There is no agreed upon figure for what counts as a small, medium, or large trainee intake. These are ambiguous and relative concepts; which get even more fuzzy if you consider options such as describing certain intake numbers as 'small to medium' or 'medium to large' sizes. But if I were to express my personal intuition as to figure ranges, I would say:what is defined as a small v large trainee intake? I know some firms offer 70+ which is obviously significant, however would an intake of 10 be seen as small though some firms take even less than that?
Can you withdraw your existing application? If so withdraw it and reapply.I just realised I have jumbled up my answers and questions for the CMS app.. ie: for question 1 i’ve pasted my question 2 answer 😭
@Jessica Booker @Amma Usman
Do you guys recommend applying using a new email perhaps? or contact grad rec
I would try to make it more tailored to the firm where you can. Think about the firm's values, culture or strategy and how that may need more specific skills related to those elements.when an application asks, 'what skills would make you good trainee solicitor at XYZ firm' are you meant to be specific about the firm or more general like - good at communication because that's important as a lawyer?
I generally consider less than 15 to be a small intake - but I stress to people they need to look at the size of the office too as an intake of 15 trainees in a firm of 400 lawyers is going to be very different to an intake of 15 in a firm of 200 lawyers.what is defined as a small v large trainee intake? I know some firms offer 70+ which is obviously significant, however would an intake of 10 be seen as small though some firms take even less than that?
The assessment may fall into working hours as they may need to be available for when the assessment is being done, and therefore they can only do it within working hours themselves.@Jessica Booker
Hi Jessica,
I’ve progressed to the written assessment stage with a firm after completing an extensive application and online test. However, all the available time slots for the assessment fall during the working hours of my winter vacation scheme. I reached out to request a transfer to their summer application cycle, which has a later timeline, but they refused simply saying “due to timing issue”.
Is there anything I can do in this situation? I feel quite disappointed, as I wouldn’t have applied if I had known this in advance, especially considering the effort I put into writing over 1,000 words for their application.
Thanks for your advice!
In terms of culture, I will only recommend to you firms I have done vacation schemes with, as I feel open days/other firm events do not suffice to make a strong inference in this regard. I have done 4 VS and the two firms that stood out to me in terms of how friendly people there were are Davis Polk and Willkie. For both of these firms the training style is not particularly structured, but after speaking to many trainees I believe they are well-supported. As for the other criteria, Davis Polk has exceptional reputation and history in the US, and guarantees all trainees the opportunity to do a six month secondment in their New York office (unless you want to qualify in competition law, in which case you would be expected to go on a Brussels secondment). Willkie arguably offers a broader training experience than other US rivals. While it has a great PE practice, it not solely focused on corporate and finance and has more established advisory and contentious teams.I've seen a few people do 'suggest firms for me' posts recently and I thought it would be fun and helpful to hop on the trend!
There are some non-negotiables for me - decent/good firm culture, international opportunities and supportive/well-structured training. I understand they are largely subjective but they are still important for me to say at the outset because at some firms, these qualities might categorically not be present (e.g., narrow focus on one market). Also, by 'culture', I don't mean work-life balance, just that the people are friendly.
Other fun facts: very interested in the US, interested in IP and life sciences (but happy to explore anything else - I am far from committed to a specific sector), I have decent language skills.
Academic record is strong (GCSEs, sixth-form, second year uni), but with a bad blip in first year (with mitigating circumstances). Non-Oxbridge; RG.
No VS, no open day experience
I appreciate any thoughts![]()
It’s on AllHires and there is no withdraw option.. Should I email them and apply from a diff email?Can you withdraw your existing application? If so withdraw it and reapply.
Its okay to ask whether it may be possible. But if the scheme is only a week, I would generally say it is better to focus on the scheme itself as taking even two hours out is effectively 5% of your time on the scheme and could have an impact even if you do stay late or work around it.@Jessica Booker
Based on your experience, is it ever acceptable to request time off during a vacation scheme to complete an assessment? I had assumed that doing so, especially at a US firm, might require a degree of discretion beyond what’s afforded by the vacation scheme. I’d really appreciate any advice on how to navigate this situation professionally!
I would contact the recruitment team first and get their advice on how best to approach it. It maybe that they can reset your application to incomplete so that you can edit it rather than submitting a new application.It’s on AllHires and there is no withdraw option.. Should I email them and apply from a diff email?
I completed mine on 15/11 and haven’t heard anything backHas anyone heard back from Bird & Bird following the VI? I completed it at the end of October and still haven't heard back, wondering if it is worth emailing.
No worries Maya! I can definitely emphasize with how frustrating that must feel, but unfortunately it doesn't seem like there's much you can do about it. I would still provisionally accept the invitation to complete the assessment and then see if my relationship with the supervisor allows for a request for this type of flexibility. I do not think you stand to lose anything by delaying the process until you get more clarity on that point.@Andrei Radu
Hi Andrei,
Thank you for your detailed reply—I really appreciate it.
I’ve already disclosed the vacation scheme situation and offered to provide documentation to prove it, but they didn’t seem interested. The written assessment is a fixed 2-hour slot, so it’s not something I can complete at a time of my choice. My winter vacation scheme hasn’t started yet, so I can’t gauge whether it would be appropriate to ask my supervisor for flexibility.
I’m also sharing this to highlight to others that firms might reject candidates on this basis. It’s something I wasn’t aware of and think others should consider. 😞
I did not and still progressed to the AC stage, as did a number of other people I know who progressed past the application stage. If you particularly like DLA and have the time to invest into writing a high-quality cover letter, it will definitely not hurt your chances. However, if there are many other firms that you are currently applying or intending to apply to, and if you think you might struggle to complete them by the relevant deadlines, I would simply focus on writing high-quality responses to the mandatory questions.is it worth including a cover letter for DLA? I know it isn't a requirement
Does this mean that people will still be receiving WG invites after the deadline?Hi, the CMS WG isn't automatic, so they review your app and then decide on sending you the WG invite