this exact experience because it shows they have grit and are willing to work hard. My experience is mostly corporate and they did not make me an offer. So please ignore this Linkedin post @l789
I’ve just seen a post on LinkedIn about how “You should not be working retail or hospitality if you want a top graduate job” in relation to training contracts.
I’d be interested to see what people think of this and the benefits of retail. Considering it’s been all I’ve known since I was 16, and it’s nerve wracking to think I’m more experienced in retail than law, however gaining legal work experience in any capacity has been extremely tough- especially throughout university and summer holidays.
If you are in a financial position where you can go for it then you should as these experiences can sometimes open doors !! But if not do not punish yourself if unpaid work is not feasible. I know people with offers who have worked in a pub and did not volunteer a day in their life. Use what you have and sell it.Thanks for the advice…. I do feel torn between giving up working retail and taking on unpaid voluntary or unpaid internship roles… which would mean I have no income to survive but a good opportunity to pad out my cv
I’d recommend reading the comments to the post, which overwhelmingly disagree with it. Retail work is great evidence for an application - it shows a lot of transferable skills and also the fact you can do a normal, sometimes boring, sometimes demanding job where you have to serve others. That actually sets you up for law very well!I’ve just seen a post on LinkedIn about how “You should not be working retail or hospitality if you want a top graduate job” in relation to training contracts.
I’d be interested to see what people think of this and the benefits of retail. Considering it’s been all I’ve known since I was 16, and it’s nerve wracking to think I’m more experienced in retail than law, however gaining legal work experience in any capacity has been extremely tough- especially throughout university and summer holidays.
Thanks for the advice…. I do feel torn between giving up working retail and taking on unpaid voluntary or unpaid internship roles… which would mean I have no income to survive but a good opportunity to pad out my cv
Thanks Jessica. Personally, my only problem is that my cv is predominantly retail (3/4 retail jobs) with tutoring, a consulting project, open days, an insight scheme and a research volunteer role.I’d recommend reading the comments to the post, which overwhelmingly disagree with it. Retail work is great evidence for an application - it shows a lot of transferable skills and also the fact you can do a normal, sometimes boring, sometimes demanding job where you have to serve others. That actually sets you up for law very well!
I hope you're also including in your work experience descriptions all of the things you learned about how the retail businesses operate because that's all very relevant commercial awareness that you wouldn't get from doing purely legal work!Thanks Jessica. Personally, my only problem is that my cv is predominantly retail (3/4 retail jobs) with tutoring, a consulting project, open days, an insight scheme and a research volunteer role.
I’m seeing if I can take on a casework volunteer role but the vast majority of applicants have this experience already- tutoring/ probono casework - so it’s nothing that stands out.
I am thinking of going unemployed to take on two different volunteering roles.
It’s difficult as I’m trying to push myself and increase my candidacy, but it’s a hard judgement call to make as to what to sacrifice.
Personally, I wouldn’t recommend this.Thanks Jessica. Personally, my only problem is that my cv is predominantly retail (3/4 retail jobs) with tutoring, a consulting project, open days, an insight scheme and a research volunteer role.
I’m seeing if I can take on a casework volunteer role but the vast majority of applicants have this experience already- tutoring/ probono casework - so it’s nothing that stands out.
I am thinking of going unemployed to take on two different volunteering roles.
It’s difficult as I’m trying to push myself and increase my candidacy, but it’s a hard judgement call to make as to what to sacrifice.
Theoretically you can use annual leave for short internships. But I agree with what everyone else has said in that the person posting on LinkedIn is objectively incorrect. Have heard personally from many extremely competitive firms that they value retail experience a lot.Thanks for the advice…. I do feel torn between giving up working retail and taking on unpaid voluntary or unpaid internship roles… which would mean I have no income to survive but a good opportunity to pad out my cv
Someone PLEASE tell me who posted this, seen it on Reddit tooI’ve just seen a post on LinkedIn about how “You should not be working retail or hospitality if you want a top graduate job” in relation to training contracts.
I’d be interested to see what people think of this and the benefits of retail. Considering it’s been all I’ve known since I was 16, and it’s nerve wracking to think I’m more experienced in retail than law, however gaining legal work experience in any capacity has been extremely tough- especially throughout university and summer holidays.
I’ve just seen a post on LinkedIn about how “You should not be working retail or hospitality if you want a top graduate job” in relation to training contracts.
I’d be interested to see what people think of this and the benefits of retail. Considering it’s been all I’ve known since I was 16, and it’s nerve wracking to think I’m more experienced in retail than law, however gaining legal work experience in any capacity has been extremely tough- especially throughout university and summer holidays.