Thanks! Last week.Congrats! When did you do the test?
Thanks! Last week.Congrats! When did you do the test?
Can I be annoying and ask what score you got? Trying to see if I should prepare for rejection!Thanks! Last week.
Hey!Hiii, I just wanted to ask if anyone has ever received feedback like this after an AC/interview and how you’re supposed to navigate it? (Mind you, I got this feedback 2+ months after my rejection) I was told that my experiences and answers were “unusual” and that I was “believable,” partly because I mentioned academic publications and having worked on multi-million euro matters at a law firm abroad, and that this contributed to me not getting the offer. I’m honestly SO confused about how I’m supposed to take this feedback on board or improve from it, because I never got any actual clarity on what I did wrong. I’ve never previously had feedback suggesting there was an issue with how I present myself or speak about my experiences, so this has genuinely made me question myself a bit. Has anyone dealt with something similar or have any insight into what they may have meant?
Hey!
I can totally understand why that feedback would leave you confused, especially since it took so long to receive it after the rejection. It does sound like the wording itself is quite unclear and not especially actionable, and I've had my fair share of similar feedback in the past!
From what you have said, my guess is that they may have meant one of two things, either:
I think sometimes interviewers can become sceptical if candidates mention very high-level work without clearly explaining what they actually did day-to-day, particularly where the experience is abroad and they are unfamiliar with the context. That does not mean you should stop mentioning these experiences - they are clearly strong experiences to have, and it's all about making sure you just frame it in the right way.
- They struggled to contextualise your experiences because they were less typical than other candidates' experiences, or
- They wanted more detail/examples showing your personal contribution to those matters, rather than the scale of the work itself.
If anything, I'd just focus on grounding those examples more concretely in future interviews and highlight:
I also think it is really important to remember that feedback after ACs/interviews is often subjective and sometimes poorly phrased, particularly where the level of competition/strength of candidates was so high. One firm's comment about your style or experiences can be completely contradicted by another firm later on - in previous assessments, I've been told I had the joint highest score in the written assessment in one, and told I didn't receive it due to my written assessment in another afterwards. Sometimes it just comes down to your performance on that specific day, or whether you were displaying things the individual firm was looking for. I really would not let this make you doubt yourself too much, and just focus on whether there are any ways you can make the discussion about your experiences a bit clearer.
- What exactly you were responsible for
- What skills you developed
- What challenges you faced
- What you learned from the experience
The fact that you have had no similar feedback elsewhere could suggest it was more about that particular interviewer's interpretation, rather than any fundamental issue with how you present yourself (which I appreciate is still frustrating).
Try not to let one piece of feedback overshadow the fact that you clearly have some interesting and valuable experiences - the right firm for you will recognise that and see it as a strength!![]()
A 15-minute presentation is so long!Heyy, okay you’re probably going to laugh, but I genuinely did all of the abovewhich is why I’ve been SO confused by the feedback. Usually, feedback at least makes sense or feels somewhat actionable, but this one just left me confused because I still don’t really understand what I was supposed to improve on.
That’s also why your point about them maybe struggling to contextualise the experience confused me a little, because the firm I interned at abroad actually happened to be a local counsel they use in that region, so I assumed the context/background of the work would be fairly familiar to them (though maybe not to that partner). I also made a conscious effort not to just throw around the scale of matters without substance. I explained what my actual role was, the kind of tasks I was involved in day-to-day, what I learned from the experience, and the skills I developed from it.
I also spoke about extracurriculars, volunteering, society work etc, it’s just that naturally a lot of my experiences are law-related, so those examples came up more frequently throughout the interview.
I think that’s why the feedback has thrown me so much, because I actually came out of the interview feeling like I’d communicated myself quite clearly and in a grounded wayso hearing afterwards that my experiences were unusual and that I was believable as part of the reason for a rejection just caught me off guard a bit.
The only other feedback point I received was that I didn’t use the presentation time appropriately because I presented for around 13 minutes rather than the full 15, which I can understand to an extent. But even then, paired with the other comments, it still all felt a little odd and quite difficult to interpret as actionable feedback overall.
But I do appreciate your perspective because it’s one of the first explanations that has at least somewhat helped me make sense of it![]()
congratulations !! very happy for you !!It’s been a while but I’m super proud to share that I’m a future trainee after 3 cycles and 28 applications. DMs are always open for advice on applications and tests! I actually managed to crack the Watson Glaser this year after serious persistence, happy to offer advice on that also.![]()
Huge congratulations!! That is amazing news, I hope you celebrate well!It’s been a while but I’m super proud to share that I’m a future trainee after 3 cycles and 28 applications. DMs are always open for advice on applications and tests! I actually managed to crack the Watson Glaser this year after serious persistence, happy to offer advice on that also.![]()
That is definitely some very odd and nitpicky feedback. i agree with what Alice said and I wouldn’t worry too much. I don’t think you should change the experiences that you talk about to try and fit the “mould” of what the firm wants. It’s very strange how they have stated that the experiences were not believable, when they are personal achievements that you have worked hard for. Maybe you could try and quantify them more and have a personal reflection so they do seem more genuine?Hiii, I just wanted to ask if anyone has ever received feedback like this after an AC/interview and how you’re supposed to navigate it? (Mind you, I got this feedback 2+ months after my rejection) I was told that my experiences and answers were “unusual” and that I was “believable,” partly because I mentioned academic publications and having worked on multi-million euro matters at a law firm abroad, and that this contributed to me not getting the offer. I’m honestly SO confused about how I’m supposed to take this feedback on board or improve from it, because I never got any actual clarity on what I did wrong. I’ve never previously had feedback suggesting there was an issue with how I present myself or speak about my experiences, so this has genuinely made me question myself a bit. Has anyone dealt with something similar or have any insight into what they may have meant?
Hey, congratulations! Please could I ask when did you do the test?Hey, has anyone done the Freeths first interview for the graduate programme? Would really appreciate some insight!![]()
Hey!hi @Abbie Whitlock I hope you are well. I wanted to ask you for advice on how to structure a research note for a client (the note includes a summary of a few articles ), I have never done one of these before so I would appreciate any advise you may have. Thank you in advance!
This is awesome. Well done!It’s been a while but I’m super proud to share that I’m a future trainee after 3 cycles and 28 applications. DMs are always open for advice on applications and tests! I actually managed to crack the Watson Glaser this year after serious persistence, happy to offer advice on that also.![]()