In 30 days, get M&A basics clear, take on your first real assignments with startups, and walk into law firm interviews with actual work samples — not just a CV.
Every year your batch waits for placements, the market is quietly moving. Here's what's actually happening — and why the window to act is while you're still in college.
Tier 1 firms are hiring fewer freshers. Template reviews, research memos, first-draft contracts are being automated. A real skill is what insulates you from the automation wave.
Marks and moots are table stakes now — everyone has them. A track record — actual deal work you've done, documents you've drafted — is what makes a recruiter open the email.
Early-stage founders need NDAs, co-founder agreements, and basic deal documents — drafted fast and cheap. They'll work with a student who understands the basics. That's your opening.
Students who walk into firms with a portfolio of real assignments get interviews on merit, not on recruitment calendar luck. The portfolio route is real — and widely underused.
Founders care whether you can draft a co-founder agreement, review a term sheet, and explain a clause clearly. They don't care which college is on your CV. Show them the work — they'll hire you.
In college you have time, low risk, and runway to take on small assignments and build real proof. After graduation, every empty month becomes pressure. Use the years you have, while they're still cheap.
A 4th-year student at a non-NLU Delhi college, Abhay watched classmates from better-known colleges get callbacks while he refreshed his email. He stopped waiting for permission and started building competence directly — drafting agreements, working with founders, learning by doing. By the time he graduated, he had a track record to point to, not just a degree. The placement queue stopped mattering.
Vishal graduated from Bhagwant University, Ajmer in 2021. He took two offers after graduation — a real estate firm in Gurgaon, then matrimonial litigation. Neither felt right. He knew he wanted corporate law but had no roadmap. He spent two years on the wrong path before finding his way to M&A — a journey he says he could have started while still in college, and saved himself the detour.
A Pune 2020 graduate, Tushar spent months after graduation applying and hearing silence while classmates from better-known colleges got callbacks. He was based in Kanpur — supposedly the wrong city for corporate work. Today he runs a cross-border sports-law and M&A practice from Kanpur itself. In March 2024 he received the Rising Managing Partner Award.
30 days is not enough to become an M&A lawyer — we won't pretend it is. It's enough to clear up the basics and know exactly what to do when a startup founder asks if you can help with their co-founder agreement.
Evening-friendly for college timetables. Bring your questions, walk through real deal documents, leave with answers.
Other students working through the same drills, in the same 30-day window. Connect peer-to-peer on LinkedIn.
Direct messaging access to mentors throughout the 30 days.
Actual term sheets, NDAs, SHAs, DD checklists — not textbook cases. The kind you'll work on the moment a founder hires you.
Fits between classes, commutes, or late-night study. Designed around a student's schedule — not an office day.
Clear guidance on how to approach startup founders, what to offer, how to price, and how to turn the first conversation into the first document.
Any year — 1st to 5th. Whether you're in a 3-year LLB or a 5-year BA LLB. The earlier you start, the bigger your head start by final year.
You don't have a direct placement pipeline to Tier 1 firms. You need a different route — and a portfolio is the route that actually works.
You've done your share of moots and stacked certifications. None of it has translated into real career signals. You want work experience, not more paper.
You understand that your first real work probably won't come from a Tier 1 firm's recruitment portal — it'll come from a founder who needs help now and doesn't care which college you go to.
Daily drills. Live sessions once a week. A cohort that shows up. If you'll genuinely put in the work, the output is real. If not — please don't join.
You want proof before you commit to a bigger programme. ₹100 for 30 days of real assignments and real community is a reasonable experiment. No renewal, no auto-charge.
₹100 · 30 days · 250 student seats. Start now and graduate with a track record — not just a degree.
Built for current law students. 30 days · Limited to 250 seats · One-time ₹100.