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TCLA Vacation Scheme Applications Discussion Thread 2025-26

DavidJC

Legendary Member
Dec 29, 2019
187
402
Has anyone particularly responded to Mayer Brown's extra question about "anything not covered elsewhere in this form that is relevant to your application"? I've been mulling over whether to put anything in there but I have at best one extra-curricular item that's really more of a hobby rather than a society or anything like that, and I doubt I would fill the 300 words available anyway, so wondering if I should just do a relatively brief description of what I did, what I gained, how it relates to being a trainee etc. Not to mention the fact that the Work Exp section is limited to 150 words instead of 250 like most of the other AllHires forms
 
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elle woods

Legendary Member
Dec 4, 2025
334
546
Ok that makes sense I would say choose firms similar to your top choices or that have similar questions, psychometric test and use it to practice to better prefer for next cycle
That is true! Thanks for the tip! Not sure what other firms are open with cappfinity testing tho :0 maybe BCLP? But lowkey a bit put off by the whole essay we need to write 🤣
 
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Abbie Whitlock

Administrator
Staff member
Gold Member
Premium Member
Sep 11, 2025
650
604
Has anyone particularly responded to Mayer Brown's extra question about "anything not covered elsewhere in this form that is relevant to your application"? I've been mulling over whether to put anything in there but I have at best one extra-curricular item that's really more of a hobby rather than a society or anything like that, and I doubt I would fill the 300 words available anyway, so wondering if I should just do a relatively brief description of what I did, what I gained, how it relates to being a trainee etc. Not to mention the fact that the Work Exp section is limited to 150 words instead of 250 like most of the other AllHires forms
Hey!

I don't think you're expected to force something into that box, and plenty of people either leave it blank or keep it very short. If you do have something that hasn't fitted neatly elsewhere, even if it is more of a hobby, a brief explanation can work well! It definitely does not need to fill all of the 300 words available - a few focused sentences on what you did, what skills you developed, and why it is relevant to your application is more than enough.

That said, if you feel discussing the hobby doesn't really add anything beyond what is already explained in the rest of your application, it is completely fine to leave it blank (as I often did!). I'd say that it's better to be concise than to include something for the sake of it :)
 

anonymous.15

Star Member
Feb 6, 2025
49
69
I have a question for firms which operate on a non rolling basis do they view apps from the ones which were submitted earlier and then go onto the ones submitted later post deadline or do they start viewing apps but don't fill spaces until the deadline? very lame question I know pls don't come @ me
 
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Andrei Radu

Legendary Member
Staff member
Future Trainee
Gold Member
Premium Member
Sep 9, 2024
1,024
1,782
I have a question for firms which operate on a non rolling basis do they view apps from the ones which were submitted earlier and then go onto the ones submitted later post deadline or do they start viewing apps but don't fill spaces until the deadline? very lame question I know pls don't come @ me
Not a lame question at all - I remember asking recruiters about it back in the day. Unfortunately, the answer is quite unhelpful: different non-rolling firms have different policies as to how and when they review applications. Besides not making progressions decisions before the deadline has passed and after they have had the chance to consider all applications, you cannot know precisely what the procedure of any individual firm will be. That said, from what I know the majority of non-rolling firms will only start reviewing applications once the deadline has passed.
 

WeGotThis!

Legendary Member
Premium Member
  • Jul 13, 2023
    294
    230
    Do you have the permanent right to work in the UK?
    I'm on a Student Visa so I do have the right to work. But unsure what "permanent" means - should I say no?
    Edit: this is for Akin + unsure if the firm sponsors intl students for TCs so if someone could jump in on this!
    Hello! Permanent right to work essentially means that you wouldn't need a visa because you are a citizen, hold an ILR, have a settled status or come from a country that doesn't need a visa to work in the UK.

    But if you need a visa sponsorship in the future based on your passport or hold a time limited visa (Eg: Graduate Visa), then you do not have the permanent right to work.

    However, it is best to email the Grad Rec team once as well for clarification. Hope this helps!
     

    anonymous.15

    Star Member
    Feb 6, 2025
    49
    69
    Not a lame question at all - I remember asking recruiters about it back in the day. Unfortunately, the answer is quite unhelpful: different non-rolling firms have different policies as to how and when they review applications. Besides not making progressions decisions before the deadline has passed and after they have had the chance to consider all applications, you cannot know precisely what the procedure of any individual firm will be. That said, from what I know the majority of non-rolling firms will only start reviewing applications once the deadline has passed.
    thanks for the insight Andrei !! Would you recommend mailing the firm and asking this?
     

    futuretraineeihope

    Esteemed Member
    Premium Member
    Nov 13, 2024
    88
    77
    Hey!

    Generally, yes - making brief notes during the preparation / reading time is acceptable unless the firm explicitly says otherwise. In previous VIs, I have used the preparation time to structure my thoughts on paper, and I haven't ran into issues with this. "Independently and unaided" is usually aimed at preventing candidates from using external help (e.g. other people, pre-written scripts, websites, or AI), not at stopping you from jotting down a few structure points.

    As long as the notes are made during the prep time, they're based only on the question and your own ideas, and you're not reading from a pre-prepared script or external materials, then this is typically fine and very common practice.

    I would just make sure to check the specific VI instructions carefully - some platforms explicitly allow note-taking, while a few may ask you not to. If it's not prohibited, brief bullet-point notes for structure are generally understood and acceptable.

    Best of luck with the VI! :)
    Hi. Thank you so much for your answer. That is really helpful. There is no explicit mention of note taking in the email invitation but I will definitely make sure to check there is nothing stating otherwise when I actually click on the interview.
     
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