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<blockquote data-quote="Jessica Booker" data-source="post: 95499" data-attributes="member: 2672"><p>With question one, I’d try to think more broadly. It isn’t about a type of deal, it is about the mechanisms of the work and also the benefit of team working. So think of things like:</p><p></p><p>- Size/scale of the deal - it’s unlikely you’ll be able to work on it on your own</p><p></p><p>- International elements - need to work with lawyers qualified in other jurisdictions. You won’t be qualified to advise on Chinese law or matters that cross into an Australian jurisdiction</p><p></p><p>- Time pressures for completions</p><p></p><p>- Benefit of team working - different perspectives, different abilities/strengths, ability to check ideas/work with other people (and then think about the benefit of thto the client).</p><p></p><p>- Learning and development: how you learn in a team vs self-learning.</p><p></p><p>With question 2, try to dig deeper. What is the benefit of multi jurisdictional matters and secondments?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Jessica Booker, post: 95499, member: 2672"] With question one, I’d try to think more broadly. It isn’t about a type of deal, it is about the mechanisms of the work and also the benefit of team working. So think of things like: - Size/scale of the deal - it’s unlikely you’ll be able to work on it on your own - International elements - need to work with lawyers qualified in other jurisdictions. You won’t be qualified to advise on Chinese law or matters that cross into an Australian jurisdiction - Time pressures for completions - Benefit of team working - different perspectives, different abilities/strengths, ability to check ideas/work with other people (and then think about the benefit of thto the client). - Learning and development: how you learn in a team vs self-learning. With question 2, try to dig deeper. What is the benefit of multi jurisdictional matters and secondments? [/QUOTE]
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