The job you are referring to is different than the one discussed in this thread. If you are interested in entry level federal attorney jobs look for ones that start at GS-11. Based on past years expect the Trademark Office to post more entry level positions in October or November for a Spring start date.Anonymous User wrote:Does anyone know when the deadline for applications is? I only see USAJOB posting for Trademark Attorney and it makes it seem like you need a lot of prior experience. Thanks!
Attorney Advisor (Trademark Examining Attorney) for USPTO Forum
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Re: Attorney Advisor (Trademark Examining Attorney) for USPTO
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Re: Attorney Advisor (Trademark Examining Attorney) for USPTO
Contingent offer call yesterday afternoon. Anyone know how long to expect between contingent and formal offer?
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Re: Attorney Advisor (Trademark Examining Attorney) for USPTO
From earlier in the thread it looks like it can take a week or two. Did they contact your references yet? Did they ask to speak to your current supervisor? It looks like some people were asked that last year.Anonymous User wrote:Contingent offer call yesterday afternoon. Anyone know how long to expect between contingent and formal offer?
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Re: Attorney Advisor (Trademark Examining Attorney) for USPTO
Can anyone else confirm this? Past procedure seems to indicate that offer calls are made to all applicants on the same day. Meaning those of us that didn't get an offer probably won't be receiving one.Anonymous User wrote:Contingent offer call yesterday afternoon. Anyone know how long to expect between contingent and formal offer?
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Re: Attorney Advisor (Trademark Examining Attorney) for USPTO
Yesterday I received a contingent offer as well. They also contacted at least one of my references yesterday, but I haven't received a formal offer yet.Anonymous User wrote:Can anyone else confirm this? Past procedure seems to indicate that offer calls are made to all applicants on the same day. Meaning those of us that didn't get an offer probably won't be receiving one.Anonymous User wrote:Contingent offer call yesterday afternoon. Anyone know how long to expect between contingent and formal offer?
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Re: Attorney Advisor (Trademark Examining Attorney) for USPTO
Has anyone previously not selected for this position NOT received notification of their rejection?
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Re: Attorney Advisor (Trademark Examining Attorney) for USPTO
The invitation to interview email said the interviews would continue through Sept. 22. How can they have made all decisions? Do they send notice of a final decision either way, or are we left wondering?
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Re: Attorney Advisor (Trademark Examining Attorney) for USPTO
It's possible they're contacting people in waves, to create a buffer should some people reject their contingent/soft offers, have their references not check out, or fail the background check. It's also possible that with clerkships and other hiring waves starting that some interviewees cancelled their interviews and freed up time. Finally, it's also possible that they save the last "week" from Sept. 15-22 as a buffer in case other interviewees have to reschedule for some reason last-minute. Regardless, they said in interviews that offers would come down at the end of September and start date would be October 31, so if we don't hear anything next week we may have to assume we're nixed.Anonymous User wrote:The invitation to interview email said the interviews would continue through Sept. 22. How can they have made all decisions? Do they send notice of a final decision either way, or are we left wondering?
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Re: Attorney Advisor (Trademark Examining Attorney) for USPTO
Has anyone who applied to the October posting heard back yet?
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Re: Attorney Advisor (Trademark Examining Attorney) for USPTO
No, I was wondering the same thing.Anonymous User wrote:Has anyone who applied to the October posting heard back yet?
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Re: Attorney Advisor (Trademark Examining Attorney) for USPTO
I wonder if why they are taking so long is because of the election....I have a feeling that they wanted to see who would win before increasing the PTO workforce.
This issue was raised in this subreddit. What do you people think? Is the PTO just taking a little more time than usual to request written statements? Or are we all going to simultaneously end up receiving a rejection email with no explanation?
This issue was raised in this subreddit. What do you people think? Is the PTO just taking a little more time than usual to request written statements? Or are we all going to simultaneously end up receiving a rejection email with no explanation?
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Re: Attorney Advisor (Trademark Examining Attorney) for USPTO
I just received the written statement request.
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Re: Attorney Advisor (Trademark Examining Attorney) for USPTO
Good luck to youframbollin wrote:I just received the written statement request.
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Re: Attorney Advisor (Trademark Examining Attorney) for USPTO
I also received a written statement request! This is my first time applying and I spent last night reading through this entire thread. I turned my statement in on Monday and look forward to the next step!
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Re: Attorney Advisor (Trademark Examining Attorney) for USPTO
I got an interview request this afternoon. Anybody else?
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Re: Attorney Advisor (Trademark Examining Attorney) for USPTO
I got an interview request today too!
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Re: Attorney Advisor (Trademark Examining Attorney) for USPTO
Same. Woot!Anonymous User wrote:I got an interview request today too!
Do we know how many openings?
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Re: Attorney Advisor (Trademark Examining Attorney) for USPTO
Probably about 20 or so.Anonymous User wrote:Same. Woot!Anonymous User wrote:I got an interview request today too!
Do we know how many openings?
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Re: Attorney Advisor (Trademark Examining Attorney) for USPTO
Bummer - no interview request here. Received the written statement request 11/10 and sent it back in 11/15. Think I'm out of luck, or is there a chance for two waves of interview requests?
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Re: Attorney Advisor (Trademark Examining Attorney) for USPTO
This site is great for finding out the status of applications (Did you get a request for a writing sample? Have people started getting invitations to interview? Have they called you back? Are you hired?), but really short on helpful information for the actual interview. I have interviewed and would like to share some info so you can be more prepared for your own interview.
Caveat: I have not yet gotten an offer or rejection. I can't tell you then what actually "worked" for me, since I have no idea if anything did! But at least you can have an idea of the process and questions.
Two panel interviews in one day. The first panel tells you about the job - but also asks you questions! The second panel assumes you now know more about the job and may ask you many of the same questions. Many of the questions I got were about my ability to produce work in a timely manner (since there are weekly production goals), my ability to accept criticism of my work (office actions are not like other writing you may have done, and your work is monitored pretty closely for at least the first 6 months), your ability to accept and adapt to training from the USPTO (especially if you have any trademark or other practice experience already), where you see yourself in 3-5 years, and any exposure you have had to trademarks already. On the scale of interviews, I would say it was one of the least painful ones I have ever done for sure.
Also, keep applying. I have met and heard of so many people who applied many times, interviewed multiple times, finally got an offer. The same way we hear about people coming straight out of unrelated clerkships and even directly from law school and getting offers from the USPTO or other federal agencies (doesn't that just make you a little crazy!). Some of it is luck, some of it is your competition (sure, you're great - but so was basically everyone else this time), some of it is who you know, some of it is it was raining on a Monday and the interviewer hates the color blue... who knows! But keep trying! Thankfully they have positions open up on a regular basis. I know this is easier said than done, I have applied multiple times myself.
Caveat: I have not yet gotten an offer or rejection. I can't tell you then what actually "worked" for me, since I have no idea if anything did! But at least you can have an idea of the process and questions.
Two panel interviews in one day. The first panel tells you about the job - but also asks you questions! The second panel assumes you now know more about the job and may ask you many of the same questions. Many of the questions I got were about my ability to produce work in a timely manner (since there are weekly production goals), my ability to accept criticism of my work (office actions are not like other writing you may have done, and your work is monitored pretty closely for at least the first 6 months), your ability to accept and adapt to training from the USPTO (especially if you have any trademark or other practice experience already), where you see yourself in 3-5 years, and any exposure you have had to trademarks already. On the scale of interviews, I would say it was one of the least painful ones I have ever done for sure.
Also, keep applying. I have met and heard of so many people who applied many times, interviewed multiple times, finally got an offer. The same way we hear about people coming straight out of unrelated clerkships and even directly from law school and getting offers from the USPTO or other federal agencies (doesn't that just make you a little crazy!). Some of it is luck, some of it is your competition (sure, you're great - but so was basically everyone else this time), some of it is who you know, some of it is it was raining on a Monday and the interviewer hates the color blue... who knows! But keep trying! Thankfully they have positions open up on a regular basis. I know this is easier said than done, I have applied multiple times myself.
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Re: Attorney Advisor (Trademark Examining Attorney) for USPTO
I cannot thank you enough for this. How long did the interview last? How many USPTO employees participated in the panels? I'm guessing that they aren't doing telephone interviews anymore.Anonymous User wrote:This site is great for finding out the status of applications (Did you get a request for a writing sample? Have people started getting invitations to interview? Have they called you back? Are you hired?), but really short on helpful information for the actual interview. I have interviewed and would like to share some info so you can be more prepared for your own interview.
Caveat: I have not yet gotten an offer or rejection. I can't tell you then what actually "worked" for me, since I have no idea if anything did! But at least you can have an idea of the process and questions.
Two panel interviews in one day. The first panel tells you about the job - but also asks you questions! The second panel assumes you now know more about the job and may ask you many of the same questions. Many of the questions I got were about my ability to produce work in a timely manner (since there are weekly production goals), my ability to accept criticism of my work (office actions are not like other writing you may have done, and your work is monitored pretty closely for at least the first 6 months), your ability to accept and adapt to training from the USPTO (especially if you have any trademark or other practice experience already), where you see yourself in 3-5 years, and any exposure you have had to trademarks already. On the scale of interviews, I would say it was one of the least painful ones I have ever done for sure.
Also, keep applying. I have met and heard of so many people who applied many times, interviewed multiple times, finally got an offer. The same way we hear about people coming straight out of unrelated clerkships and even directly from law school and getting offers from the USPTO or other federal agencies (doesn't that just make you a little crazy!). Some of it is luck, some of it is your competition (sure, you're great - but so was basically everyone else this time), some of it is who you know, some of it is it was raining on a Monday and the interviewer hates the color blue... who knows! But keep trying! Thankfully they have positions open up on a regular basis. I know this is easier said than done, I have applied multiple times myself.
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Re: Attorney Advisor (Trademark Examining Attorney) for USPTO
Each panel was... 30-45 minutes? Sorry, I wasn't really paying attention to the time. But not so long that things got awkward
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Re: Attorney Advisor (Trademark Examining Attorney) for USPTO
And I would say... about 10 people each panel?
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Re: Attorney Advisor (Trademark Examining Attorney) for USPTO
Does anyone know when offers might go out? I know the class is expected to start January 17ish - that doesn't leave much time!
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Re: Attorney Advisor (Trademark Examining Attorney) for USPTO
Did they tell you at the interview that the class is supposed to start in January? The original job posting said there would be two classes, one starting in March and one in May. January 17 seems very soon.
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