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[Ask Me Anything] Using your Law Background in Consulting - A Career in Financial Regulation, Governance, and Risk
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<blockquote data-quote="RSB99" data-source="post: 100497" data-attributes="member: 19970"><p>Thanks for the question. [USER=1532]@Lumree[/USER] </p><p></p><p>Your first step should be just expanding your knowledge of which consultants practice the area you are interested in. An easy way is to consult firm rankings (sort of like university rankings). For example, Financial Times annually publishes a list called 'UK's Leading Management Consultants.' It lists the best firms by industry/ practice area. Here is a link to the 2021 list - <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/c02c6de5-7e9b-4fc2-b153-cbf5f02655ad" target="_blank">https://www.ft.com/content/c02c6de5-7e9b-4fc2-b153-cbf5f02655ad</a></p><p></p><p>Once you have the names, you can start visiting their websites individually to see if they offer graduate roles. A shortcut to finding which ones actually offer graduate jobs is to google booklets from consulting fairs recently held at universities. While you may not be able to attend the fair itself if you have already graduated or did not attend that university, accessing the booklet gives you the exact details of who is hiring and what they need. </p><p></p><p>For example, here is LSE's 2021 Consulting Fair booklet - <a href="https://issuu.com/lsecareers/docs/consultancy_fair_2021_brochure;" target="_blank">https://issuu.com/lsecareers/docs/consultancy_fair_2021_brochure;</a> and here is Oxford's 2020 Consulting booklet - <a href="https://www.careers.ox.ac.uk/files/mancon-fair-booklet-2020pdf" target="_blank">https://www.careers.ox.ac.uk/files/mancon-fair-booklet-2020pdf</a></p><p></p><p>Once you have this information, start emailing the firm directly with your queries or messaging people on LinkedIn who currently work in the positions you want. Beyond this, it will be up to you to assemble a list that suits your exact interests using this info.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="RSB99, post: 100497, member: 19970"] Thanks for the question. [USER=1532]@Lumree[/USER] Your first step should be just expanding your knowledge of which consultants practice the area you are interested in. An easy way is to consult firm rankings (sort of like university rankings). For example, Financial Times annually publishes a list called 'UK's Leading Management Consultants.' It lists the best firms by industry/ practice area. Here is a link to the 2021 list - [URL]https://www.ft.com/content/c02c6de5-7e9b-4fc2-b153-cbf5f02655ad[/URL] Once you have the names, you can start visiting their websites individually to see if they offer graduate roles. A shortcut to finding which ones actually offer graduate jobs is to google booklets from consulting fairs recently held at universities. While you may not be able to attend the fair itself if you have already graduated or did not attend that university, accessing the booklet gives you the exact details of who is hiring and what they need. For example, here is LSE's 2021 Consulting Fair booklet - [URL]https://issuu.com/lsecareers/docs/consultancy_fair_2021_brochure;[/URL] and here is Oxford's 2020 Consulting booklet - [URL]https://www.careers.ox.ac.uk/files/mancon-fair-booklet-2020pdf[/URL] Once you have this information, start emailing the firm directly with your queries or messaging people on LinkedIn who currently work in the positions you want. Beyond this, it will be up to you to assemble a list that suits your exact interests using this info. [/QUOTE]
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[Ask Me Anything] Using your Law Background in Consulting - A Career in Financial Regulation, Governance, and Risk
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