BSF
Posted: Mon Aug 22, 2022 8:28 am
Any idea what leads to a no offer at BSF (in 2021 one summer out of 12)?
Thanks fam.
Thanks fam.
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Interesting situation as well. Would be curious to know your approx school and class rank (feel free to pm). Just one note BSF is small enough that a lot of the work will be cross-office, so the work in DC may not be that much different than their NY office, at least compared to other big shops. Although that's just a guess.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 11:34 amI'm in a similar position. I have a V30 and few V50 offers in NY. Would I be reckless in taking a BSF DC offer over the NY offers, if it is the only DC offer, and if I am interested in litigation and working in DC, given that DC litigation and NY litigation are probably going to be very different? Still waiting to hear back from some firms and will be trying to hopefully have some more options on the table.
I thought the one upside of working there is the work experience one can get as a junior, so curious to hear why you think it's limited for someone interested in litigation.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 1:04 pmIf your only offer is BSF I would absolutely mass mail. That firm may not even be around in another 3-4 years, let alone the limited type of work and experience you could get.
They no longer attract top-tier clients like they used to. The only real work they have for juniors now would be doc review and discovery disputes in plaintiff-side contingency work. That sort of case can be lucrative, but it's long-term, and the grunt work at the bottom is pretty bad. Gone are the days BSF associates can expect to work on cases for the like of New York Times, Apple, Uber, Nike, Barclays, etc. (all former clients who took their work elsewhere in the last 3-4 years).Anonymous User wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 1:39 pmI thought the one upside of working there is the work experience one can get as a junior, so curious to hear why you think it's limited for someone interested in litigation.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 1:04 pmIf your only offer is BSF I would absolutely mass mail. That firm may not even be around in another 3-4 years, let alone the limited type of work and experience you could get.
Anonymous User wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 1:07 pmStill shocking how quickly and far BSF has fallen. It was just a few years ago that gunners across the T14 had BSF at the top of their lists.
With over 100 partners they must still have some other top-tier clients. Is it just that there are fewer of those clients and juniors are not getting the same type of work? Curious to hear what you would choose between a JD NY and BSF if those are the only two offer. (seems like all the JD NY juniors I interviewed with are doing only doc review and the superstars did minimal drafting).Anonymous User wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 1:58 pmThey no longer attract top-tier clients like they used to. The only real work they have for juniors now would be doc review and discovery disputes in plaintiff-side contingency work. That sort of case can be lucrative, but it's long-term, and the grunt work at the bottom is pretty bad. Gone are the days BSF associates can expect to work on cases for the like of New York Times, Apple, Uber, Nike, Barclays, etc. (all former clients who took their work elsewhere in the last 3-4 years).Anonymous User wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 1:39 pmI thought the one upside of working there is the work experience one can get as a junior, so curious to hear why you think it's limited for someone interested in litigation.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 1:04 pmIf your only offer is BSF I would absolutely mass mail. That firm may not even be around in another 3-4 years, let alone the limited type of work and experience you could get.