Hearing Back from Law Firms, Assessment Centres & Interview Tips - 2019 - 2020

Status
Not open for further replies.

Daniel Boden

Legendary Member
Trainee
Highest Rated Member
  • Sep 6, 2018
    1,537
    3,857
    Getting a lot of questions about norm groups.

    Basically don’t worry about them. You are worrying about the wrong things if this, percentiles and raw scores are what you are fixating on.

    To explain:

    raw score - how many questions you get right (eg 18 out of 20)

    norm group: who you are being benchmarked against. This could be your fellow applicants, it could be last year’s applicants, it could be a 1000s of people who have applied to a similar job to you across different companies.

    It’s never as crude as this, but to explain. You do a WG assessment and get 5 out of 10 as a raw score. You are benchmarked against a norm group of toddlers, you’ll probably get a very high percentile. You are benchmarked against high performing qualified lawyers, and you will probably get a low percentile, even though the assessment is the same.

    percentile: this is your ranking if you lined up everyone in the norm group in performance order. Those with the 99th percentile will be the strongest performers, those with the 1st percentile are the bottom performing against the norm group.

    You could get 8 out of 10 as a raw score and still be lower than the 10th percentile. You could get 2 out of 10 and still be above the 90th percentile.
    Thanks for this explanation @Jessica Booker - that clears it up!
     
    • Like
    Reactions: Jessica Booker

    kslwnd

    Active Member
    Sep 15, 2019
    16
    26
    Anyone know when it would be appropriate to contact a law firm about the status of an application? I applied to HSF quite early and got the "formally under review" email on October 7th and I've yet to hear from them...
     

    Jessica Booker

    Legendary Member
    TCLA Moderator
    Gold Member
    Graduate Recruitment
    Premium Member
    Forum Team
    Aug 1, 2019
    14,512
    20,201
    Anyone know when it would be appropriate to contact a law firm about the status of an application? I applied to HSF quite early and got the "formally under review" email on October 7th and I've yet to hear from them...

    Not until you confidently know they are interviewing for the role
     

    kslwnd

    Active Member
    Sep 15, 2019
    16
    26
    Not until you confidently know they are interviewing for the role

    I do know for sure several people have heard back with acceptances and rejections - just thought it particularly odd as I am also aware that some of these people applied after I did and I was informed that HSF reviews applications on a rolling basis. I don't want to come off as impatient though. Thank you for your help! :)
     

    Jessica Booker

    Legendary Member
    TCLA Moderator
    Gold Member
    Graduate Recruitment
    Premium Member
    Forum Team
    Aug 1, 2019
    14,512
    20,201
    Just
    I do know for sure several people have heard back with acceptances and rejections - just thought it particularly odd as I am also aware that some of these people applied after I did and I was informed that HSF reviews applications on a rolling basis. I don't want to come off as impatient though. Thank you for your help! :)

    Applicants can often be held somewhere in the middle before deciding what to do with them.

    Recruiters will often hold a small number of applicants back to see how their interviews go and also see what acceptance rates are like before deciding what to do with those who are on hold.

    There is no harm in calling or emailing to ask for an update though. Before you do, take the following steps though:
    1. log back into your application to check the status of it (if you can) and also that your email address is correct
    2. Check your junk mail folders
    Used to be the case that around 70-80% of people who use to contact me for an update, had been updated and just hadn’t picked up the email telling them so.
     
    • Like
    Reactions: wwood and Alice G

    Jaysen

    Founder, TCLA
    Staff member
    TCLA Moderator
    Gold Member
    Premium Member
    M&A Bootcamp
  • Feb 17, 2018
    4,719
    8,627
    Hi, with the interview question "why not consulting?" how do people formulate a really strong answer, I obviously know they're different but as I've never really considered consulting I just wanted to know if anyone has a good answer to this?

    As Jess said, I'd be surprised if it's phrased this way unless you had indicated some kind of interest in consulting or made a general statement about your interest in commercial law that sounded like it could crossover to any finance profession.

    Like you, I can't say I know much about what consultants do, so I think it's easier to just be open that you haven't considered it and focus on your positive interest in commercial law (whatever your reasons are), rather than trying to suggest what you wouldn't like about consultancy.

    I was asked something like this before ('why not be an investment banker and be the one to drive a transaction forward?') and I used to just lean on my interest in the law as a subject.
     
    • ℹ️
    Reactions: mlaw1234 and Daniel Boden

    arcnor

    Active Member
    Nov 6, 2019
    12
    43
    Does anyone know how long A & O take to get back to you after interview?

    At my interview last week they mentioned that we will be hearing from them this week. Did you interview on Thursday last week in the afternoon?

    -----

    Also just received my Bird & Bird VI invite. Anyone got any tips for this?
     
    Status
    Not open for further replies.

    About Us

    The Corporate Law Academy (TCLA) was founded in 2018 because we wanted to improve the legal journey. We wanted more transparency and better training. We wanted to form a community of aspiring lawyers who care about becoming the best version of themselves.

    Newsletter

    Discover the most relevant business news, access our law firm analysis, and receive our best advice for aspiring lawyers.