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What kind of time period are we talking about between the application being submitted and the interview taking place?I was offered a training contract at quite a large firm. In my application, I stated that I was working part-time as a paralegal at a small law firm. Between sending my application and being invited for interview, they fired me (it was a very small firm and it was not particularly personal). During my training contract interview I verbally said I was still working there but was planning on quitting. Do you think this will come up in my pre-employment screening checks that I will have to complete in over a year's time (I will likely have a new job in the meanwhile).
Bros gonna be disappointed when he checks his inboxTheir email says by 6pm on 9 May so expect a 5.59 email on that date.
Between sending my application and my interview, a few weeks (less than a month). I was let go a little over a week after my applicationWhat kind of time period are we talking about between the application being submitted and the interview taking place?
LMAOOO Yeah I got the email earlier as well, well at least now I don't have to risk reading a bad email right before my best friend's bridal showerBros gonna be disappointed when he checks his inbox
Only if you mean because they have now extended this deadline to 19 MayBros gonna be disappointed when he checks his inbox
It’s not to say it couldn’t be picked up - it could. It’s why lying about things like your employment in terms of when or how long you did it is something to definitely avoid.Between sending my application and my interview, a few weeks (less than a month). I was let go a little over a week after my application
Thank you Andrei, this is super helpful!I have never completed a fact-finding exercise in an AC before, but I have some tips based on my experience with it in a client interviewing competition:
- Determine the scope of your inquiry: essentially, you want to find out early on what information you are looking to get and why, as this can help you ascertain what further questions will actually be relevant. As such, after hearing/reading the brief, ask yourself: what are the commercial/legal issues we are dealing with, what is the client's interest, and what do I need to help them achieve it?
- Organize your questions: if you can see early on that your questions can be split between a few different areas, you should make a mental plan to go through each area one at a time.
- Ask open-ended questions: this is crucial to prompt the associate to give you more information you may not even be aware you should be looking for yet. If you ask closed-ended questions like 'Did this particular thing happen?', this simply does not give the respondent much to work on.
- Spot strategic ambiguity: in my client interviewing competition, interviewees received a specific set of instructions as to how and when to give out information, and at some points, they would have to be intentionally ambiguous. This was to assess if you can spot that and know how to follow up more on the issue until you get the information you need. I would suspect the same will hold in your case, as the firm is looking for ways exercises that can differentiate between candidates' skills. Thus, I think you should constantly be on the lookout for insufficiently specific responses.
- Be an active and inquisitive listener: probably the most important line of advice here is this - you need to have a genuinely inquisitive mindset, to actively want to get to the bottom of the issue. This is what enables you to naturally seek the facts that are kept hidden from you. One method that worked for me in this regard was to try to imagine myself in the shoes of the client as I was picturing their story, which prompted me to ask the right questions as to how I got into a given situation.
Most firms I have applied to always advise one page.I submitted a two-page cover letter. This was for Sullivan & Cromwell. Cover letter length not mentioned anywhere. Only Chambers Student mentions that, FWIW. Chambers says it 'should' be single-sided. Am I now doomed with two sides?
Yes, only mentioned on Chambers Student. Their S&C entry suggests one side. It was very frustrating to see. Nothing else saying that elsewhere, really. Didn't use CS in my research. S&C's site is limited on details. I hope it's not a deal-breaker. They're one of my dream firms.Most firms I have applied to always advise one page.
If SC haven't specified specifically, it should be fine.
I don't think it would be a deal-breaker necessarily but a cover letter, unless otherwise advised, is understood to be a one page doc. I think make that your default.Yes, only mentioned on Chambers Student. Their S&C entry suggests one side. It was very frustrating to see. Nothing else saying that elsewhere, really. Didn't use CS in my research. S&C's site is limited on details. I hope it's not a deal-breaker. They're one of my dream firms.
Fair enough - that all makes sense.I don't think it would be a deal-breaker necessarily but a cover letter, unless otherwise advised, is understood to be a one page doc. I think make that your default.