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TCLA Vacation Scheme Applications Discussion Thread 2025-26

lelezb1

Star Member
Premium Member
Jan 6, 2025
29
35
Hello, I’m reviewing my application answers for Wilkie and got a bit confused by this question: Please explain why you would like a career in commercial law.
I can’t tell if they’re asking for my motivation for pursuing a career in commercial law (based on what I liked/enjoyed during my experience in relation to commercial law), or whether they want me to explain ‘why/how my skills suit the career, hence I want to pursue this career’. It might be obvious, but I am overthinking a lot. So, I’d really appreciate any insight on this. Thanks in advance.
@Abbie Whitlock @Andrei Radu
 
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Rads

Standard Member
Sep 1, 2025
8
4
I would not write to grad rec about it. The general rule is that you should email recruiters about a mistake only if it is necessary to correct that mistake so that they are able to consider your application on its true merits (e.g. correcting a wrong grade entry) or to explain an error that may otherwise be misleading (e.g. correcting a statement that you are applying for a TC instead of a VS). Nonetheless, in your case it is clear what you actually intended to write, so there would be no point to emailing about it. As for your question about how much this could impact your progression chances: in my experience, if your application is a high-quality one otherwise, you can be progressed despite one or two attention to detail errors of this nature.
Andrei, I made a similar mistake where I started directly on why Davis Polk, should I try and rectify it now by emailing the early careers team?
 

Abbie Whitlock

Administrator
Staff member
Gold Member
Premium Member
Sep 11, 2025
557
480
Hello, I’m reviewing my application answers for Wilkie and got a bit confused by this question: Please explain why you would like a career in commercial law.
I can’t tell if they’re asking for my motivation for pursuing a career in commercial law (based on what I liked/enjoyed during my experience in relation to commercial law), or whether they want me to explain ‘why/how my skills suit the career, hence I want to pursue this career’. It might be obvious, but I am overthinking a lot. So, I’d really appreciate any insight on this. Thanks in advance.
@Abbie Whitlock @Andrei Radu
Hi!

You're not overthinking - that question can read both ways, so the safest and strongest approach is usually to combine the two angles!

When firms ask "Why do you want a career in commercial law?", the graduate recruitment team essentially want to understand:

1. Your genuine motivation - what exposure, experiences or observations made you interested in commercial law specifically (not just law in general)
2. Your suitability - the skills, strengths and working style you have that make this career path a good fit overall.

Most strong answers will weave both together. For example:

1. Start with what sparked your interest (this could be work experience, commercial curiosity, something you studied, a deal you followed, etc)
2. Then link this motivation to the aspects of the job you're drawn to (complex transactions, client-facing work, strategic problem-solving, international matters, etc.). This is also a way to demonstrate an understanding of what trainee solicitors actually do!
3. Finish by showing how your skills and characteristics mean you'd thrive in that environment. Have a think about what skills and traits are essential for trainees, and discuss how you have showcased them in the past.

So it's not necessarily an either / or - they're really asking you to show both your motivation and your fit. A balanced and concise answer should cover everything they want to see! :)

I hope that helps, and best of luck with the application!!
 
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shadowboxer909

Well-Known Member
Oct 20, 2025
24
29
Looks like Eversheds have introduced a WG style test. I would assume this is automatic given the deadline was only last night and it states ‘first stage’ on the email.
There's a part of me that feels annoyed because they should have disclosed this on their site (unless I missed it) as I was intentionally avoiding firms with the critical thinking WG test so writing long essays and then getting rejected based on this test is going to hurt. But oh well, life is a bit like that - just got to take it in stride.
 

yk1906

Legendary Member
Aug 26, 2024
267
196
There's a part of me that feels annoyed because they should have disclosed this on their site (unless I missed it) as I was intentionally avoiding firms with the critical thinking WG test so writing long essays and then getting rejected based on this test is going to hurt. But oh well, life is a bit like that - just got to take it in stride.
The website only mentioned VI, you are correct. They have notified about the test via email to those who applied. I remember Freshfields doing this last year with an additional SJT
 

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