2 years out of law school, never practiced, interview with medium/biglaw firm. Tips?
Posted: Tue Oct 10, 2017 6:20 pm
"Biglaw" by medium town standards. 2 state range with 2-4 office locations and 100ish attorneys total. Mixed practice, with emphasis on litigation and employment law.
My story is roughly thus:
- Undergraduate 4.0 summa cum laude
- 169 LSAT
- Top 50ish law school
- Basically had my life break down during law school, parent died unexpectedly at the start of 2L, a bunch of other stuff I'll spare you. Grades suffered.
- Barely top 50% of class finish, average/good grades, journal but not law review.
- Passed Bar in two states now (including California), but been moving around a lot due to family craziness and working in JD-advantaged position.
- Been working a JD-advantaged position for a couple of years
- Now, through gracious alumni connection and me getting my shit together and manning up to practice law, have an interview at the firm described in the first part of the post. Would really, really like to get the job.
It's a panel interview spanning 3 hours with rotating pairs of partners and senior associates. Any general guides for what I can expect? Should I learn as much as possible about the practice area(s) that they are feeding into at the moment and try to become an expert, or just walk in with eyes open and whatever knowledge I have now?
I basically have the experience of a recent graduate. Nothing in my current job really applies to this sort of firm (but the position(s) being filled are for 0-2 years' experience). Am I damaging myself by stating it that bluntly, or is it still worth warming up the spin machine to try to make any thread of relatedness from my current work seem topical?
Finally, should I mention my family situation as an excuse/explanation for my one truly bombed semester/other bad grades, or just let me number speak for themselves as well as they can?
I missed the boat as a 3L with all of these concerns, and now feel like a slightly older and less genuine gradate panicking over these concerns that should be trivial.
Any advice appreciated.
My story is roughly thus:
- Undergraduate 4.0 summa cum laude
- 169 LSAT
- Top 50ish law school
- Basically had my life break down during law school, parent died unexpectedly at the start of 2L, a bunch of other stuff I'll spare you. Grades suffered.
- Barely top 50% of class finish, average/good grades, journal but not law review.
- Passed Bar in two states now (including California), but been moving around a lot due to family craziness and working in JD-advantaged position.
- Been working a JD-advantaged position for a couple of years
- Now, through gracious alumni connection and me getting my shit together and manning up to practice law, have an interview at the firm described in the first part of the post. Would really, really like to get the job.
It's a panel interview spanning 3 hours with rotating pairs of partners and senior associates. Any general guides for what I can expect? Should I learn as much as possible about the practice area(s) that they are feeding into at the moment and try to become an expert, or just walk in with eyes open and whatever knowledge I have now?
I basically have the experience of a recent graduate. Nothing in my current job really applies to this sort of firm (but the position(s) being filled are for 0-2 years' experience). Am I damaging myself by stating it that bluntly, or is it still worth warming up the spin machine to try to make any thread of relatedness from my current work seem topical?
Finally, should I mention my family situation as an excuse/explanation for my one truly bombed semester/other bad grades, or just let me number speak for themselves as well as they can?
I missed the boat as a 3L with all of these concerns, and now feel like a slightly older and less genuine gradate panicking over these concerns that should be trivial.
Any advice appreciated.