Vicky Brackett
Vicky Brackett is the Chief Commercial Officer at Irwin Mitchell, which is one of England’s leading law firms; she has an impressive record of senior roles within law firms, covering responsibilities as diverse as recruitment, services for high net wealth clients and the strategic growth of the entire firm. She recently visited The Grove School and spent a valuable afternoon speaking to students. Firstly, all of Year 10 had an engaging presentation by Vicky, then she spent some time with our students who had applied for a bespoke Q&A session. Vicky finished her time talking candidly with Sixth Form students about her experiences in the legal profession and the opportunities available to those that are willing to be brave and to try new things.
Vicky’s top tips:
Vicky’s top tips for interviews:
A big thank you to Vicky for giving up her time to share her brilliant advice with our students – check out some of the other inspirational speakers who have visited with our students, outlined below:
Sir David Leas
Dr Matt Kearney
Kayode Damali
Ben Dyer
Tim Maccabee
Helen Steers
Helen Steers, a partner in Pantheon’s European Investment Team with a BA and MA in Engineering from the University of Cambridge, spoke to students virtually. First, Helen spoke to all of Year 8 during a highly engaging and interesting Q&A, where she answered questions from students and staff. After this, Helen spent twenty minutes speaking with our STEM Potential students about her experiences in the private equity sector. Helen’s messages were inspiring for students, encouraging them to say ‘yes’ to as many opportunities as possible and making it clear that their future paths are not already decided. She spoke about her work with GAIN and Level 20 – two groups which champion roles and opportunities for women in investment – and made students aware of the value in listening to others. Diverse groups make better decisions, working together to get the best from each other. Thank you, Helen.
Jonny Searle MBE
Jonny’s key takeaways:
“There are no real ‘secrets to success’ or any such checklists – instead, try to look at the world in an open way, recognise what you want to achieve and accept what you can (or can’t) do to influence it”.
Circles of control:
– The main circle is yourself (have belief in yourself and value the importance of making little differences).
– The next circle is other people (you can possibly influence them but you can’t control them).
– We say that we have no control over a situation but we need to ask ourselves if that is really true. There are times when we CAN take some control, even if it’s only a small change or adaptation.
Sophie Aldrich
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