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<blockquote data-quote="futuretraineesolicitor" data-source="post: 101750" data-attributes="member: 4098"><p>Hello, guys. Hope you all are doing well. I was actually struggling with something related to case-studies so I'd be grateful if you could please help me out with it. I was wondering, how should we go about applying what we read in newsletters like Little Law and the TCLA newsletter, to our case study interviews? For example, I recently read a wide variety of news pieces ranging from how Netflix is losing subscribers to how Santander transferred money into random accounts by mistake to how consumers actually don't understand the risks of Buy Now Pay Later schemes. Now, to be honest, if it's a news story that goes over how the CMA had asked Facebook to find a new buyer for Giphy (the GIF service), I understand that we can reference and slide this news story while talking about Competition issues (if we encounter any in our case study), but these types of landmark news events are quite rare and most news letters cover one-off events like Netflix losing subscribers or Santander making mistakes. I was wondering how we can actually read the news with the mindset of getting as much information possible that we could directly apply to case-study exercises.</p><p></p><p>Thanks.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="futuretraineesolicitor, post: 101750, member: 4098"] Hello, guys. Hope you all are doing well. I was actually struggling with something related to case-studies so I'd be grateful if you could please help me out with it. I was wondering, how should we go about applying what we read in newsletters like Little Law and the TCLA newsletter, to our case study interviews? For example, I recently read a wide variety of news pieces ranging from how Netflix is losing subscribers to how Santander transferred money into random accounts by mistake to how consumers actually don't understand the risks of Buy Now Pay Later schemes. Now, to be honest, if it's a news story that goes over how the CMA had asked Facebook to find a new buyer for Giphy (the GIF service), I understand that we can reference and slide this news story while talking about Competition issues (if we encounter any in our case study), but these types of landmark news events are quite rare and most news letters cover one-off events like Netflix losing subscribers or Santander making mistakes. I was wondering how we can actually read the news with the mindset of getting as much information possible that we could directly apply to case-study exercises. Thanks. [/QUOTE]
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