Survey Results - Trainee feedback on Watson Farley & Williams LLP
The lowdown - Trainees (in their own words) on Watson Farley & Williams LLP
Why did you choose this firm over any others? ‘As a geography undergraduate, I was interested in WFW’s sectors before I applied. So, I felt that my interests aligned nicely with the firm’s key sectors’, ‘the international opportunities and quality of work available to trainees’, ‘everyone is approachable’, ‘the international nature of the work and the guaranteed international secondment’, ‘the international secondment opportunities and the six-seat training contract’, ‘the sector focus’
Best thing about the firm? ‘Trainee supervisors are excellent, extremely supportive and approachable’, ‘the mixed netball team who play every Wednesday evening’, ‘the guaranteed secondment abroad’, ‘most colleagues are approachable and helpful’, ‘the opportunities for trainees’, ‘the people, generally’, ‘the international secondment’
Worst thing about the firm? ‘The disproportionate focus on the finance teams and lack of say in seat choices’, ‘lack of transparency for certain seat rotations’, ‘the salary is not competitive’, ‘hours worked compared to pay received’, ‘the benefits’, ‘the office’, ‘lack of seat choices and limited destinations for international secondment’, ‘the approach to innovation and legal technology’, ‘diversity – particularly class diversity’, ‘a four-month seat can feel too short at times’
Best moment? ‘Sitting in the projects team’, ‘my international secondment to Singapore’, ‘receiving positive feedback on work – people care about your development here’, ‘attending client events’, ‘attending a successful mediation hearing in my first few weeks at the firm’, ‘being given high levels of responsibility on certain transactions’, ‘living and working abroad during my secondment’
Worst moment? Working until early hours of the morning on some occasions’, ‘my international secondment – the overseas office didn’t want trainees from London and said as much!’, ‘long hours near Christmas’, ‘cancelling plans due to late urgent work’, ‘working through the night for tight deadlines in the disputes department’
The Legal 500 Future Lawyers verdict on Watson Farley & Williams LLP
WFW is an expert in the shipping, aviation, energy and infrastructure sectors. A guaranteed overseas secondment is also an undoubted perk of training at the firm, with trainees jumping at the chance to ‘spend at least four months in one of the international offices’. A six-seat structure makes for training which is ‘expansive, in-depth and tailored to individual needs’. There is also a ‘lot of investment and support given to trainees’. The ‘approachability of partners and associates’ is one of the best things about WFW; there’s a ‘willingness to help from colleagues at all levels’ and, reassuringly, ‘people are not afraid to act like normal people’. Some recruits think that there’s a ‘disproportionate focus on the finance teams’, which sees ‘most trainees spend around 50% of their training contract in these areas’. Elaborating, respondents feel that ‘this isn’t always clear when you initially apply’ and find the resulting ‘lack of say in seat choices’ disappointing. WFW recruits’ worst moments included ‘extremely long hours in my first seat when I was only just starting’ and a ‘long period of research-heavy tasks that ended up not being used’. Trainees were much prouder of ‘being able to assist in drafting important documents for large shipping deals’, ‘the opportunity to work and live abroad for four months’ and ‘being able to lead client calls and closing meetings’. To train at a sector-focused firm where the ‘culture is collaborative’, an international secondment guaranteed, and where trainees are ‘given lots of responsibility’, consider WFW.
A day in the life of... Laura Izquierdo, second-year trainee, Watson Farley & Williams LLP
Departments to date: Dispute resolution; Regulatory, public Law and competition (RPC); Assets and structured finance; Corporate
University: University of Bristol University of Leuven
Degree: Law (LLB); Master of International Business Economics and Management (MSc)
9.30am: WFW has an agile working policy that allows us to work from home on up to two days of the week. Trainees are expected to communicate with their supervisors to ensure there’s as much cross-over as possible in the days that they’re in the office and ideally, trainees should be in the office when their supervisor is. I tend to come into the office four days a week but having the flexibility is helpful. Whether I’m working from home or in the office, I tend to log on slightly before 9.30am since I like to fit in going to the gym or going for a walk in the morning, before the workday starts (and largely because it’s the last thing I want to do after a day at work).
The first thing I do is check my emails. Given that our clients and the stakeholders involved in any particular transaction or dispute are often in a different time zone, it’s normal for emails to come in overnight. After I’ve checked my inbox to ensure I know what the status of those matters is, I file those emails that I don’t need to action into the relevant sub-folders in my inbox, and I flag those that I do need to action. I then create a to-do list for the day that prioritises the emails I have flagged according to their urgency and importance.
9.45am: The typical tasks I need to complete throughout the day will, of course, depend on the practice area I’m working in.
Throughout my disputes seat, typical tasks included proofreading statements of case, statements of defence and witness statements; preparing indexes for the bundle of exhibits that accompanied the aforementioned filings; taking attendance notes during client calls; reviewing documents in the data room to identify and sort those that were relevant for disclosure; redacting confidential information in documents to be disclosed; drafting emails to stakeholders involved in the matter; contacting counsel’s clerks; conducting research (for example, on the Civil Procedure Rules or relevant cases); preparing payment schedules and drafting chronologies to summarise the correspondences between the parties.
Our RPC team covers a breadth of areas, including planning, environment, health and safety (EHS), competition and data protection. It’s also a comparatively small team, so it’s a great way to both gain exposure to a wide range of work and take on more responsibilities than you would perhaps need to take on in other seats. It’s a comparatively research-dense seat, which I enjoyed. Typical tasks include conducting research and drafting notes to clients to advise them in response to their query; conducting due diligence to ensure the client’s procedures and standards meet what’s required under the relevant regulations; attending calls and meeting with clients; preparing and delivering presentations to clients (I presented part of our presentation on the Building Safety Act 2022, for example, to explain to our client what the proposed change in law could mean for them).
The nature of the work during my assets and structured finance seat was very different to the type of work I had previously done at the firm, since it was my first transactional seat. Typical tasks included updating the factual information in the relevant finance documents to reflect the current deal; creating and updating conditions precedent checklists (ie summarising the status of the documents and tasks to be executed or completed prior to completion); creating e-bibles and compiling originals; running insolvency searches for legal opinions and attending closing calls.
1.00pm: I take a break for lunch. We have a restaurant on the lower-ground floor that always serves a great range of both hot and cold options. Our office is also very conveniently located near Liverpool Street station, so there are plenty of great places to grab food nearby and we’re a five-minute walk away from Spitalfields market, where I sometimes meet friends who also work in the area, or catch up with other trainees and colleagues.
2.00pm: The first thing I do when I get back to my desk is read through the emails that have come in while I was on my lunch break; if I need to, I’ll update my to-do list. The tasks I need to complete will, again, vary depending on the team I’m working in (see above for the typical tasks involved in each seat).
6.30pm: My leaving time depends on the deadlines I need to meet, and this varies across all departments. 6.30pm/7.00pm is probably my average leaving time but providing a top-quality service to clients includes being quick to respond to their needs, so it’s not uncommon for trainees to have to work in the evenings.
About the firm
The firm: WFW is an international law firm advising on complex transactions and disputes through local knowledge and an integrated international network. It has a strong sector focus, combining its technical excellence with deep industry knowledge across energy, transport and associated infrastructure.
The clients: Airbus Bank, Citibank, HSBC, Investec, JP Morgan, Lightsource bp, MSC Cruises, Nordea Bank, Orsted, Standard Chartered Bank and Vattenfall, among others.
The deals: Advised the Republic of Guinea on the US$15bn Simandou project, the world’s largest mining and related rail and port infrastructure project; advised Höegh LNG on the refinancing of two FSRUs to service Germany’s new North Sea LNG terminals to help it achieve its goal of energy independence from Russia; advised Navigator Holdings on a US$200m loan agreed for the financing of ten vessels, including one of the first KPIs relating to gender diversity ever seen in a shipping loan; advised a consortium of lenders on the €410m mezzanine financing of MaxSolar’s German solar portfolio, one of the largest solar portfolio development financings in Germany to date; advised Investec Aviation Finance on the launch of its new aviation debt platform in partnership with a major Japanese institutional investor to initially target a US$500m portfolio of well-diversified loan assets; advised Nexrail, a European rolling stock operator, on a €322m sustainability-linked debt facility to refinance its existing fleet and to finance new-build orders and future capital expenditure; advised RGREEN INVEST on a €250m investment in independent Israeli renewable energy producer Econergy; advised the lenders to DIF Capital Partners on the financing of a 540MW portfolio of co-located UK solar generation and battery storage assets; advised Altera Infrastructure on its successful Chapter 11 restructuring process in the US addressing US$1bn+ of secured and unsecured holding company debt; secured a favourable judgment for Gulf Wings before the Dubai International Financial Centre Court of Appeal.
Senior partner: George Paleokrassas
Managing partner: Lindsey Keeble
Other offices: Athens, Bangkok, Dubai, Dusseldorf, Frankfurt, Hamburg, Hanoi, Hong Kong, Madrid, Milan, Munich, New York, Paris, Rome, Seoul, Singapore, Sydney and Tokyo.
Who we are: WFW strives for excellence in all that we do and views investment in our people as key to achieving our business goals and values, which rest on developing deep and long-lasting relationships externally and internally through respect, sharing, communication and integrity. Our teams are integrated across legal disciplines and offices, delivering consistently high levels of service in combination across borders and locally through a deep understanding of local business customs and culture.
What we do: Within our core sectors of energy (conventional and renewable power; oil and gas; mining and commodities), transport (aviation, maritime and rail) plus associated infrastructure, we provide a full suite of legal services including capital markets, construction, corporate, dispute resolution, employment, finance, private equity, public law, real estate, regulatory and competition, restructuring and insolvency, and tax.
What we’re looking for: Although there is no typical WFW trainee there are certain qualifications, skills and traits that we look for. You will need a 2(1) or above – or predicted if you haven’t yet graduated. We also look for at least ABB from A level results, 34 points from IB or their equivalent if you have taken other qualifications. Applications are read in their entirety and we take mitigating circumstances relating to academics into consideration. As well as academic achievement, we particularly value applicants with clear initiative, drive, commercial awareness and an interest in our sectors. You will have the chance to demonstrate these things at one of our assessment centres, as part of the application process.
What you’ll do: Our training contracts are hands-on, with as much experience of clients and challenging, high-profile work as possible. Trainees benefit from plenty of exposure to senior lawyers, many acknowledged leaders in their field.
WFW deals with training and ongoing development in an individual way. During each seat the firm discusses with trainees plans for the next one to ensure they gain valuable insight from the six-seat programme, including a guaranteed international secondment.
We believe that only total immersion can provide trainees with the experience they require.
Perks: These include 25 days’ holiday, income protection scheme, life assurance, employee assistance scheme, pension scheme, private medical insurance, interest-free season ticket loan, £250 contribution towards a sports club or exercise classes, and a flexible benefits scheme.
Sponsorship
Fees and maintenance grants paid for PGDL and SQE studies, depending on the point at which you accept a training contract with us.
Diversity and inclusion
Please visit www.wfw.com/about-us/diversity-and-inclusion for information.
Percentage of female associates: 53
Percentage of female partners: 29
Percentage of BAME associates: 23
Percentage of BAME partners: 9