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Aspiring Lawyers - Applications & General Advice
General Discussion
Best seats to qualify into if you eventually want to go in-house or to a smaller law firm?
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<blockquote data-quote="Jessica Booker" data-source="post: 30706" data-attributes="member: 2672"><p>not really - again if would matter what type of company you were working in house for and in particular the nature of the in-house role. Some in-house lawyers working in larger companies are specialists working on a specific topic, while others will be mode generalist working in smaller legal teams. If anything probably having varied seats is more likely to be helpful for the latter, but even then I don’t think this is something where it as clear cut/obvious.</p><p></p><p>My advice would be to talk to in-house lawyers though if this is something you are certain you want to do and get their advice on this. Think carefully about the size of company and the type of sector you think you might be interested in working for in the future and target those people specifically.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Jessica Booker, post: 30706, member: 2672"] not really - again if would matter what type of company you were working in house for and in particular the nature of the in-house role. Some in-house lawyers working in larger companies are specialists working on a specific topic, while others will be mode generalist working in smaller legal teams. If anything probably having varied seats is more likely to be helpful for the latter, but even then I don’t think this is something where it as clear cut/obvious. My advice would be to talk to in-house lawyers though if this is something you are certain you want to do and get their advice on this. Think carefully about the size of company and the type of sector you think you might be interested in working for in the future and target those people specifically. [/QUOTE]
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Aspiring Lawyers - Applications & General Advice
General Discussion
Best seats to qualify into if you eventually want to go in-house or to a smaller law firm?
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