Skip to content
Thomson Reuters
Academic

Impress at training contract interviews: what is your weakness?

Kirsten Maslen

03 Mar 2017

Every aspiring lawyer has to navigate a number of interviews, which present an opportunity to impress hiring partners and show them why you’d be a great fit for the firm. In this series, we look at some of the most common interview questions that applicants will face, and our expert team from Herbert Smith Freehills demonstrate what makes a good or bad answer—and why.

This week, the quintessential interview mainstay: if you had to identify one weakness, what would it be? Like it or not, you’ll have to address it. And it is not beneficial to say ‘I’m a perfectionist!’. First, let’s see what not to say.

That example might seem extreme, but it isn’t hard to imagine an ill-prepared candidate stumbling upon a bad answer. On the other hand, a well-prepared candidate might say something like this:

Although the weakness the candidate identified was worrying, he managed to place it in context against his strengths. He was also armed with a practical example, and a keen sense of self awareness.

Next week, a really tricky one: do you think you’re a robust person? Come back next week to hear more, and don’t forget to share your interview tips, pitfalls and experiences at @TRLegalEurope.

The Hearing: Episode 81 – Stanley Litow (P-TECH) Known by some but largely unseen by many—law in a time of crisis Teaching Law with Technology: Winner tours TR Labs to hear about latest in AI and law COVID-19—kill or cure for the careers of women lawyers? Linda Chadderton’s ‘Legally Bound’ wins the Teaching Law with Technology Prize 2020 Institutional allyship—a solution to help improve diversity and combat workplace sexual harassment How do the US and the UK match-up in legal?—The Uncertain Decade The Hearing: Episode 55 – COVID-19: emerging culture and new opportunities for the legal industry The Hearing: Episode 52 – Lord Neuberger The Hearing: Episode 51 – COVID-19: the economic implications for lawyers and law firms