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1. Word limit: there's no absolute figures to cite here, but for me think the "acceptable" word count range would be anywhere from 400-500 to 1000-1200 for the personal statement and anywhere from around 200 to 600 for the hobbies section. Ultimately, what matters here is (i) extracting as much value from the application form answers as possible by explaining as many of your impressive experiences and achievements is sufficient depth; while also (ii) ensuring you are not overloading the answers with so much information that it makes it difficult to navigate and makes individual points less impactful; and (iii) ensuring you write in as concise and to-the-point manner as if you had restrictive word limits. As long as you respect all three requirements, your answer will be fine regardless of how many words you end up writing. The aforementioned ranges are simply what I think is the case for most answers that observe these criteria, but I am in no way affirming that in individual circumstances it would not be possible to so while writing more/less than suggested.im doing a TC application for a firm and they want a personal statement and interests and hobbies. then a CV. i was wondering how long should the personal statement and hobbies sections be as there is no guide word limit. also how should I structure the personal statement section? there's no guidance on their website either
OK. I remember that one now and typed full transcript available on request if required or similar.Thanks, but the additional information section is just a textbox it seems, and I can’t upload anything to it.
Hey @legal18 so I think there are a number of associated benefits of a sector-focused approach from both a client and an employee perspective:What is the benefit of law firm's with a sector-focused approach for clients?
Hey @lolasparks firstly I want to say I completely relate to your struggles. My first application draft would always be substantially above the word count and I would spend hours and hours to think of ways as to how to reduce it. In some ways however that was not bad, as it forced me to think a lot more closely about what is and is not valuable in an application and thus refined my general application writing skills.Hey - I'm not sure if there can be any advice or tips for this but I've realised I kinda struggle with meeting the word count on applications. I always go above it slightly and then have to cut down. There's nothing wrong with that but I was wondering if anyone has any tips, structures or things that have helped them I guess feel like they've included enough and ticked all the boxes!
Absolutely not - it’s still early.Do you guys think it's too late to start applying for schemes with early jan deadlines that are rolling?
I applied oct 19So sorry to hear this! When did you apply. I applied around 5th and haven’t heard back
I think I applied around this time, maybe even the end of September, and I also haven’t heard from Slaughter and May. Very strangeSo sorry to hear this! When did you apply. I applied around 5th and haven’t heard back
I had the same experienceThat HSF SJT report was the opposite of every selection I made during the test. 😭
Thank you so much for such a detailed response!Hey @legal18 so I think there are a number of associated benefits of a sector-focused approach from both a client and an employee perspective:
Benefits for clients:
- Ease of service: essentially, a sector-focused firm will deliver legal services in a way that is a lot easier for the client to use. Firstly, if a firm organizes teams more around sectors than practice areas, it looks and is a lot more similar to the client's business. Businesses perceive themselves as players in a certain industry and do not neatly separate their legal needs between the different workstreams of different practice areas. Thus, the legal service of sector-focused firms seems a lot more tailored to the client. Secondly, industry-focused firms tend to have partners with significantly broader expertise. Hence, the firm can provide a 'one-point-of-contact' system to clients, which is easier to navigate administratively.
- Strategic advice: the idea is that if you spend years and years working on matters in a single industry, by the time you become a more senior practitioner you will have almost as much technical expertise in the sector as the client themselves. Having this kind of deep insight and knowledge of the industry will not only mean that you can give better advice to clients on particular mandates, but it will also mean you will be in a better position to form a client-lawyer relationship which goes beyond that. This way, you will have a good chance of getting to know all the insides of the client's business and becoming their go-to strategic advisor. Thus, the client gets the benefit of exceptional business and legal advisory services simultaneously.
- Industry reputation: if the firm generally does a lot of high-end work in a particular sector, it will become very reputable with businesses in that sector. The fact that firm will simply be a very well-known name definitely helps in terms of shaping advantageous negotiations dynamics with opposing counsel. A great example of this is Kirkland in the PE sphere. Simply because of the firm's reputation in this area, it is able to obtain advantageous terms for clients by insisting they are "market terms". Because nobody does as many deals as they do in PE, it is sometimes difficult for the other side's counsel to counteract Kirkland's claims.
Benefits for employees:
- Learning more about the intricacies of the sector as a benefit in itself: if you have a prior interest in a given sector of the economy, working for a firm that has a focus on that sector will enable you to get a lot more exposure to it, which can be a benefit in and of itself. Just as you might have a general interest in commercial law because you have a general interest in learning more about and working with businesses, you might also have a specific interest in sector-focused firms because you have a specific interest in learning more about the sector. This reasoning will be especially persuasive if you have some previous work or other relevant experience related to the sector. Personally, I have seen candidates write persuasive answers based on this type of question in regards to sectors ranging from tech and financial services to energy, pharma and transportation.
- Becoming a true strategic business advisor: this is similar to the line of reasoning you mentioned but is focused on long-term career prospects. As mentioned before, repeated experience in a single industry means you will in time become very technically proficient in your understanding of it. This puts you in a great position to become a true strategic adviser, which is potentially a more interesting role than just dealing with their legal requests.
- More high-end mandates: if the firm can generally provide better service than its competitors because of its sector focus, this also means that the firm will be better placed to win the top of the market mandates from that industry. This might be naturally attractive to you, as these mandates tend to be the among the most complex and consequential.
really frustrating as my report ended up with more negative feedback than positive😔That HSF SJT report was the opposite of every selection I made during the test. 😭
Most Candidates I have spoken with and my own experience is that you find out if you have a place on the A/C two weeks prior to have enough time to prepare. I wouldn't worry about it as they also have an A/C in Jan so there is still a chanceAnything from DLA yet? I’m assuming they’ll send something out if there’s an AC next week?
With interviews that are 30mins with grad rec how many questions do they tend to ask and will it mainly be motivational/competency based questions?There really isn't an answer to this unfortunately - for some people it may be less than 60 seconds, for somone else it may be over 4 minutes.
If an interview is an hour long, you will actually only be interviewed for about 40 minutes of the hour (need time to settle in, intros, time for you to ask questions at the end etc), and then you have to factor in the time they ask the questions. They will more than likely ask around 10 or more questions and so you can easily see how individual interview questions can be roughly 2-3 minutes long.