Jessica Booker
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- Aug 1, 2019
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**Please avoid any of these companies - Bradstone Allington, Morgan Quays, Burlington Row, Hampton Cross - they are all connected in one way or another**Hey all! First time poster here but was looking for some advice and figured this would be the best place to start.
In summary, has anyone heard of or had any experiences with Bradstone Allington and specifically their paralegal training and work experience course?
Since graduating in July, I’ve been applying for paralegal roles. Having graduated with a high 2:1 from a very strong RG, I figured it would be rather straightforward. However, despite sending out probably 80 applications since then, I’ve not landed one interview. It’s becoming really disheartening as I’m spending a long time on each application, have had friends and family read over them, and I’m just not sure where I’m going wrong.
It’s gotten to the stage where I don’t only need the job to progress my career but to support myself. If I haven’t found one by the end of the year, I anticipate that I will need to get a job in retail or hospitality, which is what I desperately want to avoid.
I’ve now stumbled upon Bradstone Allington and their paralegal course. They offer a professional certification and a 12 week work experience placement, which I figure will be helpful with both paralegal and VS applications. The reviews mostly seem good too, but I am wary about the fact that it costs £2,000. I don’t want to immediately scream “scam” but paying for work experience seems a bit off. Having said that, I am aware how saturated the paralegal market is right now and perhaps things like this are needed to break through.
Any personal experiences or advice would be much appreciated!
No one I know in the legal profession would value these qualifications via these companies. Same goes for their HR and Accountancy/Finance courses.
The courses are just basic e-learning courses that do not have any formal qualifications attached to them. You would be better off finding free e-learning content or if you wanted a formal qualification, finding a recognised educational institution that provides a formal qualification (this will say something like Level 3, Level 4, Level 5, Level 6 or Level 7). But even then you don't need formal qualifications to be a paralegal.
The major red flags of these companies are:
- They never provide any details of who their trainers are
- They never detail the employers they are placing people with
- Their employees on LinkedIn never have any connection to or experience within the industries these programmes sit within
- Many of their reviews are likely to be fake - its very easy to pay someone a couple of dollars to write a glowing review for a service they have never accessed.
Reddit and RollonFriday have been clear in how they feel about these companies:
EXCLUSIVE Company charges aspiring lawyers £1,995 for ‘paralegal training’
'I lost my time and my money'
I also looked into these companies earlier in the year and posted about them here: https://www.thecorporatelawacademy....ns-discussion-thread-2023-24.8037/post-180166
They also like to threaten people like me who speak out about how ethical their companies are, often threatening we will be taken to court for defamation (when they clearly don't even know what defamation is). They are ridiculously unethical on a number of levels, including getting bots to flood Reddit forums with positive reviews or requests to ban Reddit forum users/remove content that speaks badly of them.
There is a reason everyone I know speaks so badly of them, and its because we think their business model is completely unethical.