- Jul 13, 2022
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Hi everyone, how is your week going for far? š
Who here can relate to this situation?:
"Your phone goes off. You know that sound - itās an email notification. You open your inbox, and there it is. The email youāve been waiting for for weeks. You tentatively hover over it. Ok, breathe, clickā¦ YES! The firm has invited you to an interview! After calling your friends and family, it starts to become very real. The interview is in two weeks, thereās so much to do, where do you start?"
Sound familiar? I wanted to jump into the forum today to share with you some advice to help you prepare for your interviews, whether it be for a training contract or vacation scheme.
Here are 5 things you can do to prepare:
āļøAnswering motivational, commercial, competency and situational judgement based questions.
āBreaking down why the interviewer is asking this question, and what they are looking for in your response.
āļøCommon pitfalls to avoid, and examples of āmodel answersā.
These videos are interactive - you will be asked the interview question, and then have time to think about how you would answer, before moving on to the āanswerā video, where you can listen to advice on how best to approach the question in a real interview setting.
I hope you found this useful, feel free to share any interview preparation tips of your own in this thread!
Erin š
Who here can relate to this situation?:
"Your phone goes off. You know that sound - itās an email notification. You open your inbox, and there it is. The email youāve been waiting for for weeks. You tentatively hover over it. Ok, breathe, clickā¦ YES! The firm has invited you to an interview! After calling your friends and family, it starts to become very real. The interview is in two weeks, thereās so much to do, where do you start?"
Sound familiar? I wanted to jump into the forum today to share with you some advice to help you prepare for your interviews, whether it be for a training contract or vacation scheme.
Here are 5 things you can do to prepare:
- Research the firmās practice areas: This is a key way of showing the interviewer that you are invested in joining the firm because of the work that they do, not just to gain a training contract. You donāt need to memorise every department, focus on the practice areas that the firm specialises in, and familiarise yourself with those. Say the firm has a large Tech department, and you are interested in working in this area - focus on this!
- Choose a commercial awareness news story: Trying to learn every detail about every commercial news story in the space of two weeks isnāt realistic. Pick one that interests you, and learn it inside out. Read every update, make notes of key details, and discuss it with someone else aloud if you can.
- Research the firmās current deals: You will most likely be asked a question in your interview surrounding the firmās recent deals. You canāt be expected to know every deal that the firm is working on, but itās important to have basic knowledge of the most relevant ones at the time of your interview. Find out what deals the firm is currently working on, note down key details, which departments are involved, and start to think about how the deal will impact the firm as a business.
- Read over your application: When writing applications to a host of different firms, it can be difficult to remember exactly what youāve written. Your interviewer could bring up any aspect of your application - be prepared by reading over your application ahead of time, and re-familiarise yourself with your answers. The last thing you want to happen here is to confuse your answers with an application you submitted to a different firm!
- Practise your answers aloud: Often the way you would answer a question in written form is different to how you would actually answer it in conversation. To avoid sounding like youāre reading from a script in your interview, note down the key points you want to discuss, and practise answering them aloud to a friend or family member. If you canāt find someone to practise with, try recording yourself. Watch yourself back and see how your answers come across from the interviewerās perspective - this may be uncomfortable at first, but itās a great way to refine your answers, and ensure they are coming across in the way you intend.
Our popular āHow to prepare for a law firm interview and assessment centreā course has been transformed!
The brilliant Mahesh, a former trainee at a Magic Circle firm, has compiled all of his knowledge from conducting 600+ mock interviews at TCLA, into a deep dive video series focusing on:āļøAnswering motivational, commercial, competency and situational judgement based questions.
āBreaking down why the interviewer is asking this question, and what they are looking for in your response.
āļøCommon pitfalls to avoid, and examples of āmodel answersā.
These videos are interactive - you will be asked the interview question, and then have time to think about how you would answer, before moving on to the āanswerā video, where you can listen to advice on how best to approach the question in a real interview setting.
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I hope you found this useful, feel free to share any interview preparation tips of your own in this thread!
Erin š