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  #11  
Old 09-19-2006, 07:40 PM
thing85 thing85 is offline
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Default Re: tips for getting full-time offer on Wall St.

[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
Public accounting is the way to go.


*pukes*

[/ QUOTE ]
It's not exactly clear what job the OP thinks he wants, but public accounting isn't the way to any of them.

[/ QUOTE ]

I know; it was a side comment/sarcastic joke.
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  #12  
Old 09-19-2006, 10:36 PM
NajdorfDefense NajdorfDefense is offline
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Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Manhattan
Posts: 8,227
Default Re: tips for getting full-time offer on Wall St.

[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
Public accounting is the way to go.


*pukes*

[/ QUOTE ]
It's not exactly clear what job the OP thinks he wants, but public accounting isn't the way to any of them.

[/ QUOTE ]

I know; it was a side comment/sarcastic joke.

[/ QUOTE ]

Stick to making fries and laying out Torry Holt...
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  #13  
Old 09-20-2006, 10:13 AM
thing85 thing85 is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: 100NL but I like uNL too much to leave
Posts: 3,672
Default Re: tips for getting full-time offer on Wall St.

[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
Public accounting is the way to go.


*pukes*

[/ QUOTE ]
It's not exactly clear what job the OP thinks he wants, but public accounting isn't the way to any of them.

[/ QUOTE ]

I know; it was a side comment/sarcastic joke.

[/ QUOTE ]

Stick to making fries and laying out Torry Holt...

[/ QUOTE ]

I wish my job were that easy.
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  #14  
Old 09-20-2006, 11:21 AM
Colt McCoy Colt McCoy is offline
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Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Bend over, Baby!
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Default Re: tips for getting full-time offer on Wall St.

Find out who the actual hiring managers are in addition to the recruiters. Then hound them all mercilessly until they agree to grant you an interview just to get you off their back.

Come up with a better reason your GPA sucks. Everyone has commitments, but still manages to do their job. Unless you happen to interview with someone who's into it, they don't want someone who says, "well I really want to be a banker but I wasn't preparing myself as adequately as possible because I spent my study time in a rowboat."

Play up your internship, play down the school and have a good reason for why you went there.
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  #15  
Old 09-20-2006, 11:56 AM
starbird starbird is offline
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Default Re: tips for getting full-time offer on Wall St.

[ QUOTE ]
Tell them you play poker and blackjack, I remember when I was talking to some Susquehanna reps at a job fair, one of the hot chicks asked me if I played blackjack...

[/ QUOTE ]

Susquehanna in particular is known for wanting to hire games players. Poker or blackjack would be a strong plus with them.
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  #16  
Old 09-20-2006, 02:31 PM
Riverman Riverman is offline
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Default Re: tips for getting full-time offer on Wall St.

[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
I understand why poker and to a lesser extent counting at blackjack might be good experience for a trader (not sure about I-banking). Why craps, though? Doesn't that pretty much just show you don't understand probability?

[/ QUOTE ]

I would reply that it shows you are able to understand and combine knowledge of probability, expectation, money mgmt and bankroll skills, while also understanding it is a negative EV game, *but* the best EV table game in the casino combined with the ability to have fun and be social, as opposed to the plain nerdy-counts-cards- at bj-but-maybe can't-talk/work-with-others Nit mentality.

Besides, anyone can say they can count down a 6-deck shoe perfectly, not like they will test you during an interview, read for 3 minutes on how it works and you can fake expertise, a deep understanding of craps [and other -EV casino games] gives you chance to show that you understand variance and risk mgmt, etc, like to live a little, are social, what kind of person you are, are you a don't bettor, do you make the horribly bad craps bets, etc.

Again, I had them all on there, no one wanted to talk about counting cards except one firm, 90% of them want to talk about how to play craps, or great craps runs they had -- then you're foot in the door a step up on the other 499 undergrads trying to claw past you. 90% of traders I've worked with on Wall St have played/still play craps - floor traders, pit traders, fx traders, futures traders, forwards traders, swap traders, option traders. It's like a club, and OP/you want to be in it, so that's jmho.

If you're interviewing for a PM job at a deep-value shop, I'd just put poker on there and *not* craps. Like most things, it may depend on the situation.

Look, these people interview dozens of people a day, 500 per year per school they cover in some cases. I covered the SE/ and historically black colleges for my I-bank. I [and everyone else] figures you can DCF, you can model, you're not a lying thief, you work hard, etc, but that's hard to prove in 30 mins. What people really, really WANT is someone who is personable and fun to work with, combined with smarts [and looks] if possible - talk about the BCS, talk about postmodern French Lit, talk about poker, Beethoven, make yourself stand out. {Bonus hint - a listing of poker, skiing, running marathons will make you one of every 2 resumes I see. No joke. No, sailing/cycling doesn't do it either. Banks get 3-500 of resumes per school often, recruiting teams may cover 7-10 schools or more.}

Or you have no shot. Plain and simple. When I started working in downtown NYC I got hired as 1 of 4 analysts in my I-banking dept, I dunno what the # of applicants was, but it could easily have been 4000, or much more.

When I moved to top 5 I-bank #3, I was given the chance to start my own P+L within that dept for an under-served and somewhat unique set of bank's clients. I increased profits by 600% in less than 3 years taking virtually zero market or vol risk [obvs this means lots of hedging]. Within 2 years I had the 2nd most profits and highest quality revenues on the desk.

Perhaps subconsciously pitching myself as the 'careful, cautious trader' who *hates* to lose bank's/OPM at work, but likes to let loose at the Mirage craps table every now and then with his own money rang very true and real to the MD's that interviewed and hired me. I don't really know. They'd rather have that than the cowboys who sank Sumitomo and Granite and Amaranth, I can vouch for that.

To be perfectly honest, it doesn't matter a whit if you start at Mitsui, or Wachovia, or some 3rd-tier trading shop, the cream almost always rises to the top, eventually, in this industry. Smart, savvy, sober, consistently good-to-great, hardworking [which can mean 95+ hours a week and 3 days off a year including weekends] employees are a lot harder to come by than you'd think. It's not a sprint, so don't stress too much about tying the knot with your 'dream firm.' My resume gets me in for an interview anywhere, but that's as far as it goes. After that, it's how you interview and fit with your desired firm.

Best of luck to you.

Naj

In life, like craps, luck plays a much larger role than you may think. Maybe that was it...

[/ QUOTE ]

Ugh.
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  #17  
Old 09-20-2006, 03:27 PM
TNAchicago TNAchicago is offline
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Default Re: tips for getting full-time offer on Wall St.

[ QUOTE ]
I guess I will get straight to the point. I want to get a full time offer on Wall St. after I graduate in one of the top ibanks at the desk. I know what it takes and I am willing to work as hard as necessary because I want this job. Obviously, there are a few problems, at least the way I see it:

1) I go to a good school but its not in the top 10 core schools from which these companies recruit.
2) I do well in school but I do not have a 3.7 mainly because I have been on the rowing team throughout all of college which was a huge commitment. It’s my senior year and after a lot of though I quit this season.
3) I interned in a foreign ibank this summer.

Basically, my main concern is surviving the resume scan which is very tough. Should I put poker among interests? How can I stand out among all the 4.0 candidates from Harvard who’s older brother is a senior analyst at Bear or JP?

I am fairly confident that I can get it if I get a chance to interview.

There is a number of people here with experience in trading so if anybody has any tips or insider advice that is not covered in any of the presentations, books, career offices and online, please let me know. I really appreciate all the help…Thanks a lot.

[/ QUOTE ]


OP only said he wants to work for an I-bank, not necessarily doing "investment banking". Worth noting before somebody else responds with a 5,000 word essay on "My Accomplishments As An I-Banker, Heed My Wisdom, etc".

There are plenty of worthwile (and lucrative) jobs within an investment bank that aren't "i-banking". Sales, trading, or research positions in equities, fixed income, derivatives, etc.

Aggressive networking is definitely your best option from a non-core school. Once you get the first job, it doesn't really matter.
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  #18  
Old 09-20-2006, 10:39 PM
NajdorfDefense NajdorfDefense is offline
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Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Manhattan
Posts: 8,227
Default Re: tips for getting full-time offer on Wall St.

[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
I guess I will get straight to the point. I want to get a full time offer on Wall St. after I graduate in one of the top ibanks at the desk. I know what it takes and I am willing to work as hard as necessary because I want this job. Obviously, there are a few problems, at least the way I see it:

1) I go to a good school but its not in the top 10 core schools from which these companies recruit.
2) I do well in school but I do not have a 3.7 mainly because I have been on the rowing team throughout all of college which was a huge commitment. It’s my senior year and after a lot of though I quit this season.
3) I interned in a foreign ibank this summer.

Basically, my main concern is surviving the resume scan which is very tough. Should I put poker among interests? How can I stand out among all the 4.0 candidates from Harvard who’s older brother is a senior analyst at Bear or JP?

I am fairly confident that I can get it if I get a chance to interview.

There is a number of people here with experience in trading so if anybody has any tips or insider advice that is not covered in any of the presentations, books, career offices and online, please let me know. I really appreciate all the help…Thanks a lot.

[/ QUOTE ]


OP only said he wants to work for an I-bank, not necessarily doing "investment banking". Worth noting before somebody else responds with a 5,000 word essay on "My Accomplishments As An I-Banker, Heed My Wisdom, etc".

There are plenty of worthwile (and lucrative) jobs within an investment bank that aren't "i-banking". Sales, trading, or research positions in equities, fixed income, derivatives, etc.

Aggressive networking is definitely your best option from a non-core school. Once you get the first job, it doesn't really matter.

[/ QUOTE ]

tl;dr

I don't know any people who think sell-side equity research is either worthwhile, or lucrative for new entrants at this point.
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  #19  
Old 09-20-2006, 11:42 PM
AvivaSimplex AvivaSimplex is offline
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Default Re: tips for getting full-time offer on Wall St.

Najdorf,
Thanks for your detailed response. I lol'd at your flowchart, too. I've briefly considered I-banking, but I figure money's no good if you don't have time to spend it.
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  #20  
Old 09-21-2006, 01:02 PM
thing85 thing85 is offline
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Default Re: tips for getting full-time offer on Wall St.

[ QUOTE ]
Najdorf,
Thanks for your detailed response. I lol'd at your flowchart, too. I've briefly considered I-banking, but I figure money's no good if you don't have time to spend it.

[/ QUOTE ]

My thoughts exactly.
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