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Transfer to NYU - Bid List Criticism

Posted: Mon Aug 06, 2012 11:19 pm
by Anonymous User
Hey all,

Transferred from T30 to NYU. Old school: top 10%; secondary journal. Hoping to work for a firm whose work (at least tangentially) touches the tech/start-up sectors. No significant work experience, straight through from undergrad. Ties to CA (hence the SF firms). Focusing mainly on NYC (35-40 bids) and secondary on SF (10-15 bids)

We get 50 bids but here are the 20 that I've tentatively ranked.

Ropes & Gray (NY)
Morrison & Foerster (NY)
Latham and Watkins (NY)
Kirkland Ellis (NY)
Cleary (NY)
Sidley (NY)
Covington & Burling (NY)
Pillsbury Winthrop (NY)
Goodwin Procter (NY)
Jones Day (NY)
Simpson Thatcher (NY)
K&L Gates (NY)
WilmerHale (NY)
dla piper (NY)
Skadden (NY)
Gibson Dunn (NY)
Mayer Brown (NY)
Cooley (SF)
Foley & Lardner (SF)
Orrick (SF)

Questions: 1) Can I rank the SF firms still lower? (Heard that secondary markets can be bid low and still grabbed). 2) Anyone I'm missing in my top 20 in terms of tough to get screeners?

Criticism is appreciated!

Re: Transfer to NYU - Bid List Criticism

Posted: Mon Aug 06, 2012 11:23 pm
by ryanmot
Might want to re-think Covington.

Re: Transfer to NYU - Bid List Criticism

Posted: Mon Aug 06, 2012 11:57 pm
by Anonymous User
I would rank the SF offices high if at all. I ranked some as high as 15 and didn't get a spot. They have small class sizes.

Re: Transfer to NYU - Bid List Criticism

Posted: Tue Aug 07, 2012 12:17 am
by Anonymous User
Anonymous User wrote:I would rank the SF offices high if at all. I ranked some as high as 15 and didn't get a spot. They have small class sizes.
Oh really? I thought conventional wisdom was to bid on secondary markets later since they would be less bid.

Interesting thanks for the insight.

On that note, who DO you bid low then?

-OP

Re: Transfer to NYU - Bid List Criticism

Posted: Tue Aug 07, 2012 12:29 am
by Anonymous User
If you're willing to work in Boston, Goodwin's office there does a good deal of start-up stuff and they have a much larger summer class than the NYC office.

Re: Transfer to NYU - Bid List Criticism

Posted: Tue Aug 07, 2012 12:31 am
by Anonymous User
Anonymous User wrote:If you're willing to work in Boston, Goodwin's office there does a good deal of start-up stuff and they have a much larger summer class than the NYC office.
I actually would be and I was thinking the same with Ropes. Problem is my ties to Boston are weak at best....

Re: Transfer to NYU - Bid List Criticism

Posted: Tue Aug 07, 2012 9:59 am
by ryanmot
Boston firms are notorious for asking about ties etc. If you have no family, never went to school there, then it will be tough. They have a large summer class, but usually the people that end up in it outside of the Boston schools have ties to the area.

(From Boston and went to school in Boston before transfering. Ended up in NYC).

Re: Transfer to NYU - Bid List Criticism

Posted: Tue Aug 07, 2012 10:24 am
by Anonymous User
Why avoid Covington? Seems okay to me, albeit a small office. They have at least some tech clients.

I think this looks like a pretty good list, with a wide range of selectiveness.

Re: Transfer to NYU - Bid List Criticism

Posted: Tue Aug 07, 2012 12:41 pm
by Anonymous User
Any more suggestions for who to move or who I'm missing in my top 20?

-OP