Received a PFO from Paul,Weiss, as expected tbh, but pretty demoralising that they took this long to hand it to me.
Thank you!With group exercises, I mainly have experience with case study ones where We need to advise a client or find a solution. For these, it was just keeping up with commercial awareness but also making sure I am confident in the firms practices and capabilities (for example explaining recommending to the client [role played by partner] a specific practice that could help with this issue).
On the day, it was just being friendly, getting into the character (e.g., associate in corporate), including quiet people, and also creating a time plan for the exercise (e.g., if we had 1 hour to discuss and create a presentation breaking down the time into discussions, voting, presentation plan, and practise).
Thank you so much, your journey is honestly amazing - well done to you! Reading this has definitely given me a pushHey, I can totally resonate with how you’re feeling! I graduated in 2017 with a degree in psychology and decided to pursue law instead a year later. I constantly applied for VS/TCs year after year for three years to no avail; never even getting past the application/testing stage. You can only imagine how demoralising getting rejection after rejection was. But I guess one thing this taught me was resilience.
The next year (2022/2023 cycle), I approached the cycle differently. I spent the summer really researching, trying to actually understand what I was looking for from a firm. I narrowed down the firms I wanted to apply to 8. From September-November, I made 3 applications, ended up with 2 VS offers and a training contract. You’ve got to bounce back. My mentality at the time was, ‘I’m eventually gonna get a TC, it’s just a matter of when. Just keep at it! It only takes one. You’ve got this💪🏾
Also, utilise all resources at your disposal: aspiring solicitors, STRIVE, rare, TCLA, the commercial law academy etc.
I'd generally wait until late Tuesday or early Wednesday before chasing up. If they have said 24 hours, I would wait 72 hours before chasing up unless it was super time urgent and you needed the documents ahead of another deadline.Just over a day, so I am definitely not too worried yet! But just wanted to anticipate any delays and understand how long it is appropriate to wait![]()
They have kept me on hold as well, not sure if a follow-up email is necessary or if I should just assume a rejection hahaTuesday of the next week I think. Are they keeping you on hold post-WG?
If there is no second batch, the last interviews are taking place tomorrow. Sadly I think it might be a rejectionThey have kept me on hold as well, not sure if a follow-up email is necessary or if I should just assume a rejection haha
Yeap seems like the most sensible optionIf there is no second batch, the last interviews are taking place tomorrow. Sadly I think it might be a rejection
Thanks for this @Jessica Booker Can I ask why they ask which firm I am joining - is it to contact them? I wouldn't want to risk losing my other offerYou will need to send something in writing to formally withdraw your candidacy. If this is before you have taken any financial support or started the onboarding process for the GDL/SQE, then this will be fairly straight forward. Normally I would recommend speaking to the GR/HR team over the phone before sending something in writing, especially if you have had a lot of interaction with the firm (such as attending a vacation scheme), but a lot of people don't feel comfortable doing this and so they just send an email instead.
I would recommend being clear on why you are reneging. If you don't, the firm is likely to ask why you are reneging anyway, so probably worthwhile disclosing anyway. The firm is likely to ask which firm you will be joining instead if you are reneging for another offer.
No - they won’t contact the firm. That’s a breach of GDPR.@
Thanks for this Jessica! Can I ask why they ask which firm I am joining - is it to contact them? I wouldn't want to risk losing my other offer
This is super helpful thank you- could I ask how/if the process would change if you had already started onboarding for a course? I imagine you would have to pay back any money the firm has paid to enrol you in the course, but presuming that the course hasn't started yet (e.g. you withdraw in July) is it reasonable to assume this would just be a deposit, not the entire course fees?You will need to send something in writing to formally withdraw your candidacy. If this is before you have taken any financial support or started the onboarding process for the GDL/SQE, then this will be fairly straight forward. Normally I would recommend speaking to the GR/HR team over the phone before sending something in writing, especially if you have had a lot of interaction with the firm (such as attending a vacation scheme), but a lot of people don't feel comfortable doing this and so they just send an email instead.
I would recommend being clear on why you are reneging. If you don't, the firm is likely to ask why you are reneging anyway, so probably worthwhile disclosing anyway. The firm is likely to ask which firm you will be joining instead if you are reneging for another offer.
I don't think you can assume it would just be the deposit - the firm could be liable for the full fees, especially if they cannot back fill your place.This is super helpful thank you- could I ask how/if the process would change if you had already started onboarding for a course? I imagine you would have to pay back any money the firm has paid to enrol you in the course, but presuming that the course hasn't started yet (e.g. you withdraw in July) is it reasonable to assume this would just be a deposit, not the entire course fees?
I would go with the dates that works best for you - your chances will not be determined by which scheme you do.Hey guys, sorry if this is the same type of question being mentioned again but I just got a Travers Smith offer and they do two dates - is there any advantage to doing an earlier date or are the chances of getting a TC equal?
Hi @Kodak123 I know how difficult it must feel to be rejected after a VS, but you should know that getting to this stage already demonstrates that you have everything it takes to succeed. Conversion is a game of really small margins and luck certainly plays a significant role, as different firms will weigh assessment criteria differently in their decision-making - a candidate that would be offered the TC with no second thoughts at one firm might well be rejected by another. That said, of course you want to be proactive in integrating feedback and doing all you can to maximize your conversion chances for future vacation schemes. I have collated bellow some of my best advice.Anyone have advice on how to convert VS to TC, I keep struggling starting to think I might never will?
The AC's were all end of March/start of April so I'm afraid you're assuming correctlyI’m currently assuming a PFO, but has anyone actually been rejected from Mischon post Summer Vac scheme VI yet?
They suggested they’d respond by the end of March, now it’s the end of April and I’ve heard nothing 🤔