Good or Bad Advice? Forum
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Good or Bad Advice?
I'm a 2L at CCN. I just spoke to a friend who will be a 3L next year about job recruiting. She got an V100 SA outside of NY despite being below median, not URM, not IP, and having no work experience. (For the people wondering, she's okay-looking but not extremely attractive.)
She said the trick to getting a job is to be shameless, to not apologize for bad grades, and to show employers you are decisive. Is this true? Do interviewers really care more about tenacity than grades or solid work experience? Does anyone have any other advice on how to overcome median grades and K-JD?
She said the trick to getting a job is to be shameless, to not apologize for bad grades, and to show employers you are decisive. Is this true? Do interviewers really care more about tenacity than grades or solid work experience? Does anyone have any other advice on how to overcome median grades and K-JD?
- DELG
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Re: Good or Bad Advice?
Don't apologize for bad grades
Do read "How to Strike Out"
Do read "How to Strike Out"
- Tanicius
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Re: Good or Bad Advice?
The real answer is luck. Some employers don't like arrogance, others love it. Take that entire anecdotal story with a grain of salt.Anonymous User wrote:I'm a 2L at CCN. I just spoke to a friend who will be a 3L next year about job recruiting. She got an V100 SA outside of NY despite being below median, not URM, not IP, and having no work experience. (For the people wondering, she's okay-looking but not extremely attractive.)
She said the trick to getting a job is to be shameless, to not apologize for bad grades, and to show employers you are decisive. Is this true? Do interviewers really care more about tenacity than grades or solid work experience? Does anyone have any other advice on how to overcome median grades and K-JD?
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Re: Good or Bad Advice?
OP here.
How would a K-JD address bad grades without being arrogant/ignoring them? I have 2 C's and 2 A's. Everything else is a B.
How would a K-JD address bad grades without being arrogant/ignoring them? I have 2 C's and 2 A's. Everything else is a B.
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Re: Good or Bad Advice?
Doesn't NYU place like 60% biglaw? Doesn't that mean that roughly one in five students below median land big law there? If so, her story may simply represent the fact that some firms are willing to reach deeper at CCN level schools rather than any secret sauce to getting biglaw when you don't have the grades.
In terms of the way you phrased the question ("do interview really care more about tenacity than grades ..."), the answer is absolutely not. You can be as bold, confident, and tenacious as you want, but if you have shitty enough grades, or go to a shitty enough school, the odds are outrageously stacked against you. And, vice versa, if you have stellar enough grades at the right institutions, it almost doesn't matter how you present yourself or how imbecilic you are. Grades > tenacity.
But as far as what to do as median at CCN who wants biglaw, I imagine the three following bits of advice shouldn't be controversial (obviously I encourage more experienced or informed people to chime in):
1. Bid wisely. Your grades should meet, or preferably exceed, the cutoffs disclosed by the vast majority of firms you interview with if not every single one. Don't waste bids thinking that you'll wow screeners with your personality and get them to waive their grade cutoffs.
2. Use this summer (assuming you're a rising 2L) to network, hustle, and mass mail. There was a guide written on this board at some point about hustling your way into a biglaw job. A dude with not-so-stellar credentials ended up getting a bunch of offers by being a beast networker/hustler. My guess is that he was a bit of a social badass, but it's still worth finding and looking at that post and others like it if you can.
And I would definitely start mass mailing before OCI. Once OCI begins, mass mailing becomes much more of a shit show. FWIW, I was top 5% at a T25, I mailed around 100 firms during OCI (all with at least slightly tailored cover letters), and I heard back from one firm. Don't get your hopes up about mass mailing, especially once OCI begins.
3. Work on your interview skills. If your school offers mock interview opportunities and the like before OCI, take them. Be aware of how you come across to people and try to improve your social/interviewing weak spots.
And yes, I'd agree with your friend that you at least shouldn't apologize for bad grades. Not that there's any secret to that--I just think acting butt hurt about your law school performance won't make you fun to talk to.
Sometimes, when trying to figure out how to best answer certain difficult interview questions, I found the following thought experiment useful. Imagine that your school contacts you and asks you to interview potential incoming students for next year's 1L class. You ask them the question (or some analogous question) that you're wondering about. What would strike you as a strong response?
Applying this to your situation, imagine asking a candidate with a low LSAT score and GPA how they felt about their academic and testing performance. As you'd guess, I don't think "Yeah, I'm really sorry.. I just don't know what happened.. I was really disappointed.." comes off as too attractive. Nor does "yeah so, in my Econ class, my grandma died like the week before. And in my English class, the one where I got a B-, my professor was like 100 years old and none of us knew what was going on. And there was this guy sitting next to me during the LSAT who kept farting..." Even if all of that crap is true. And my guess is that something like "undergraduate grades and LSAT don't matter--I know I'm going to be an amazing law school student" comes off as presumptuous and stupid. At least for me, an attractive answer would be something that hit on points like (1) I genuinely applied myself in my classes and on the lsat, (2) I tried to learn from my mistakes by talking with professors and taking other steps toward improvement, and (3) I look forward to the opportunity to try my best in law school. And, of course, it would need to be delivered in a sincere and human manner where I actually believed what they were saying and didn't think they were trying to remember what their overbearing dad wrote on flash cards for them or something.
Anyway, the strong point of the thought experiment is just that it's a reminder that an interviewer is just another person. It's just you or one of your classmates in a few years. I think it helps to keep that in mind.
GL in your job hunting. And remember that the only thing great about biglaw is the pay check. (Even then, given the hours, it's questionable.) Being sunk in law school culture makes you think that it's also the one-and-only key to happiness and self-respect, but it's not, and it's best to get over that mentality.
In terms of the way you phrased the question ("do interview really care more about tenacity than grades ..."), the answer is absolutely not. You can be as bold, confident, and tenacious as you want, but if you have shitty enough grades, or go to a shitty enough school, the odds are outrageously stacked against you. And, vice versa, if you have stellar enough grades at the right institutions, it almost doesn't matter how you present yourself or how imbecilic you are. Grades > tenacity.
But as far as what to do as median at CCN who wants biglaw, I imagine the three following bits of advice shouldn't be controversial (obviously I encourage more experienced or informed people to chime in):
1. Bid wisely. Your grades should meet, or preferably exceed, the cutoffs disclosed by the vast majority of firms you interview with if not every single one. Don't waste bids thinking that you'll wow screeners with your personality and get them to waive their grade cutoffs.
2. Use this summer (assuming you're a rising 2L) to network, hustle, and mass mail. There was a guide written on this board at some point about hustling your way into a biglaw job. A dude with not-so-stellar credentials ended up getting a bunch of offers by being a beast networker/hustler. My guess is that he was a bit of a social badass, but it's still worth finding and looking at that post and others like it if you can.
And I would definitely start mass mailing before OCI. Once OCI begins, mass mailing becomes much more of a shit show. FWIW, I was top 5% at a T25, I mailed around 100 firms during OCI (all with at least slightly tailored cover letters), and I heard back from one firm. Don't get your hopes up about mass mailing, especially once OCI begins.
3. Work on your interview skills. If your school offers mock interview opportunities and the like before OCI, take them. Be aware of how you come across to people and try to improve your social/interviewing weak spots.
And yes, I'd agree with your friend that you at least shouldn't apologize for bad grades. Not that there's any secret to that--I just think acting butt hurt about your law school performance won't make you fun to talk to.
Sometimes, when trying to figure out how to best answer certain difficult interview questions, I found the following thought experiment useful. Imagine that your school contacts you and asks you to interview potential incoming students for next year's 1L class. You ask them the question (or some analogous question) that you're wondering about. What would strike you as a strong response?
Applying this to your situation, imagine asking a candidate with a low LSAT score and GPA how they felt about their academic and testing performance. As you'd guess, I don't think "Yeah, I'm really sorry.. I just don't know what happened.. I was really disappointed.." comes off as too attractive. Nor does "yeah so, in my Econ class, my grandma died like the week before. And in my English class, the one where I got a B-, my professor was like 100 years old and none of us knew what was going on. And there was this guy sitting next to me during the LSAT who kept farting..." Even if all of that crap is true. And my guess is that something like "undergraduate grades and LSAT don't matter--I know I'm going to be an amazing law school student" comes off as presumptuous and stupid. At least for me, an attractive answer would be something that hit on points like (1) I genuinely applied myself in my classes and on the lsat, (2) I tried to learn from my mistakes by talking with professors and taking other steps toward improvement, and (3) I look forward to the opportunity to try my best in law school. And, of course, it would need to be delivered in a sincere and human manner where I actually believed what they were saying and didn't think they were trying to remember what their overbearing dad wrote on flash cards for them or something.
Anyway, the strong point of the thought experiment is just that it's a reminder that an interviewer is just another person. It's just you or one of your classmates in a few years. I think it helps to keep that in mind.
GL in your job hunting. And remember that the only thing great about biglaw is the pay check. (Even then, given the hours, it's questionable.) Being sunk in law school culture makes you think that it's also the one-and-only key to happiness and self-respect, but it's not, and it's best to get over that mentality.
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- Tanicius
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Re: Good or Bad Advice?
60 percent biglaw placement means more than one in five below median. You're not accounting for any self selection - the fact that many NYU grads above median do clerkship and PI.
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Re: Good or Bad Advice?
Thanks Tanicius, you're right. I considered PI, which perhaps through cynicism I tried to account for with "roughly", but I didn't consider clerkships.
- DELG
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Re: Good or Bad Advice?
It also assumes everyone with the grades to land biglaw, can. Unfortunately not the case.
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Re: Good or Bad Advice?
I was below median at CCN and ended up with 6 call-backs and 3 offers, all NYC (V25, V50, and V100s). I don't believe my experience was typical, however, as I had prior work experience and some language skills that I felt I was able to sell pretty well. I was also extremely conservative in bidding 90% NYC and targeting firms ranked between V50 and V100.
I never actually had any firm ask directly about my grades, so I didn't have any chance to be particularly cavalier about them. To the extent them came up tangentially, however, I played the humility card and deflected by talking about how much I really enjoyed the coursework while noting in passing that I had struggled with the law school exam format.
Some interviewers were obviously turned off by my transcript; others didn't seem to mind. If you know you can't ride your transcript to the top of the vault, I would recommend really practicing describing yourself, your experience, and your goals beforehand so that you can be very articulate when extemporaneously talking those points. I spent quite a lot of time writing essays about myself to really play around with different phrasings and framings. I think that exercise helped give me (or at least helped me fake) the right kind of confidence pretty well.
I never actually had any firm ask directly about my grades, so I didn't have any chance to be particularly cavalier about them. To the extent them came up tangentially, however, I played the humility card and deflected by talking about how much I really enjoyed the coursework while noting in passing that I had struggled with the law school exam format.
Some interviewers were obviously turned off by my transcript; others didn't seem to mind. If you know you can't ride your transcript to the top of the vault, I would recommend really practicing describing yourself, your experience, and your goals beforehand so that you can be very articulate when extemporaneously talking those points. I spent quite a lot of time writing essays about myself to really play around with different phrasings and framings. I think that exercise helped give me (or at least helped me fake) the right kind of confidence pretty well.
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Re: Good or Bad Advice?
Vault is not a good proxy for selectivityAnonymous User wrote:I was below median at CCN and ended up with 6 call-backs and 3 offers, all NYC (V25, V50, and V100s). I don't believe my experience was typical, however, as I had prior work experience and some language skills that I felt I was able to sell pretty well. I was also extremely conservative in bidding 90% NYC and targeting firms ranked between V50 and V100.
I never actually had any firm ask directly about my grades, so I didn't have any chance to be particularly cavalier about them. To the extent them came up tangentially, however, I played the humility card and deflected by talking about how much I really enjoyed the coursework while noting in passing that I had struggled with the law school exam format.
Some interviewers were obviously turned off by my transcript; others didn't seem to mind. If you know you can't ride your transcript to the top of the vault, I would recommend really practicing describing yourself, your experience, and your goals beforehand so that you can be very articulate when extemporaneously talking those points. I spent quite a lot of time writing essays about myself to really play around with different phrasings and framings. I think that exercise helped give me (or at least helped me fake) the right kind of confidence pretty well.
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Re: Good or Bad Advice?
Previous anon here. I agree that it's not a perfect proxy, but I don't think it is a bad one at all. My school provided a pretty solid list of the GPA ranges of those to whom firms previously extended offers. There was definitely a correlation between the GPAs of those who got offers and Vault rank, though it was certainly less strong past the V25 firms. I went through that list meticulously when I was choosing bids so I'm not exactly talking out of my ass here. In fact, my bidding strategy was based on the GPA ranges, not the vault rankings; it ended up focusing me on lower ranked firms precisely because there is a ready correlation between the two (though there are exceptions).rad lulz wrote:Vault is not a good proxy for selectivityAnonymous User wrote:I was below median at CCN and ended up with 6 call-backs and 3 offers, all NYC (V25, V50, and V100s). I don't believe my experience was typical, however, as I had prior work experience and some language skills that I felt I was able to sell pretty well. I was also extremely conservative in bidding 90% NYC and targeting firms ranked between V50 and V100.
I never actually had any firm ask directly about my grades, so I didn't have any chance to be particularly cavalier about them. To the extent them came up tangentially, however, I played the humility card and deflected by talking about how much I really enjoyed the coursework while noting in passing that I had struggled with the law school exam format.
Some interviewers were obviously turned off by my transcript; others didn't seem to mind. If you know you can't ride your transcript to the top of the vault, I would recommend really practicing describing yourself, your experience, and your goals beforehand so that you can be very articulate when extemporaneously talking those points. I spent quite a lot of time writing essays about myself to really play around with different phrasings and framings. I think that exercise helped give me (or at least helped me fake) the right kind of confidence pretty well.
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Re: Good or Bad Advice?
I will also chime in on that topic and say that, at least my school, there was definitely a correlation between Vault rank and stated GPA cutoffs. There were exceptions (mostly in the form of lower-rank vault firms with unusually high stated cutoffs), but they were few. That may just be a form of branding on the firms' parts, but I honestly can't say that I know of anyone that got in a firm (or even got a callback) where they were below the stated GPA cutoff. And plenty of people tried for it. Though I'm working from a small sample of friends and acquaintances, to be fair.
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