Hi
@futuretraineesolicitor good question! If you would still like it as a starred thread then feel free to post your question as a thread early next week and I can star it in order to gain wider input
My sense is that everything you hear about the benefits of a small or large trainee intake will be
1. Marketing spin or
2. Anecdotal experiences. Also, from my time working as a TCLA application reviewer, I can tell you that comments about a firm's trainee intake size are usually not very interesting in part because
every single candidate makes them... also, I have seen comments about 'the firm's small intake' when the firm in question has one of the largest trainee intakes in the City, so try to avoid making a mistake like that🤣
Ok, so about the actual difference between firms with small and large trainee intakes - sure, you will hear that a smaller trainee intake gives you 'more responsibility' and a larger one is 'more collegiate' and may have 'better training' but what does any of that mean?
@Jessica Booker's point about ratio of trainees to other lawyers is an excellent point. It is possible to conclude that a smaller trainee intake leaves you more exposed as you have fewer peers to ask questions of and your work can be more closely overseen by grad rec and senior lawyers, but at the same time a firm with a larger intake may have longer-established mechanisms in place for reviewing trainees' work.
Firms with larger intakes sometimes have better training structures in place if they have been in the City longer, although some firms with small intakes are renowned for excellent training as they invest a lot in training their small crop of trainees.
I would say that statistically, you are more likely to make friends in a larger intake, simply by virtue of the fact that there will be more people for you to choose from! There could also be less of a sense of direct competition with trainees when there are a vast number as opposed to only a handful. Nevertheless, a smaller intake might bond very well and enjoy a more intimate firm environment. It really is hard to say.
At the end of the day, most firms do not manufacture the size of their trainee intake for the benefit of trainee culture. Their trainee intake is determined by business need (which is why multiple firms with 'large' intakes had 'small' intakes a decade ago but grew rapidly in the meantime) and they subsequently espouse the value of their intake size in recruitment brochures as if they chose it to be that size for some other reason than business need 🤣