Leveraging Offers, College Majors, Licenses and More!
So I am interviewing with 2 BB banks for a FT IB analyst position. Firm A made me an offer and while it is a great opportunity, I would much rather work for Firm B. Firm B has told me that they are still finishing interviewing, but are still interested in me. My question is: how do I use the offer from Firm A to speed up Firm B’s decision?
There is no need to beat around the bush or try to be coy. Simply put, you want to work at Firm B, so tell Firm B that Firm A has made you an offer that is exploding by X (give yourself an extra 1-3 days at least just for a cushion) and although it is a great opportunity you feel the fit and experience will be much better at their firm, firm B. Then let them know that you appreciate their consideration and want to know if there is anything else they need ahead of making a final decision on your candidacy. Something along those lines (give or take a sentence or 2) should suffice and get you a response.
Remember, just as with everything, being tactful is very important – don’t pressure them, just let them know of your situation and they will either be unable to accommodate, or provide you with a decision – either way, you can move on and make a decision.
I had a really short and kind of disconcerting phone call with a banker that I was referred to. On the follow-up email, I made a few typos – did the typo screw my chances?
It’s not an interview, just a networking conversation – a few typos won’t kill you by any means. However, if the conversation was really bad (and not just short because the banker was busy or suddenly got another call, etc), then that would be worse than making a few typos.
Forget about the typos. If the banker responds positively, you are in good shape and keep it going. If he doesn’t respond, try to work on being more comfortable over the phone or having more questions/dialogue in the hole (if either of those were your problem) and move on. If you need help with cold calling or networking over the phone, you can consider my Prep Service as well.
Which looks better to recruiters – Finance Major or Finance and Accounting Concentrations (which require a few less courses than a typical major)?
If the question is resume-related, then state your degree on the title line, and under “Major: XXX” it would look better to write “Concentration: Finance and Accounting” rather than “Major: Finance.”
That said, the difference is very marginal and your Relevant Coursework matters more than what your concentration is – the slight exception to this is regarding complete non-target business schools. In that case, you want to showcase your finance and accounting degrees and coursework as much as possible in your education.
In short, whichever is easiest for you to obtain and maintain the highest GPA is the option you should go with. From there, relevant coursework will cover any questions on the material you know and having a finance major or finance and accounting concentrations will send the same message – “business student who should know his technical crap.”
How do associates and analysts decide who orders dinner, goes to pick it up, etc. Is there a hierarchy, does the hated analyst go, is there something implied by the decision?
First, there are far more important issues to worry about than who makes a phone call or visits a website to order dinner. That said, here goes: someone either orders everything online or makes a quick phone call. Order is placed. Food arrives in lobby. Random analyst, usually the one who had a minute and placed the order runs down and brings it back up. Food is charged to a card, admin is told next day who the charges covered – done.
When people actually go out, it could be a bunch of guys getting their own stuff, or a few analysts running out to pick some things up and head back – again, not a big deal. It’s not a community hanging session; just get a few guys who have a few minutes, run out, grab food, and you’re back.
If a company specifically requests a resume, cover letter AND transcript, what would happen if I do not include a transcript?
If you were specifically told to include your transcript, they will either be nice and send an email to ask for it, or not be as nice (and rightly so since they made the request clear) and just pass on your resume.
That said, they could overlook the lack of transcript and give you an interview major anyway. If you happen to get the interview and go all the way to the end, before getting an offer, they will want your transcript. If there is anything on there that would keep you from a position, you will not getting one whether you submit now or wait all the way until the end. If it isn’t that big of a deal, then just send it now. The big things they are looking for are GPA, relevant coursework and, if your graduated or are about to graduate, truth on your resume in terms of dates and courses – nothing really to sweat over.
Does it help to have a Series 7 and 66 license ahead of FT recruiting? I have them and want to know if I should put it on my resume, or if it could hurt me.
It doesn’t hurt to have it, but it won’t help much either. Analysts in IB at least, and any S&T I know, don’t require you to have it and, if down the line (months, year+), you need it, they will just sponsor you to take it. Since at some point, you will need to have it, it won’t hurt you (especially if the bank was planning to sponsor you sooner rather than later), but it won’t help you much either. Put it on your resume, but don’t expect anyone to jump out of their seats and demand to see you because you have it. Oh, and no, it won’t hurt you at all either – this isn’t “Boiler Room” (great move, by the way).
