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When Law Firm Suitors Come A-Knockin,’ You’ll Have a Month and a Half to Respond

different paths.jpgThe National Law Journal reports that in the upcoming recruiting season, 2Ls will have a deadline of 45 days to respond to law firm summer-associate offers. NALP says it’s making the change to help out firms with smaller summer associate programs.

Adopted earlier this year by the NALP board of directors, the new guidelines have a 45-day rolling offer provision that includes a countdown ending on Dec. 30. A law firm’s letter offering a summer position to a student determines the date when the 45-day period begins to run.

The old guidelines enabled students to hold on to five offers until Oct. 15. They could keep open four offers until Nov. 1, and three following that date. By Dec. 1, students could not hold on to more than one offer.

NALP decided to revise its guidelines, in part, because many schools have started their summer associate recruiting season earlier — in August, before the fall semester begins. As a result, students in some cases held on to offers for nearly four months.

The new policy is being given a one-year tryout period before being made permanent. We’re curious to see what you think in the comments.

Also on the topic of accepting offers, we received this email query about rescinding acceptance of an employment offer if a better one comes along:

My situation is this: offer #1 came and I accepted. Not big law, just a mid-size firm. Offer came last year around October and the job is to start in October of this year. Now, another job offer came (better $, firm size, practice, etc) and I really want to take this second offer. Don’t know what to do at this point. Nothing has been signed between me and offer #1, just the letter I returned to offer #1 that I accepted their offer. I read the offer letter like a million times by now and it’s in bold that the employment is at-will and either “you (me) or the firm can terminate at any time, with or without notice or cause.” Offer #1 has not paid me any $, but they did send some goodies during exam time (bag, Starbucks card). What should I do?

I kinda hinted at [this situation in] the career services office, and they told me students who had done this in the past (rejecting the accepted offer to take offer #2) had lost both jobs and been reported to the state ethics committee. I find it hard to believe.

Decisions, decisions. Any one have advice to offer?

Law Students Had Better Think Fast [National Law Journal]

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