Hey Jaysen,
Out of interest were those successful applications (so you interviewed at those firms) or just practice ones?
Yep, they were both successful applications. Ashurst was for a TC. Jones Day for a vacation scheme.
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Hey Jaysen,
Out of interest were those successful applications (so you interviewed at those firms) or just practice ones?
The name should at least tell you their gender. For female contacts, use "Dear Ms X" instead of "Miss/Mrs" if you're unsure about their marital status.Hello, I have a question. If I found the name of a graduate recruiter through my own research (the application did not specify who I should address the cover letter to), should I write "Dear X" or "Dear Mr/Miss X"? I don't know if the former is too informal, but I don't want to assume the marital status of the latter. Please help!
The name should at least tell you their gender. For female contacts, use "Dear Ms X" instead of "Miss/Mrs" if you're unsure about their marital status.![]()
I would be wary about doing this, as some people aren't too keen on 'Ms'. I think 'Dear [Full Name]' will suffice.
I would be wary about doing this, as some people aren't too keen on 'Ms'. I think 'Dear [Full Name]' will suffice.
Thanks! I wasn't too sure about using Ms either, but won't putting down just the name be informal?
Hi Ben
You would normally be correct. The cover letter should be used for information you haven't already provided in your application form. So if the question in the application form was: "Why are you applying to this firm?", you would be justified leaving this out in your cover letter.
However, in your case the application form is different. The question is asking you what makes the firm different to other firms. And, while this has some crossover with: "Why are you applying to this firm", it is not the same. I would therefore suggest you still include this in your application form.
Let me know if you need any further help.
Hello, bit late coming across this one! I am doing an application for Ashurst TC (found your cover letter very helpful thank you). But like the person above I am a bit confused as to how to separate the cover letter and answer to the 'how is Ashurst different to other firms you have applied to'.
For the question about how Ashurst is different, would you suggest giving a more descriptive answer and literally stating how I perceive it to be different, or should I also add to that and include why these differences appeal to me? (Word limit is just 250 words)
Although it specifically mentions 'other firms you have applied to', is it best not to refer in any specifics to other firms, just perhaps that they are similar scale of size/international work etc.?
Thanks!
I’d personally not reference a qualified role in the future as that is a big jump for a law firm like Slaughters and even though you are qualified elsewhere, they will have a more traditional way of qualifying, through a training contract.@Jaysen, in a cover letter for a paralegal position (FTC 6-12 months - Disputes & Investigations) with Slaughters would it be okay to say that I want this role to gain a foundation in English litigation and investigations (technical knowledge) to apply be an Associate in the team if there is an opportunity in the future.
[internal note: I am a qualified lawyer but want to do a paralegal role to get English litigation and investigation experience]
Thank you, @Jessica Booker for picking this up! So kind! does your answer differ if i mentioned that i am english-qualfied? and I can say to be an associate in disputes and investigations (without saying at slaughter and may)?I’d personally not reference a qualified role in the future as that is a big jump for a law firm like Slaughters and even though you are qualified elsewhere, they will have a more traditional way of qualifying, through a training contract.
I would focus on the experience the paralegal role will give you and your interest in this area rather than the jump to potentially secure a qualified role at a later date.