Hadya Khorami and Hiren Halai reveal what it's really like to learn the law on the job, straight from school to the City.
When Slaughter and May took on its first-ever cohort of solicitor apprentices last September, it marked a big move from one of the Cityâs most recognisable legal names. Almost a year in, we caught up with two of those apprentices to find out what it is really like to learn the law on the job straight out of school.
Why the Apprenticeship Route?
Hadya came across it at a school law fair. âHearing about how you get to learn and earn while you study really sold it to me,â she says. âI just learn better when Iâm actually doing the thing, rather than just the theoretical side of it.â
Hiren weighed university against the apprenticeship. âI had the choice between uni and the apprenticeship,â he explains, âand I looked at the differences and where I could be in 10 years.â For him, the decision was straightforward. âI think itâs just so much more beneficial to my future career than going to university.â
Why Slaughter and May?
Both point to a firm that does things its own way. âThe firm in general is very different to law firms across London and across the world,â Hiren says, highlighting its focused global footprint and the strength of its relationship firm networks. He is also taken with how the firm trains its lawyers. âYou are trained to become a multi-specialist, which I think is so helpful and interesting. Being able to advise on a broad range of legal matters across your practice area, rather than being limited to a specific area, is really good.â
Unique Structure: Knowledge Teams First
What really sets the apprenticeship apart is its structure. Rather than throwing apprentices straight into fee-earning work, the firm starts them in knowledge teams. âFor the first two years in the programme, we sit with knowledge lawyers in the legal groups,â Hiren explains. âEach practice area at the firm has knowledge lawyers who focus on managing and enhancing the firmâs legal knowledge. Working in these teams means that we have been able to really absorb expert knowledge, expand our commercial awareness and develop invaluable research and analysis skills right from the start.â For Hadya, it is one of the things that makes the programme stand out. âSitting in the knowledge team is something thatâs really unique to the firm. I donât think any other firms do that.â
Being the first cohort has its perks. âWe get to put in as much input as possible, and they really do listen to us,â she adds. That early promise is already drawing recognition â the programme recently won the âSixth Formersâ Choice for Solicitor Apprenticeshipsâ Award at The Legal Cheek Awards.
Day-to-Day Life
Day to day, sitting in a knowledge team means plenty of legal research, drafting precedents and pitching in on business development. Hadyaâs seat ties in closely with her contract law module at university, and she has been drafting precedent agreements and contracts. âItâs really cool to see how our university work applies to our practical work in the workplace too,â she says. For Hiren, the message from fee earners and trainees has been consistent. âTheyâve been saying that legal research is a really key part of what we do as lawyers.â
Both value how much the role brings them into contact with the rest of the firm. Rather than being boxed into a single team, they find their work arriving from all directions. âItâs not just my supervisor giving me work,â Hiren explains. âItâs different knowledge lawyers, different fee earners.â Hadya enjoys getting to âhelp behind the scenes and assist in that way, which I think is quite cool.â
Support and Work-Life Balance
Support has been plentiful. From the moment they accepted their offers, the firm was in regular contact and organised welcome events. There are now fortnightly catch-ups with the early careers development team, regular sessions with supervisors and monthly check-ins with continuity partners. A two-week induction was followed by termly training on everything from tech to drafting contracts, with sessions tailored to whatever the apprentices would like more support with. One unexpectedly useful example, Hiren says, was a workshop on notetaking. âYou donât think you need to be told how to take notes, and then once they ran through it, I realised that Iâve been so bad at taking notes!â
The long hours that hang over the profession are an obvious worry, but on this both apprentices are reassuring. Each has kept up friendships outside work, while the firm runs a busy social calendar of its own: a summer party, an annual dinner dance, employee network events and trainee socials every couple of months. They are also plugged into networks with other firms across the city. âWe get to make friends and socialise with other apprentices from different firms, which is really good,â Hadya says. And the firm is strict about one thing in particular. âTheyâre really set on protecting our hours,â she explains, with the apprentices leaving at a set time each day. âIt ensures we have time to study and can still have a social life.â
Who Thrives on This Route?
For Hiren, it is someone with staying power. âYou need to have resilience to get through this whole six years. Itâs a long time,â he says, recommending the path to anyone goal-oriented and purpose-driven. For Hadya, it comes down to attitude. âThe biggest thing is someone whoâs really willing to learn,â she says, alongside good time management, motivation and strong communication. Asked what they would change about their first year, both wish they had relaxed a little. Hiren was so cautious about protecting time for his university work that he ended up unnecessarily stressed. âIf you go through A Levels, you can get through anything,â he reflects. Hadya would tell her nervous, newer self to be bolder and to âask as many questions as you can.â
Advice for Applicants
Reassuringly for any school leaver who feels behind, there is no expectation that you arrive knowing everything. âI wasnât an expert on the law before starting,â Hadya says, having had only a surface-level awareness of the subject. She built her commercial awareness gradually, skimming the news, completing online work experience through Forage (including the firmâs Explore Law programme) and, later, picking up the FT. That leads to their shared advice on applications. âMake sure youâre not just applying for the sake of it,â Hiren urges, favouring âa smaller number of firms that you really care aboutâ and a genuine personal connection to each. Hadya agrees that research should run deep, and that the relationship works both ways. âYou look at why the firmâs good for you and why youâre good for the firm.â






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