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<blockquote data-quote="Patrick - Osborne Clarke" data-source="post: 218470" data-attributes="member: 42481"><p>Morning Stacy, </p><p></p><p>Thanks for your question.</p><p></p><p>The long form answers are there to give you the chance to demonstrate as much of your knowledge and individual perspectives as possible. Keep that in mind when writing them. I think my top tips are as follows: </p><p></p><p>1. Be concise and make sure everything you are writing is relevant.</p><p>2. They are not a test of legal knowledge - it is about commercial awareness so think about knowledge you have of the markets, the wider geopolitical landscape etc that you can bring into your answer.</p><p>3. Avoid GPT to create ideas - this can make your answer sound like anyone elses which is not what we are looking for</p><p>4. Try to think about how your answers links in with the work OC does. Take a look at our deals, our clients etc to see if you can build links between what you are writing and the firm you are applying to. </p><p></p><p></p><p>Hope that helps!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Patrick - Osborne Clarke, post: 218470, member: 42481"] Morning Stacy, Thanks for your question. The long form answers are there to give you the chance to demonstrate as much of your knowledge and individual perspectives as possible. Keep that in mind when writing them. I think my top tips are as follows: 1. Be concise and make sure everything you are writing is relevant. 2. They are not a test of legal knowledge - it is about commercial awareness so think about knowledge you have of the markets, the wider geopolitical landscape etc that you can bring into your answer. 3. Avoid GPT to create ideas - this can make your answer sound like anyone elses which is not what we are looking for 4. Try to think about how your answers links in with the work OC does. Take a look at our deals, our clients etc to see if you can build links between what you are writing and the firm you are applying to. Hope that helps! [/QUOTE]
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