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Documenting my TC Journey (Project TC🚀)

Thank you so much @Abbie Whitlock as always your advice and support is extremely valuable to me!

If you could have one advice you would give yourself if you were going through the process again, what would it be? ☺️
Thank you so much, that's really lovely of you to say! 😊

If I could give myself one piece of advice, it would be to stop comparing my journey to everyone else's. It's so easy to feel behind when you see others getting offers or interviews, but everyone's timeline is different. I remember being so disheartened when I didn't convert any of my vacation schemes, thinking that I was super behind everyone I knew, but I ended up in the right firm for me through my only DTC application! Once I focused on improving my own applications and celebrating my small wins, the process became a lot less stressful - and I wish I had done it from the start!

You can only control certain parts of the journey, so try not to be too hard on yourself for the things that are out of your hands - the right opportunity really will come at the right time :)
 
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Thank you so much, that's really lovely of you to say! 😊

If I could give myself one piece of advice, it would be to stop comparing my journey to everyone else's. It's so easy to feel behind when you see others getting offers or interviews, but everyone's timeline is different. I remember being so disheartened when I didn't convert any of my vacation schemes, thinking that I was super behind everyone I knew, but I ended up in the right firm for me through my only DTC application! Once I focused on improving my own applications and celebrating my small wins, the process became a lot less stressful - and I wish I had done it from the start!

You can only control certain parts of the journey, so try not to be too hard on yourself for the things that are out of your hands - the right opportunity really will come at the right time :)

Thank you so much Abbie and this is so true, I definitely compare and it is truly the thief of joy! I will follow your advice! I hope you update with some good news soon!😊
 
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Reactions: Abbie Whitlock
UPDATE

Last week was hard, I am waiting to hear from a firm I am really keen on progressing so I am trying not to spiral every 5 minutes!

However, applications are often really hard to predict so I have been distracting myself with other applications. It has been productive so far, applied to another firm and sent off an Open Day application.

Key learning from last week: I finally decided to remove any expectations, what it’s meant for me will simply find me!

Hope to send two more applications averaging 2-3 application per month so far. Slow progress but steady.

See you soon
J🌸
 
UPDATE

Last week was hard, I am waiting to hear from a firm I am really keen on progressing so I am trying not to spiral every 5 minutes!

However, applications are often really hard to predict so I have been distracting myself with other applications. It has been productive so far, applied to another firm and sent off an Open Day application.

Key learning from last week: I finally decided to remove any expectations, what it’s meant for me will simply find me!

Hope to send two more applications averaging 2-3 application per month so far. Slow progress but steady.

See you soon
J🌸
Heyy, I noticed it's been a while since you gave an update. How is it going?
 
Hii yes, glad you noticed. Literally worst months of my life. I am not sure I will keep this thread going anymore.

But thanks for reaching out!!! Hope the cycle is going well for you!
I completely understand! working full time and making applications is really difficult, especially when you're also trying to have a life and achieve other goals. I started following your thread when I noticed you reacted to one of my posts haha :D Just remember that one day, you'll look back after you've got your TC, and be proud of the person you've grown into. You've got this!! ✨
 
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I completely understand! working full time and making applications is really difficult, especially when you're also trying to have a life and achieve other goals. I started following your thread when I noticed you reacted to one of my posts haha :D Just remember that one day, you'll look back after you've got your TC, and be proud of the person you've grown into. You've got this!! ✨
Thank you so much! I really REALLY appreciate this!! Wishing you the best of luck and thank you for reaching out ❤️
 
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Ahhh first post of 2026…

I initially thought I would delete this whole thread, it was a stark reminder of what my expectations from this cycle were and what actually ended up happening.

It’s been a very though ride so far and it still very though currently waiting post app for one firm and the rest waiting for potential ACs invitations.

Although I am beyond happy for each forum member here progressing and being successful I can’t help but to compare my journey to theirs. Am I doing something wrong? Is there something personally wrong with me, my grades or my experiences that is preventing me from succeeding?

In comparison to the last couple of years, this cycle has been very different, harder more competitive and most importantly very unpredictable but with 17 applications made and 11 rejections the odds are truly against me.

Not sure about the future of this thread or my account in general :/

But in the meantime, I will keep the faith and keep applying and see where it leads me.

Best,
J 🪷
 
The Alyssa Liu Mindset that radicalised my brain.

I have come across this amazing US figure skater while watching the Milano Cortina Winter Olympics.

In an interview she said “I love struggling, it makes me feel alive”. This stuck with me because from as long as I could remember I hated struggling, I associated it with failing, doing bad, disappointing myself or not meeting me impossibly hight expectations.

However, I reflected across this cycle I had wins and many losses, the hardest cycle ever but for some strange reason, the cycle I enjoyed the most, learned the most and cried the most lmao.

I think struggling is where growth lies, learning to live with the struggle, embracing it it’s something that I am actively trying to do.

Alysa Liu was not fussed about winning the gold medal, she was more focused on learning to enjoy the process completing detaching it from the outcome.

This is the mindset I would like to adopt, in such a competetive and often cutthroat environment the TC process is, how can someone learn to enjoy the process? I think taking everything as a learning experience so long as I am learning, I am progressing. That’s that. Having a VS or a TC is just the outcome. I am no longer attached to the outcome but rather the experience of writing an application what did I learn, why was I rejected etc. For an AC I am taking everything as learning and experience every second I am there is me gaining something rather than losing. Instead of counting down the errors, replaying the interview answers in my head, trying to remember what were the case study materials, I will reflect on what I actually gained.

Ahaha that’s my little Substack article here 😂😂😂

If anyone has any tips on how to enjoy this process rather than being consumed by it, please reply to this thread. Looking to hear your thoughts and feedback!!!!!

Jas🌼🌼
 
I Thought I Was Close. Turns Out I Had to Start Again

This cycle was supposed to be different.

I told myself that after multiple application rounds, after refining my CV, after getting more comfortable with the process, I was finally getting somewhere. I convinced myself I was improving, even if the outcomes did not show it.

And this year, it finally felt like proof.

Two Assessment Centres, in one of the most competitive cycles ever. That should have meant something. I thought it did.

The Moment It Didn’t Convert

When the rejections came after the ACs, it hit differently. Not like the early-stage ones you can brush off or the generic emails that are easy to detach from. This time it felt like I had done everything right, or at least everything I knew how to do, and it still was not enough.

That is a harder thing to sit with because it forces a different question. Not whether you are improving, but whether you have been measuring your progress correctly at all.

The Illusion of Progress

For a while, I framed those ACs as momentum. I told myself that getting through meant my applications were working and that I just needed a bit more polish to convert. It was a comforting narrative because it suggested I was close.

But the more I reflected, the more uncomfortable the truth became. Getting to AC is not the same as being competitive at AC. I had treated them as the same milestone when they are not. One gets you in the room, the other decides whether you belong there.

Realising I Was Still Missing Something

At AC level, everyone looks strong on paper. The usual signals that help you stand out earlier in the process stop carrying the same weight. What matters instead is how you think, how you communicate, and whether you can make yourself the obvious choice in a room full of equally capable candidates.

I realised that while I could get through the process, I was not consistently answering the question of why me over everyone else. Under pressure, my answers were structured but not distinctive, informed but not sharp enough, confident but not convincing enough to tip the balance.

The Reset

This was the hardest part to accept because it meant that despite what looked like progress, I was still missing something fundamental. Not something that could be fixed with a few tweaks, but something that required a deeper rebuild.

My understanding was there, but it was not translating into performance at the level required when it mattered most.

Calling it a reset felt harsh, but accurate. It meant letting go of the idea that I was one small step away and accepting that I needed to rework how I approached the entire process.

Starting Again, But Differently

It feels strange to say I am starting again after my most successful cycle, but it is true in a different sense. This time, I am not starting from guesswork or assumptions. I am starting with clarity. I have seen the standard up close and understand what separates those who make it through from those who do not.

That changes how I approach everything, from how I prepare to how I think about my own positioning as a candidate.

What This Cycle Actually Gave Me

It did not give me an offer (YET), which is what I wanted. But it gave me something more uncomfortable and ultimately more useful. It forced me to confront the gap between being a strong candidate on paper and being the candidate who actually secures the offer.

That gap is easy to underestimate until you are in the room.

Final Thought

It is easy to celebrate progress when it is visible and easy to interpret. It is much harder when progress reveals how far you still have to go. I thought I was close, and in some ways I was, but only relative to where I had been before.

Now I understand that being close is not the same as being ready.

Iraq Sad Cat GIF by Bashar
 
I Thought I Was Close. Turns Out I Had to Start Again

This cycle was supposed to be different.

I told myself that after multiple application rounds, after refining my CV, after getting more comfortable with the process, I was finally getting somewhere. I convinced myself I was improving, even if the outcomes did not show it.

And this year, it finally felt like proof.

Two Assessment Centres, in one of the most competitive cycles ever. That should have meant something. I thought it did.

The Moment It Didn’t Convert

When the rejections came after the ACs, it hit differently. Not like the early-stage ones you can brush off or the generic emails that are easy to detach from. This time it felt like I had done everything right, or at least everything I knew how to do, and it still was not enough.

That is a harder thing to sit with because it forces a different question. Not whether you are improving, but whether you have been measuring your progress correctly at all.

The Illusion of Progress

For a while, I framed those ACs as momentum. I told myself that getting through meant my applications were working and that I just needed a bit more polish to convert. It was a comforting narrative because it suggested I was close.

But the more I reflected, the more uncomfortable the truth became. Getting to AC is not the same as being competitive at AC. I had treated them as the same milestone when they are not. One gets you in the room, the other decides whether you belong there.

Realising I Was Still Missing Something

At AC level, everyone looks strong on paper. The usual signals that help you stand out earlier in the process stop carrying the same weight. What matters instead is how you think, how you communicate, and whether you can make yourself the obvious choice in a room full of equally capable candidates.

I realised that while I could get through the process, I was not consistently answering the question of why me over everyone else. Under pressure, my answers were structured but not distinctive, informed but not sharp enough, confident but not convincing enough to tip the balance.

The Reset

This was the hardest part to accept because it meant that despite what looked like progress, I was still missing something fundamental. Not something that could be fixed with a few tweaks, but something that required a deeper rebuild.

My understanding was there, but it was not translating into performance at the level required when it mattered most.

Calling it a reset felt harsh, but accurate. It meant letting go of the idea that I was one small step away and accepting that I needed to rework how I approached the entire process.

Starting Again, But Differently

It feels strange to say I am starting again after my most successful cycle, but it is true in a different sense. This time, I am not starting from guesswork or assumptions. I am starting with clarity. I have seen the standard up close and understand what separates those who make it through from those who do not.

That changes how I approach everything, from how I prepare to how I think about my own positioning as a candidate.

What This Cycle Actually Gave Me

It did not give me an offer (YET), which is what I wanted. But it gave me something more uncomfortable and ultimately more useful. It forced me to confront the gap between being a strong candidate on paper and being the candidate who actually secures the offer.

That gap is easy to underestimate until you are in the room.

Final Thought

It is easy to celebrate progress when it is visible and easy to interpret. It is much harder when progress reveals how far you still have to go. I thought I was close, and in some ways I was, but only relative to where I had been before.

Now I understand that being close is not the same as being ready.

Iraq Sad Cat GIF by Bashar

I enjoyed reading this, especially the honest reflection.

Please keep it up. I look forward to continuing to follow your journey.
 
I enjoyed reading this, especially the honest reflection.

Please keep it up. I look forward to continuing to follow your journey.
thank you so much!

Having become somewhat of a seasoned AC failer, I would love to know what someone can do to really start exceeding at Assessment centres!

For context I did Ropes & Gray recently: I was told to get on the VS I needed to average 70% across all exercises - I got 62% close but yet sooooo far.

The good news? Based on feedback my key strengths are interviews!

The bad news: I apparently suck at written exercises / group exercises 🥲🥲

Before I start my direct training contracts applications I will need to really improve my commercial awareness/ written exercises skills.
 
thank you so much!

Having become somewhat of a seasoned AC failer, I would love to know what someone can do to really start exceeding at Assessment centres!

For context I did Ropes & Gray recently: I was told to get on the VS I needed to average 70% across all exercises - I got 62% close but yet sooooo far.

The good news? Based on feedback my key strengths are interviews!

The bad news: I apparently suck at written exercises / group exercises 🥲🥲

Before I start my direct training contracts applications I will need to really improve my commercial awareness/ written exercises skills.

The good thing is the firm gave you specific feedback here on where to improve.

If it was me, I'd break each exercise down into its sub-parts. For example, for a written exercise:

1. Grammar
2. Clarity of writing
3. Structure
4. Commercial awareness

I'd then look to do lots of reps on each of these between now and your next written exercise, so you absolutely nail it :)
 
The good thing is the firm gave you specific feedback here on where to improve.

If it was me, I'd break each exercise down into its sub-parts. For example, for a written exercise:

1. Grammar
2. Clarity of writing
3. Structure
4. Commercial awareness

I'd then look to do lots of reps on each of these between now and your next written exercise, so you absolutely nail it :)
I will, thank you so much! 🥹
 
I Thought I Was Close. Turns Out I Had to Start Again

This cycle was supposed to be different.

I told myself that after multiple application rounds, after refining my CV, after getting more comfortable with the process, I was finally getting somewhere. I convinced myself I was improving, even if the outcomes did not show it.

And this year, it finally felt like proof.

Two Assessment Centres, in one of the most competitive cycles ever. That should have meant something. I thought it did.

The Moment It Didn’t Convert

When the rejections came after the ACs, it hit differently. Not like the early-stage ones you can brush off or the generic emails that are easy to detach from. This time it felt like I had done everything right, or at least everything I knew how to do, and it still was not enough.

That is a harder thing to sit with because it forces a different question. Not whether you are improving, but whether you have been measuring your progress correctly at all.

The Illusion of Progress

For a while, I framed those ACs as momentum. I told myself that getting through meant my applications were working and that I just needed a bit more polish to convert. It was a comforting narrative because it suggested I was close.

But the more I reflected, the more uncomfortable the truth became. Getting to AC is not the same as being competitive at AC. I had treated them as the same milestone when they are not. One gets you in the room, the other decides whether you belong there.

Realising I Was Still Missing Something

At AC level, everyone looks strong on paper. The usual signals that help you stand out earlier in the process stop carrying the same weight. What matters instead is how you think, how you communicate, and whether you can make yourself the obvious choice in a room full of equally capable candidates.

I realised that while I could get through the process, I was not consistently answering the question of why me over everyone else. Under pressure, my answers were structured but not distinctive, informed but not sharp enough, confident but not convincing enough to tip the balance.

The Reset

This was the hardest part to accept because it meant that despite what looked like progress, I was still missing something fundamental. Not something that could be fixed with a few tweaks, but something that required a deeper rebuild.

My understanding was there, but it was not translating into performance at the level required when it mattered most.

Calling it a reset felt harsh, but accurate. It meant letting go of the idea that I was one small step away and accepting that I needed to rework how I approached the entire process.

Starting Again, But Differently

It feels strange to say I am starting again after my most successful cycle, but it is true in a different sense. This time, I am not starting from guesswork or assumptions. I am starting with clarity. I have seen the standard up close and understand what separates those who make it through from those who do not.

That changes how I approach everything, from how I prepare to how I think about my own positioning as a candidate.

What This Cycle Actually Gave Me

It did not give me an offer (YET), which is what I wanted. But it gave me something more uncomfortable and ultimately more useful. It forced me to confront the gap between being a strong candidate on paper and being the candidate who actually secures the offer.

That gap is easy to underestimate until you are in the room.

Final Thought

It is easy to celebrate progress when it is visible and easy to interpret. It is much harder when progress reveals how far you still have to go. I thought I was close, and in some ways I was, but only relative to where I had been before.

Now I understand that being close is not the same as being ready.

Iraq Sad Cat GIF by Bashar
Hey

This is a really thoughtful (and very honest) reflection, and I think a lot of people will relate to it (+ I know I would've last cycle).

I completely get what you mean about AC rejections hitting differently - I had a similar experience where I was rejected after an AC in one of my earlier cycles and I felt pretty crushed at the time, especially as I saw it as my 'one real opportunity'. Looking back though, I can see I just wasn't quite ready, and I am grateful for that experience as it showed me the areas that I still needed to work on. I think sometimes what often separates people who go on to be successful in later cycles is their ability to reflect on those experiences and actively build on them, rather than letting them knock their confidence - whilst it takes some work, it seems clear to me from this post that you are already aiming to do exactly that.

I would gently push back on the idea that you are starting again. Getting to multiple ACs, especially in this cycle which seems to be more competitive than ever, shows that you are already operating at a high-level and are clearly a strong candidate. Your distinction between getting into the room and proving you should be chosen in the room is spot on, and I think a lot of my downfall in earlier ACs came down to internal confidence under pressure. However, these aspects are usually about refinement rather than a complete rebuild, and the fact that you can reflect on this so clearly suggests that you are already well on your way to bridging that gap.

In my view, it sounds less like a reset and more like you now have a much clearer understanding of what "conversion level" actually looks like, which you can use to refine your already strong performance - this puts you in a really strong position moving forward. Wishing you the best of luck with the next cycle, and we'll all be rooting for you! :)
 
Hey

This is a really thoughtful (and very honest) reflection, and I think a lot of people will relate to it (+ I know I would've last cycle).

I completely get what you mean about AC rejections hitting differently - I had a similar experience where I was rejected after an AC in one of my earlier cycles and I felt pretty crushed at the time, especially as I saw it as my 'one real opportunity'. Looking back though, I can see I just wasn't quite ready, and I am grateful for that experience as it showed me the areas that I still needed to work on. I think sometimes what often separates people who go on to be successful in later cycles is their ability to reflect on those experiences and actively build on them, rather than letting them knock their confidence - whilst it takes some work, it seems clear to me from this post that you are already aiming to do exactly that.

I would gently push back on the idea that you are starting again. Getting to multiple ACs, especially in this cycle which seems to be more competitive than ever, shows that you are already operating at a high-level and are clearly a strong candidate. Your distinction between getting into the room and proving you should be chosen in the room is spot on, and I think a lot of my downfall in earlier ACs came down to internal confidence under pressure. However, these aspects are usually about refinement rather than a complete rebuild, and the fact that you can reflect on this so clearly suggests that you are already well on your way to bridging that gap.

In my view, it sounds less like a reset and more like you now have a much clearer understanding of what "conversion level" actually looks like, which you can use to refine your already strong performance - this puts you in a really strong position moving forward. Wishing you the best of luck with the next cycle, and we'll all be rooting for you! :)

Heyyy @Abbie Whitlock,

I really appreciate this, thank you for taking the time to write such a thoughtful response.

What you said about AC rejections feeling like your “one real opportunity” really resonated. I think that’s exactly why it hit the way it did for me as well. When you get to that stage, it feels like you’ve finally broken through, so not converting almost feels heavier than earlier rejections.

I also really value your perspective on it not being a full reset. I think part of my reaction came from that gap between expectation and reality. In my head, getting to AC meant I was almost there, so realising there’s still a meaningful gap felt bigger than it probably is in reality.

But I think you’re right, and the way you’ve framed it as refinement rather than rebuild is probably the more accurate (and more productive) way to look at it. Especially what you said about understanding what “conversion level” actually looks like. That’s something I definitely didn’t fully grasp before going through it.

The point about confidence under pressure is also really interesting, because I can see that playing a role for me as well. Not in a lack of preparation sense, but in how consistently I could translate that preparation into clear, decisive answers in the moment.

I think the main difference now is that, like you said, there’s a lot more clarity. It feels less like guessing what firms want and more like understanding where the marginal gains actually are.

Really appreciate the encouragement as well, it genuinely means a lot. And congrats on pushing through it yourself, it definitely helps to hear from someone who’s been through that same stage and come out the other side❤️

I have taken my time to mourn my rejections and now i am geared towards direct Training contracts.

My approach and mindset shift will be the following:

Applying to firms with the aim to improve my application writing.

For Virtual Interviews I will practice once a week to improve my delivery and time management.

AC prep: it’s clear my downfall was the written exercise so I going to first do a very detailed breakdown of M&A understanding exactly common issues etc. in the feedback call it was evident that my answers lacked depth and consistency!

All these years I was operating on auto-pilot applying carelessly and just hoping for the best lol. This cycle I actually was really focused and although it hasn’t resulted in a VS or TC yet I do think it is a matter of time. So long as I am learning nothing really is a loss :)
 

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