So—I was filling out an application yesterday and it asked for 3 references. In that moment, I realized that my best references likely won’t come from partners. There are a couple really senior counsel who I think would be better references for me but I’m not sure how that would look to the prospective employer. Any insight??
Also, how did you feel about alerting people at your firm (who you want to be references for you) that you’re applying for jobs? If you don’t get the job then it will probably feel terrible to have put them on notice that you want to leave.
References: who to include and alerting people that you want to leave Forum
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Re: References: who to include and alerting people that you want to leave
Generally speaking, you should not inform anyone at your current job that you have listed them as a reference or are looking for a different job. Unless they are for some reason supportive of you looking elsewhere, it burns bridges otherwise. When I moved, I listed my supervising partner with the understanding a prospective firm would not contact them unless an offer was about to be extended.
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Re: References: who to include and alerting people that you want to leave
This makes a lot of sense. I had a friend ask her reference (before listing them) whether he would give her a POSITIVE review (for lack of a better word). After learning that, I figured getting assurance from your reference was a good idea. Would you not recommend that then?tyroneslothrop1 wrote:Generally speaking, you should not inform anyone at your current job that you have listed them as a reference or are looking for a different job. Unless they are for some reason supportive of you looking elsewhere, it burns bridges otherwise. When I moved, I listed my supervising partner with the understanding a prospective firm would not contact them unless an offer was about to be extended.
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Re: References: who to include and alerting people that you want to leave
Relatedly, how would it look to put somebody who is maybe a year or two above you (with whom you’re quite close) in lieu of a supervisor? Doing something like that would risk jeopardizing an offer, would it?
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Re: References: who to include and alerting people that you want to leave
So do you mean if the slightly senior person hasn’t ever worked with you? Like a friend at the firm?objctnyrhnr wrote:Relatedly, how would it look to put somebody who is maybe a year or two above you (with whom you’re quite close) in lieu of a supervisor? Doing something like that would risk jeopardizing an offer, would it?
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Re: References: who to include and alerting people that you want to leave
Worked alongside you and a friend, but never supervised. Somebody who has observed your work and can speak positively about it...but whose rank is only a year or so above your own. Is it bad to list that person as a reference in lieu of a high-level supervisory person at the entity you’re leaving?worklifewhat wrote:So do you mean if the slightly senior person hasn’t ever worked with you? Like a friend at the firm?objctnyrhnr wrote:Relatedly, how would it look to put somebody who is maybe a year or two above you (with whom you’re quite close) in lieu of a supervisor? Doing something like that would risk jeopardizing an offer, would it?
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