Two 1L tips
Posted: Sat Oct 02, 2010 12:45 pm
I came to law school to get a job. So my advice is from the perspective of getting a job. There are some great posts on TLS that help you do prepare for exams and do really well on them. That is the most important thing, obviously, almost no matter what your goal from law school. But here are the two things that I did that really helped me get a job at OCI.
1) If you have something intelligent to say in class, say it. Stay really engaged and interact. Doing this I managed to get bumped on three of my four doctrinal course exams first semester. In two of those, my bumps on the exam actually turned into a bump in grade (i.e. B+ to A-), in the other class I was half a point away from a bump. Also, my Profs then took an interest in me and helped me get a job 1L summer. Both the elevated GPA and interesting summer work were important to my getting a job through OCI.
The caveat is that it really has to actually be intelligent. People who just open their mouths all the time get no love. The good new is that you are at law school and so you definitely have intelligent things to say, just don't be a gunner.
2) Meet people in law. Don't "network" in that horrible slimy way where you are angling for a job or whatever, but do get to know lawyers in the city at every chance you get. I guess be genuinely interested in them and their advice, not what they can do for you. Particularly in summer after 1L year, meet some friends of friends who are at firms. For example, I met a 2L, who introduced me to an alum who worked at a non-profit. We would get a beer or coffee occasionally, and then before OCI he introduced me to a friend of his that worked at a firm. That guy introduced me to three other people at three other firms that I got to know. I met a number of people in similar ways. I didn't interview with all of their firms, but I did interview with a number.
It worked well for me. I had 16 OCI interviews, and by the time I interviewed I knew people at six of those firms. I got callbacks from four firms total--and all four were firms at which I knew someone, and one of them gave me an offer. This is not a coincidence. I knew none of these people before the summer after my 1L year. I would not have a job if I did not know some people.
The secret to this is that most of the associates at firms fucking love to help out students and most of them are great people. It seems intimidating at first, but it is easier than you think.
The caveat here is that you can't polish a turd. You need to be someone that the contact is willing to give an wholehearted endorsement to, and that generally means good grades and a decent personality. Consentrate on grades for sure
1) If you have something intelligent to say in class, say it. Stay really engaged and interact. Doing this I managed to get bumped on three of my four doctrinal course exams first semester. In two of those, my bumps on the exam actually turned into a bump in grade (i.e. B+ to A-), in the other class I was half a point away from a bump. Also, my Profs then took an interest in me and helped me get a job 1L summer. Both the elevated GPA and interesting summer work were important to my getting a job through OCI.
The caveat is that it really has to actually be intelligent. People who just open their mouths all the time get no love. The good new is that you are at law school and so you definitely have intelligent things to say, just don't be a gunner.
2) Meet people in law. Don't "network" in that horrible slimy way where you are angling for a job or whatever, but do get to know lawyers in the city at every chance you get. I guess be genuinely interested in them and their advice, not what they can do for you. Particularly in summer after 1L year, meet some friends of friends who are at firms. For example, I met a 2L, who introduced me to an alum who worked at a non-profit. We would get a beer or coffee occasionally, and then before OCI he introduced me to a friend of his that worked at a firm. That guy introduced me to three other people at three other firms that I got to know. I met a number of people in similar ways. I didn't interview with all of their firms, but I did interview with a number.
It worked well for me. I had 16 OCI interviews, and by the time I interviewed I knew people at six of those firms. I got callbacks from four firms total--and all four were firms at which I knew someone, and one of them gave me an offer. This is not a coincidence. I knew none of these people before the summer after my 1L year. I would not have a job if I did not know some people.
The secret to this is that most of the associates at firms fucking love to help out students and most of them are great people. It seems intimidating at first, but it is easier than you think.
The caveat here is that you can't polish a turd. You need to be someone that the contact is willing to give an wholehearted endorsement to, and that generally means good grades and a decent personality. Consentrate on grades for sure