Thank you very much lovely ahhaha 🤗 I am sure you will hear happy news too. Are you waiting to hear back from anyone else?Cmon you are gonna get the AC just a matter of time !!!!!!
Hey Guest, do you have a question for graduate recruitment? Gemma Baker from Willkie is live to answer your questions!
Thank you very much lovely ahhaha 🤗 I am sure you will hear happy news too. Are you waiting to hear back from anyone else?Cmon you are gonna get the AC just a matter of time !!!!!!
Thank you very much lovely ahhaha 🤗 I am sure you will hear happy news too. Are you waiting to hear back from anyone else?
You are smashing this!!! I wish you the utmost best of luck!!! Hope your AC outcome is what you hoped for xwaiting on 4 firms post AC/s/First stage interviews. 3 of them done this week and last. Had an US firm AC today :/ (only had a day to prep, but the firm was lovely, super technical question ahahaha, and a very difficult AC, but what can you do!)
You?
Fingers crossed for FF and everything else for us both
Nope, still waiting! I saw that some people unfortunately started to receive rejections towards the end of last week though. When did you apply if you don't mind me asking?Has anyone heard back from Hogan Lovells?
There is absolutely no protocol.what is the protocol about thank you notes? should those be done to the people that interview you at AC? Thanks!
I usually emailed Grad Rec to thank them briefly after the AC. If my interviewer had given me their name, and their email was public on their profile on the website (for example, all lawyers at Travers have a bio on the website in which their email contact is included). If their email wasn't in their bio, I wouldn't email them - I took that as a general suggestion that they're not open to communication unless initiated by them.what is the protocol about thank you notes? should those be done to the people that interview you at AC? Thanks!
No worries - thought you had the wrong person 🤣Sorry tagged the wrong person haha 😂
thank you but just not interested in smaller/ non-prestigious firmsDoes anyone know anything about Brown Rudnick's recruitment timetable?
I'm not one for mushy motivational speeches but let me give you a bit of a positive boost as someone with a similar profile in a similar position: there are FAR TOO MANY firms in the UK for you to be rejected by all of them. You just have to be prepared to broaden your horizons.
This cycle I have managed to find 29 firms to apply for and I still have at least 10 left on my hit list (and growing!). Many of them are traditional city big dogs. But quite a lot are smaller, less well known firms which graduates probably aren't throwing themselves at quite so frequently. Just ask yourself what matters more in a difficult job market: the specific firm, or just getting into law at all?
There is a corporate partner at Linklaters who trained at a high street practice in Hull. While his career is a bit improbable, if you're good enough there is no reason why you couldn't end up somewhere really aspirational after you've trained! That's the way I'm viewing it anyway.
Edit: also, smaller more niche firms tend to have much easier app forms, no online tests and only do direct TCs. Could be worth it just for the ease of applying.
I personally know very little about the firm; however, I do know of Tracy Tsao who is very active on LinkedIn and is a future trainee at Rosenblatt - you might want to reach out!Hi! Anyone got any tips for finding out more information about Rosenblatt, cannot seem to find anything on Chambers, Chambersstudent, legal500, lex100...
I broadly agree with this and just thought to give it a boost and add my two cents.Does anyone know anything about Brown Rudnick's recruitment timetable?
I'm not one for mushy motivational speeches but let me give you a bit of a positive boost as someone with a similar profile in a similar position: there are FAR TOO MANY firms in the UK for you to be rejected by all of them. You just have to be prepared to broaden your horizons.
This cycle I have managed to find 29 firms to apply for and I still have at least 10 left on my hit list (and growing!). Many of them are traditional city big dogs. But quite a lot are smaller, less well known firms which graduates probably aren't throwing themselves at quite so frequently. Just ask yourself what matters more in a difficult job market: the specific firm, or just getting into law at all?
There is a corporate partner at Linklaters who trained at a high street practice in Hull. While his career is a bit improbable, if you're good enough there is no reason why you couldn't end up somewhere really aspirational after you've trained! That's the way I'm viewing it anyway.
Edit: also, smaller more niche firms tend to have much easier app forms, no online tests and only do direct TCs. Could be worth it just for the ease of applying.