One more question. How important is it to have a callback early in the callback interview season? Are decisions made on a rolling basis? And is mid to late september considered early, middle or late?Thanks!
I had a non-lunch callback for biglaw & I ended up getting a summer associate offer.
Quote from: superman10 on August 17, 2008, 01:21:41 PMI had a non-lunch callback for biglaw & I ended up getting a summer associate offer.how long typically after a callback does the offer come?
Maybe I'm not understanding you guys' question, but are you asking whether, once you receive a callback offer, it's better to schedule it earlier rather than later?The answer is almost certainly no. Big law firms are very good at planning recruitment numbers, and they will not be offering you a callback unless they are seriously interested in hiring you. You're not going to "lose your spot" simply because you interviewed last.Some firms may do offers on a rolling basis, I really don't know. But even if they do, there's no need to worry. Again, they've planned it out and are interviewing the correct number of people based on their usual acceptance rates. You are "accounted for," so to speak, and you're not going to fall through the cracks.
The noobs are so into themsleves you'd think they allready have offers at Tool, Tool, feminine hygiene product & Dumbass LLC
Quote from: antsor5 on August 17, 2008, 01:34:15 PMQuote from: superman10 on August 17, 2008, 01:21:41 PMI had a non-lunch callback for biglaw & I ended up getting a summer associate offer.how long typically after a callback does the offer come?I'm guessing anytime within 2 weeks from the callback.
Quote from: Villefort on August 17, 2008, 01:54:28 PMQuote from: antsor5 on August 17, 2008, 01:34:15 PMQuote from: superman10 on August 17, 2008, 01:21:41 PMI had a non-lunch callback for biglaw & I ended up getting a summer associate offer.how long typically after a callback does the offer come?I'm guessing anytime within 2 weeks from the callback.I think most of my friends ranged from between 1 week to 4 weeks. I had my offer almost 4 weeks after the interview.
Regardless of whether the committees meet every week or two, it's not comparable to law school admissions. The difference is there is no such thing as a "borderline" candidate at a callback. Everybody is very well qualified, and the firms are going to offer the people they like. There are no externalities at work like yield protection or numbers that affect rankings. The people who don't get offered from a callback are people who aren't going to get offered no matter when they interview.