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Aspiring Lawyers - Applications & General Advice
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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: 100879" data-attributes="member: 19970"><p>[USER=1532]@Lumree[/USER] </p><p></p><p>On average, I would say consulting as an industry is more friendly to direct graduate role applications that law. Naturally, some firms will prefer you to come through the internship route, there are plenty others that will accept a direct graduate job application. 'Training contracts' are just a term unique to law. All other industries just call them 'graduate schemes' or something equivalent. There is no concept of a recognised 'training period' in consulting like there is in law. However, many firms will run their 'graduate scheme' for 2-3 years (similar to a TC) and make you study towards a qualification relevant to your practice.</p><p></p><p>Hope this helps!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="RSB99, post: 100879, member: 19970"] [USER=1532]@Lumree[/USER] On average, I would say consulting as an industry is more friendly to direct graduate role applications that law. Naturally, some firms will prefer you to come through the internship route, there are plenty others that will accept a direct graduate job application. 'Training contracts' are just a term unique to law. All other industries just call them 'graduate schemes' or something equivalent. There is no concept of a recognised 'training period' in consulting like there is in law. However, many firms will run their 'graduate scheme' for 2-3 years (similar to a TC) and make you study towards a qualification relevant to your practice. Hope this helps! [/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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