rayiner wrote:At OCI there are 2 kinds of people: those that get 7+ callbacks, and those that get 0-3. Once you're inside the grades range of K&E, Weil, etc, you're going to get tons of callbacks. Not so much because firms are falling over themselves to get top 1/4, but because firms who only take top 1/4 have so many SA slots they need to give out a ton of callbacks to fill them all. If you're good enough to get a Weil callback, you'll likely get K&E and Skadden and Paul Weiss and DPW, etc, etc.
Once you're outside that range of firms, it becomes much more about luck. Reed Smith doesn't need to give out 100+ callbacks to fill it's 5 person summer class. At the same time, the folks at Reed Smith don't usually care all that much about 3.5 versus 3.3. It becomes about how you connect with any given interviewer, and that's a matter of chance to a great degree.
Different anony poster here. First, this isn't an argument against your point, per-say, just an observation.
I know 4 people with 3.65-3.85 GPAs. In the middle, one of the people has 5 call backs on about 10 chicago interviews (plus a few others in other markets). At the top is a person who is socially great, super prepared for the interview process, and has an impressive resume (not me I swear). That person has 1 call back on like 10 chicago interviews. The other two people have 2 and 3 chicago callbacks, respectively, and maybe only 1 of those is at a firm with a normal GPA median in the 3.7-8 range.
I also know a couple people with 3.4-3.5 GPAs, have met with the same firms, and just have more callbacks. AND if you go back through this thread, there are a TON of non IP 3.2-3.5 GPA people with excellent callbacks at places like Latham, Sidley, etc. In fact, it seems like there are more top-firm call-backs on those lower GPAs.
Maybe its dumb luck. Maybe it's my particular sample group + TLS people. Or maybe it is that certain firms aren't calling back high-GPA people in the first phase of call backs and are choosing to vet-out those people who are on their fence before they accept offers elsewhere (not that this strategy makes sense). The point is, there are always horror stories about good folks with 3.65+ GPAs who just have bad luck at OCI. The fact that, so far, I know 2-3 of those people out of my maybe 6 person close friend circle is amazing and, frankly, worrisome.
Seriously, if people are willing, can you identify anon your GPA if you are in that 3.3-3.9 GPA range, tell your GPA, and what your large and mid CB to interview ratio is in chicago? I bet it would be surprising so far.
Yield protection? Distrust of post van-zandt NULaw? I mean, its all useless guess work and fear-making without the data.