• Get Everything You Need to Secure a Training Contract
    Now half the price. Join TCLA Premium for £30/month and get step-by-step application support, daily commercial awareness practice, and 700+ successful examples of past applications and interview experiences. Plus so much more.
    Join Premium →
  • Office Hours with BCLP (Live Q&A)
    17 December 2025 5:30 pm – 6:30 pm (UK) Hosted on TCLA TV
    Join Isabel Elsey, Legal Recruitment Manager at BCLP, for a live Q&A session. Get details on secondments, innovation, growth areas, and everything else you’ve wanted to ask about life at BCLP!

    📺 View Event →

TCLA Vacation Scheme Applications Discussion Thread 2025-26

Ronaldo04

Well-Known Member
Premium Member
Jan 29, 2024
23
15
Hi @Ronaldo04 I would advise you to read my Competency Interviews Preparation Guide and follow the step-by-step preparation method I set out there; it is somewhat more comprehensive than you may need at this stage (as I wrote it primarily with final stage interviews in mind) so you no not necessarily need to practice answering that wide of a range of questions. Thus, I would focus on the getting really good at answering the most common types of interview questions such as the ones I will list bellow, as it is unlikely you will be asked something very different from that at this stage:
  • The big three motivational questions: why commercial law, why you, why the firm; but be prepared to also answer different iterations of such questions - i.e. "Why do you want to be a solicitor, and what other careers have you considered?" "Why the firm rather than our rivals, and what makes you a great fit?" etc.
  • Usual skills/competencies questions: Tell me about a time you demonstrated teamwork, resilience, problem-solving skills etc.
  • Scenario-based questions: How would you deal with a situation in which you had competing deadlines, had a difficult work relationship etc
  • Classic commercial questions: Tell me about a news story you have been following, how it impacts our clients, something that represents a challenge/opportunity for the firm
Besides this, I would advise you to construct answers in a very structured and easy to follow manner, and to focus on being crystal-clear in the way you articulate them when you practice - since during a phone interview the recruiter does not have any helpful visual input and neither do you (in terms of noticing if there is anything you would need to explain in more detail or go over again), the risk that you may lose the focus of your audience is a lot greater. Also, I think you should try to be extra enthusiastic and friendly, as the nature of the format already makes it difficult to truly connect and build rapport.
Thank you so much!
 
  • Like
Reactions: Andrei Radu

pfoapplicant

Valued Member
Dec 7, 2020
111
27
Hi guys - I'm currently doing the cover letter for the Taylor Wessing application, and I had a couple of quick questions - if anyone has any advice, I'd be massively grateful! :)

1. On the application form, it says that candidates' cover letters must provide "details on your skills and why you have applied for the scheme". With this in mind, does a typical cover letter structure of why commercial law/why Taylor Wessing/why you sound okay?

2. I can't find anything on the Taylor Wessing website suggesting who the cover letter should be addressed to, but lawcareers.net suggests it should be addressed to Jasmine Hepple. I know that Jasmine Hepple works in Taylor Wessing's recruitment team; would it be a good idea to address it to her, or is it preferable to just put "Dear Sir/Madam?"

Apologies if these questions are a bit stupid; it's my first time writing in a cover letter in a while!
 
Reactions: Abbie Whitlock

Prudentia

Distinguished Member
Oct 21, 2025
60
143
Does anyone know if the Clifford Chance team reviews our first or latest submitted application when we make changes to the DTC application (the portal is still open and the page allows changing inputs and saving new inputs)
I didn’t know you could change applications! I submitted mine and didn’t realise the last sentence of my motivation response had been cut. I’ve quickly gone and edited it. They don’t review the applications under after you’ve passed the WG test anyway. So if you can edit it now go ahead and do it.
 
  • Like
Reactions: BillSikes

AMullin

Star Member
Nov 18, 2025
29
64
Hi guys - I'm currently doing the cover letter for the Taylor Wessing application, and I had a couple of quick questions - if anyone has any advice, I'd be massively grateful! :)

1. On the application form, it says that candidates' cover letters must provide "details on your skills and why you have applied for the scheme". With this in mind, does a typical cover letter structure of why commercial law/why Taylor Wessing/why you sound okay?

2. I can't find anything on the Taylor Wessing website suggesting who the cover letter should be addressed to, but lawcareers.net suggests it should be addressed to Jasmine Hepple. I know that Jasmine Hepple works in Taylor Wessing's recruitment team; would it be a good idea to address it to her, or is it preferable to just put "Dear Sir/Madam?"

Apologies if these questions are a bit stupid; it's my first time writing in a cover letter in a while!
Hi!

So I have an application in for Taylor Wessing, not sure whether they invite everyone for the online test or review applications first but I had a test invite and I followed a similar why law/why TW/why me structure and addressed it Dear Graduate Recruitment Team.

As I said, I'm not sure if a human has actually looked at it yet so take that with a pinch of salt.
 

About Us

The Corporate Law Academy (TCLA) was founded in 2018 because we wanted to improve the legal journey. We wanted more transparency and better training. We wanted to form a community of aspiring lawyers who care about becoming the best version of themselves.

Get Our 2026 Vacation Scheme Guide

Nail your vacation scheme applications this year with our latest guide, with sample answers to law firm questions.