All the thumbs up are very reassuring - thanks all!!Is anyone still waiting to hear back from Latham for their open day on 23rd November?
Hey Guest, do you have a question for graduate recruitment? Gemma Baker from Willkie is live to answer your questions!
All the thumbs up are very reassuring - thanks all!!Is anyone still waiting to hear back from Latham for their open day on 23rd November?
Hi, what was the turnover time between the interview and your decision?They only asked for my academic reference and it was for the winter scheme
This is where it gets a little bit complicated, as it depends on the situation.Hi, just a bit of a grammar q, should 'banking paralegal' be capitalised? And should modules e.g., 'competition law' be capitalised?
That makes sense, thank you!I think it may seem like Northern offices have less competition, and it may true in some senses, but given that they generally have fewer places, the competition may end up being proportionally similar. Plus, I'm unsure how well your motivation to apply to a Northern office only to move to London would be looked at as it shows a lack of commitment on your part.
If you do end up applying, I would highlight the practice and deal focuses of the office you're applying to and find the reasons why the cities you've mentioned would be good for your career instead of highlighting your desire to move to London after/during your TC.
If you're applying to them directly yes (I work for Baker and we use BM often). However, if you're describing previous experience you've done with them for another application I'd avoid abbreviations.Can I shorten Baker McKenzie as BM?
I think if the first time you mention it you put 'Baker McKenzie (BM)', then you can - that is what I did for Herbert Smith, e.g. 'Herbert Smith Freehills (HSF)'Can I shorten Baker McKenzie as BM?
Do you know how much they'll reimburse us for travel? Tickets are too expensiveJust received an invite for the latham open day
It is one of the few firms where I don’t think you should shorten it, unfortunately.Following on from the above discussion how could I abbreviate Slaughter and May or is it not possible?
I can't replace the 'and' with an asterisk as that is how it is spelt and equally using 'Slaughters' looks unprofessional and colloquialized.
Any tips? @Jessica Booker
A lot of firms are just going to get a factual reference that confirms your dates of education/employment, job title/degree title, and in the case of your academics, confirm your academic results. Any detail beyond this tends to be limited to saying there weren't any conduct or performance issues.Hey everyone!
I need help understanding the system for providing academic references to firms.
My situation:
I have done my undergrad in law in Europe and last year an LLM in London. For work references, I have lawyers who have supervised me in short term internships that agreed to be put as reference so it should be all good I hope. But for the academic side, I'd say that is not something that is done too much in my country, and we don't have the equivalent of a supervisor or anything. I don't know any professor personnally. There is one with whom I have one class with a good mark and I wrote my dissertation with him as well and also had a really good mark. However that's about it in terms of relationship, I never even had a meeting or anything. I'm unsure whether he would even agree to be a reference, especially since it has been 3 years now since last contact...
As for my LLM in London, that is the same, no professor could picture my face from my name I believe... We had a personal supervisor (who had ~10 other supervisees) but it was more for general support with studies. In terms of professors, I have 4 modules for which I received distinction, but still don't really see if that is enough of a reason.
Could someone help me understand what firms really expect? Do firm contact them regularily? Even if they are out of the UK? and who would you advise I put as a contact? Does their field of expertise matter? do I need to write to them in advance asking if I am allowed to do that? (I guess that for someone in my country that is for me to find out, but what is the standart for professors in London?) What happens if they get contacted? Is it a call or do they have to provide a full letter? What do they need to attest of? In London, are professors generally willing to say something nice even if they dont really know you? If I were to contact a professor, would I need to tell him/her what grade I had in their module (results are anonymous...)?
Please help me I'm completely lost
Thank you in advance!!
Thank you very much for your prompt response Jessica!A lot of firms are just going to get a factual reference that confirms your dates of education/employment, job title/degree title, and in the case of your academics, confirm your academic results. Any detail beyond this tends to be limited to saying there weren't any conduct or performance issues.
The firm may want more than this, but many organisations do not have the ability to provide anything more than this, and in many cases are unwilling to provide any more detail than this (risk associated with providing subjective details). Many employers will not allow individual employees to give references and instead ask for it to be put through a central team like HR.
The referee will only be contacted until they provide the reference. They may be chased up if they are slow in providing it. If they don't provide it at all, the law firm/reference check company will come back to you and ask you to provide alternative details.
It really doesn't matter who they are.
Out of politeness, in situations you are asking individuals (rather than organisations) to provide a reference, you should be asking them whether it is ok for you to pass on their contact details. It is a good way to also give them a heads-up to expect the reference request coming through.
It tends to be a written reference rather than a call.
Any academic referee still at the university will have access to your academic results, so you don't need to tell them what they are.
The firm may want more than just confirmation of your grades, but many universities will only confirm your grades. Many cannot provide the detail that firms request - and the firms accept that. You should provide the contact for the university that you feel is most appropriate given your circumstances.Thank you very much for your prompt response Jessica!
If I understand well, for the academic side, firms want a contact that will be able to confirm the factual details I provide? Does that mean I should provide detail of the student administration, who has access to all the records? Should I provide one for each University I have been educated at?
I would break this question down into it's many parts before proceeding to answer. So the concerns are-Hi - anyone got any advice on applying to WFW? I am stuck on this question.
'You are a trainee solicitor, working in the office and it is 6.30pm. You have an important personal appointment at 7pm. You are updating a document ready for a client meeting which will take place at 10am the next day. As this is a new client it is important that the firm impresses them and accuracy is key. You are waiting on some information from a third party before you can finalise the document. You have also received several emails from other fee-earners in the department asking you to help them on some urgent tasks. Your supervisor is working from home. What do you do?'
Thanks