7 OCI Mistakes That Cost You Callbacks
BigLaw Bear · February 27, 2026 · 3 min read
1. Not Researching the Firm
This is the biggest one. Showing up to an interview without knowing the firm's key practice areas, recent deals, or what makes them different from the firm you interviewed with 30 minutes ago? That's an instant pass.
You have access to more firm information than any previous generation of law students. Use it. Big Law Bear's firm directory gives you practice area breakdowns and key details for every major firm. There's no excuse.
2. Giving Generic "Why This Firm" Answers
"You're a great firm with great people." Cool. So is every other firm they're competing with for talent. If your answer could be copy-pasted into any other interview, it's not good enough.
We wrote an entire guide on this question. Read it. Prepare a specific answer for every firm on your schedule.
3. Not Having Questions Ready
When the interviewer says "What questions do you have for me?" and you say "I think you covered everything" — that's a callback killer. It signals disinterest.
Always have 2-3 questions per interview. Ask about the interviewer's experience, the practice group's recent work, or how associates develop within the firm. See our OCI questions guide for ideas.
4. Talking Too Much (or Too Little)
The screener is 20 minutes. If you're monologuing for 5 minutes straight, the interviewer is tuning out. If you're giving one-sentence answers and letting silence hang, they can't evaluate you.
Aim for 60-90 second responses. Then let the conversation flow naturally. It's a dialogue, not a deposition.
5. Bad-Mouthing Other Firms or Experiences
Never trash-talk a previous employer, a professor, or another firm. Even if the interviewer seems to invite it. The legal world is absurdly small, and negativity is a red flag.
If asked about a negative experience, focus on what you learned. Keep it neutral and forward-looking.
6. Ignoring the Small Stuff
Showing up late. Having a wrinkled shirt. Forgetting the interviewer's name. Checking your phone. Weak handshake. These seem minor, but they create impressions that are hard to shake.
Arrive 10 minutes early. Dress properly. Put your phone on silent and leave it in your bag. Know the interviewer's name before you walk in.
7. Failing to Follow Up
A brief thank-you email within 24 hours isn't optional. It's expected. Some students skip this because they're tired or overwhelmed or think it doesn't matter.
It matters. A good follow-up reinforces your interest and reminds the interviewer who you are. A missing follow-up is conspicuous.
The Common Thread
Every mistake on this list comes down to the same thing: lack of preparation. The students who get callbacks aren't necessarily the smartest or the most charming. They're the ones who did the work beforehand.
Start your prep with the firm directory, bookmark your top firms with Gold Stars, and walk into OCI ready. The bar for preparation is honestly not that high — most of your competition won't clear it.