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- gdane
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Re: when writing a memo at an internship...
Ask the person that assigned it to you dude. They may not want all that filler crap.
- BVest
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Re: when writing a memo at an internship...
Also ask if they prefer footnotes or inline citations. I've had requests for both (at the same internship but different people assigning).gdane wrote:Ask the person that assigned it to you dude. They may not want all that filler crap.
Last edited by BVest on Sat Jan 27, 2018 6:29 am, edited 1 time in total.
- sublime
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- BVest
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Re: when writing a memo at an internship...
If they're big enough to have developed their style guide.sublime wrote:Don't most places give you their formatting guidelines? That was the impression that I got from my LRW prof.
Last edited by BVest on Sat Jan 27, 2018 6:29 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: when writing a memo at an internship...
I was just assigned a memo and no one mentioned formatting at all. This is a gov't agency. It was due today so I turned it in as a discussion section only, in part because I was crunched for time. I guess I'll find out if they're pissed next week.sublime wrote:Don't most places give you their formatting guidelines? That was the impression that I got from my LRW prof.
- rinkrat19
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Re: when writing a memo at an internship...
My 1L employer wanted questions presented, short answers, and discussion, and there was a Word template I had to use for the page formatting. I didn't have to TREAC very formally as long as my argument was presented logically and readably. But obviously you should ask what their expectations are.
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Re: when writing a memo at an internship...
I don't mean to sound neurotic about this, it's just that I felt like my choice was (a) to give the impression that I never learned how to write a "proper" memo with all the right headings and sections; (b) annoy the attorney by providing extraneous information that wastes their time
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Re: when writing a memo at an internship...
In retrospect, I should have played it safe and written a LRW style memo. I'm already dreading the "you... you did learn how to write a memo in 1L, right?" talk I'm going to get next week.rinkrat19 wrote:My 1L employer wanted questions presented, short answers, and discussion, and there was a Word template I had to use for the page formatting. I didn't have to TREAC very formally as long as my argument was presented logically and readably. But obviously you should ask what their expectations are.
- wbrother
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Re: when writing a memo at an internship...
Your concerns are valid, but just ask the person assigning it. Different people will want different things, and it's better to ask than too turn in work they don't like.SouthernMiss wrote:I don't mean to sound neurotic about this, it's just that I felt like my choice was (a) to give the impression that I never learned how to write a "proper" memo with all the right headings and sections; (b) annoy the attorney by providing extraneous information that wastes their time
- Hipster but Athletic
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Re: when writing a memo at an internship...
Dude, the point of the memo is to communicate something effectively and efficiently to the attorney. If she didn't tell you what she expected, she didn't realize you hadn't written anything for the agency yet --you really need to ask. It's a five second question --"hey, i know everybody has sort of different ideas of what a memo should look like, do you have a good example of what you'd like me to produce?"....she'll either give you one, or just say, "doesn't have to be too formal, but i do want good cites" in which case, casually try to IRAC, and include as much authority as possible. Chances are she already knows the law pretty well and is just looking for decent case illustrations to match the facts in whatever jx you're in.
- rinkrat19
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Re: when writing a memo at an internship...
It's a bummer you didn't clarify expectations before your first attempt but just make sure your second attempt is spot on for whatever standards they want from you. My very first day last summer was similarly wonky, with someone assigning me an emergency memo without checking with my actual supervisors. I got them a quick answer but it was a crap memo. BUT, everyone understood that I'd just been tossed in over my head without any floaties. I made sure to clarify expectations before starting my next assignment.SouthernMiss wrote:I don't mean to sound neurotic about this, it's just that I felt like my choice was (a) to give the impression that I never learned how to write a "proper" memo with all the right headings and sections; (b) annoy the attorney by providing extraneous information that wastes their time
As for questions presented/short answers, keep in mind that the people reading it are busy and they may be passing it along to people who are even busier. That's not extraneous. Some sort of summary is pretty essential. Then they can choose whether to read further into your discussion.
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Re: when writing a memo at an internship...
Yeah, I was given this assignment 5 hours before it was due. I felt pretty good that I churned out a well-cited 10 page memo, and gave myself plenty of time to re-read it several times to check for spelling, citations, readability. Then I turned it in and realized I had completely blanked on formatting. I got into bad habits at my former internship, and it didn't even cross my mind that anyone would care, as long as the research and writing was good. But yeah, I'll ask as soon as I see this attorney next week how to format my next one, and will be meticulous from now on.rinkrat19 wrote:It's a bummer you didn't clarify expectations before your first attempt but just make sure your second attempt is spot on for whatever standards they want from you. My very first day last summer was similarly wonky, with someone assigning me an emergency memo without checking with my actual supervisors. I got them a quick answer but it was a crap memo. BUT, everyone understood that I'd just been tossed in over my head without any floaties. I made sure to clarify expectations before starting my next assignment.SouthernMiss wrote:I don't mean to sound neurotic about this, it's just that I felt like my choice was (a) to give the impression that I never learned how to write a "proper" memo with all the right headings and sections; (b) annoy the attorney by providing extraneous information that wastes their time
As for questions presented/short answers, keep in mind that the people reading it are busy and they may be passing it along to people who are even busier. That's not extraneous. Some sort of summary is pretty essential. Then they can choose whether to read further into your discussion.
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Re: when writing a memo at an internship...
I'll just add this incident to my endless list of law school facepalm moments. It's amazing what an overburdened 2L schedule can do to an otherwise competent brain. The struggle is real.
- Hipster but Athletic
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Re: when writing a memo at an internship...
dude, i thought you were just starting off. if you turned in a ten page memo that you went full formal on, there's no way anyone's gonna give you shit.
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Re: when writing a memo at an internship...
Thanks for the good vibes. I'm still facepalming though. It was my first assignment and I'm worried the attorney will think im an idiot, despite my good legal reasoning/citations/writing.Hipster but Athletic wrote: dude, i thought you were just starting off. if you turned in a ten page memo that you went full formal on, there's no way anyone's gonna give you shit.
- Hipster but Athletic
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Re: when writing a memo at an internship...
Ya, not trying to send good vibes. I'm trying to send you the kind of vibes that say, "the fact that you're worried about this is retarded and you should feel bad about the fact that this kind of stuff gets to you. sack up"
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Re: when writing a memo at an internship...
fair enough. i'll stop.Hipster but Athletic wrote:Ya, not trying to send good vibes. I'm trying to send you the kind of vibes that say, "the fact that you're worried about this is retarded and you should feel bad about the fact that this kind of stuff gets to you. sack up"
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Re: when writing a memo at an internship...
For future reference, for every new assignment, you should always ask the following before you leave the room/end the call:
1. When would you like this by?
2. What format would you like it in? (If it is the first time working with the person, ask more specific questions about document formatting)
3. Is there a model document that I should look at for style/etc?
4. How long do you envision this (memo/email/whatever) being?
5. Is there a treatise or other spot you recommend I start?
It's the junior attorneys that don't ask questions that are the dangerous ones. You need to find the balance between getting what you need to do the project well and not becoming a pest that needs micro-managing.
1. When would you like this by?
2. What format would you like it in? (If it is the first time working with the person, ask more specific questions about document formatting)
3. Is there a model document that I should look at for style/etc?
4. How long do you envision this (memo/email/whatever) being?
5. Is there a treatise or other spot you recommend I start?
It's the junior attorneys that don't ask questions that are the dangerous ones. You need to find the balance between getting what you need to do the project well and not becoming a pest that needs micro-managing.
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Re: when writing a memo at an internship...
I wouldn't worry too much. I've done like three memos for a partner, once he wanted it full all questions presented, once he wanted just a discussion, and once barely more than a email.
It's not automatically wrong to just do a discussion section. Especially if the memo is just for their internal purposes. Normally, the wider the audience the more formal. Client? Do the whole 9 yards. Partner is curious about something. He might not care.
It's not automatically wrong to just do a discussion section. Especially if the memo is just for their internal purposes. Normally, the wider the audience the more formal. Client? Do the whole 9 yards. Partner is curious about something. He might not care.
- BVest
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Re: when writing a memo at an internship...
For this question, if the answer "in the next few hours" then you need not ask this followup, but if they say "in a week" you might also ask how long they would like you to spend on it. It may be that they only expect it to be a 4-5 hour assignment but that they don't need it until next week because it's not a pressing matter. You don't want to spend 40 hours on something they only want you spending 4 on.TooOld4This wrote:For future reference, for every new assignment, you should always ask the following before you leave the room/end the call:
1. When would you like this by?
Last edited by BVest on Sat Jan 27, 2018 6:29 am, edited 1 time in total.
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- BarbellDreams
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Re: when writing a memo at an internship...
The LWR format is super TTT at firms. Unless you have psychos or archaic partners your memo will always go:
- "You've asked me to research "x". Please see my finding below.
- Bunch of headings breaking down your issue(s) clearly)
- "Based on my research I am of the opinion that (this will happen because of this)"
Thats really it. My 1L summer I drafted my very first memo for a head partner about some weird florida homestead tax exemption. He literally laughed out loud when he saw my wimpy "question presented", turned to me and said "I gave you the assignment, I know what issue I presented, why would you write this?".
He is right.
- "You've asked me to research "x". Please see my finding below.
- Bunch of headings breaking down your issue(s) clearly)
- "Based on my research I am of the opinion that (this will happen because of this)"
Thats really it. My 1L summer I drafted my very first memo for a head partner about some weird florida homestead tax exemption. He literally laughed out loud when he saw my wimpy "question presented", turned to me and said "I gave you the assignment, I know what issue I presented, why would you write this?".
He is right.
- encore1101
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Re: when writing a memo at an internship...
I've always included all the other sections, because you don't know who else would see it. I've drafted memos that started off to ADAs that eventually was handed up to the #2 person at the DA's Office, as well as the NY/NJ Port Authority. If and when the attorney wanted something less than a full-fledged memo, they'd explicitly tell me so.SouthernMiss wrote:Say it's day 1 at a new legal internship, someone asks for a "memo" on a particular legal issue. Are you supposed to format it like in legal writing, i.e., question presented, brief answer, discussion, conclusion, or do they just want the discussion, and the rest is extraneous/annoying?
edit: if it was due later that day, you're okay. At that point, the few hours you'd spend writing the other sections would be better off doing research/discussing the main issue.
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