Investment Banking Recruitment Guide: The Full Process (2024)

An Overview of the Investment Banking Recruitment Process, Including Networking, Resumes, Internships, and Interviews

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How Does Investment Banking Recruitment Work?

Investment banking recruitment is the process that banks use to interview candidates and then award internship or full-time job offers to those candidates.

Since investment banking is a highly paid, prestigious, and competitive field, banks do not have to do much to “attract” candidates – in a single year, over 100,000 candidates might compete for a few thousand spots worldwide.

So, it’s best to think of the “recruitment process” as the “selection process”: it’s more like applying to a highly selective university than anything else.

To have the best chance of winning investment banking job offers, you should be at a top undergraduate university andstart very early (i.e., Year 1) with your initial internships and networking efforts.

If you have already graduated from university, or you are not at a top university, you may still be able to get into investment banking, but it will take more time and effort, and you may need an additional degree such as an MBA or Master’s in Finance.

To understand this process from A to Z, you should start by reading our comprehensive article on how to get into investment banking and then continue to the specific topics below.

Recruitment Pathways into Investment Banking

The main pathways into investment banking (IB) include the following:

Pathway #1: As an Undergraduate

This is the easiest and cheapest way to get into the industry, but you must decide very early on that you want to pursue investment banking.

Pathway #2: As a Recent Graduate

Some students graduate, accept a role that’s related to IB, such as a Big 4 valuation job, corporate banking, or corporate finance, and then move into IB from there.

Pathway #3: At the MBA Level

If your full-time work experience has nothing to do with finance, you will probably have to apply to top MBA programs, get in, and use one of them to move into the industry. Read more about the MBA investment banking recruitment process here.

Pathway #4: Beyond the MBA Level

If you’re well beyond the MBA level – for example, you have 10+ years of experience and are now a mid-level executive at a company – then you don’t have a realistic chance of breaking into investment banking at the Analyst, Associate, or VP levels. But if you make it to the senior executive level, you may be able to move into IB from there.

7-Step Process for Breaking into Investment Banking

Investment Banking Recruitment Guide: The Full Process (7)

  1. Win “Steppingstone” Internships or Jobs
  2. Craft Your Story
  3. Bankify Your Resume/CV
  4. Network Your Way into Interviews and Offers
  5. Prepare for Investment Banking Interviews
  6. Complete the Investment Banking Interview Process and Win Offers
  7. If You Don’t Win Offers, Reassess and Try Again or Aim for Different Fields

If you follow and implement this process, you’ll be better-equipped for investment banking recruiting than ~95% of candidates.

Investment Banking Recruiting Timeline

The investment banking recruiting timeline differs depending on your level, but here’s a quick summary:

  • Undergraduate: Youmust start in Year 1, win internships, and start networking with alumni ASAP. This is because large banks in the U.S. recruit for third-year (junior year) internshipsover a year in advance – so you’ll apply and interview in Year 2, and you’ll need some solid experience by then.
  • Master’s Degree (non-MBA): You still interview for Investment Banking Analyst-level roles here, so the timing is similar: you interview over a year in advance of summer internships, at least if you want to work at the biggest banks.
  • MBA Level: Banks cannot recruit you before your MBA program begins, so the timing here is a bit saner. You interview for summer internships following your first year of business school a few months after your program begins. However, you still need to prepare long in advance – before you even set foot on campus!
  • Lateral Hires:The timing here could best be described as “random.” If you’renot in an undergraduate, MBA, or Master’s program, banks hire on an “as needed” basis, which usually means looking for someone when someone else quits suddenly.

If you’re at the undergraduate or Master’s, non-MBA levels, please see the articles below for more tips on super-early recruiting and how to maintain your sanity:

  • How to Conquer the Super-Early Investment Banking Recruiting Timeline and Win Offers
  • How to Prepare for Investment Banking Summer Internship Recruiting
  • Investment Banking Recruiting as a First or Second-Year University Student: How to Survive the Insanity

We cover the MBA level and lateral hiring in some of the sections below on this page.

The main takeaway from these articles is that you do not have time to “find yourself” or “experiment” with different career options.

If you are even slightly interested in investment banking, you must win internships early on so that you have a shot at winning that all-important summer internship at a large bank.

If you figure out that you hate IB, great! You’ve ruled out one career option, and you can go back to recruiting for normal jobs with slower timelines.

But if not, and you decide that you want to pursue IB over the long term or get into another field that normally requires it, such as private equity, then you’ll bereally glad you put yourself in this position early on.

Investment banking internships are pretty much required to have a great shot at winning a full-time investment banking offer at the undergraduate, Master’s, and MBA levels.

An “investment banking internship” is anextended job interview where the bank evaluates your performance over several months and decides whether or not to give you an offer based on that.

Decades ago (e.g., the 1990s and 2000s), students could break into the industry and win full-time jobs – even at the top banks – without internships because recruiting started much later, and demand for Analysts and Associates often exceeded supply.

However, these dynamics have changed over time, and you arenot very likely to win a full-time role without completing an internship first.

Since an internship is an extended job interview, it’s not enough just to win it – you also have toperform well and get the team to like you if you want a good chance of receiving a return offer.

We cover the different parts of this process, including how to prepare for recruiting, how to prepare for the internship once you’ve won it, and how to perform well in the internship, below:

  • How to Get an Investment Banking Internship
  • How to Prepare for Investment Banking Summer Internship Recruiting
  • How to Prepare for Your Investment Banking Summer Internship in Less Than 8 Hours
  • Investment Banking Internship Guide: How to Succeed and Win Return Offers

When your internship ends, there are a few possible outcomes:

  1. Ideal – You win a full-time return offer from the bank and accept it.
  2. Possible But Not Ideal – You win a full-time return offer, but you decide to interview at other banks and win an offer elsewhere.
  3. Not Good – You fail to win a full-time return offer from the bank, so you have to interview around for other jobs.

There isn’t much to say about the first case, but if you want to switch banks, see our articles on accelerated interviews and accelerated recruiting in London.

And if you fail to win an offer, take a look at these articles here:

  • No Investment Banking Summer Internship Offers: What to Do
  • What If You Don’t Get a Return Offer From Your Investment Banking Summer Internship?

One final note: in some cases, even today, you can still win full-time IB roles without an internship. Check out the reader interview on last-minute investment banking recruiting for more on that.

Lateral Hires (Post-Graduation Recruiting)

If you’ve already graduated from university, a Master’s program, or business school, then banks might still consider you forlateral roles.

“Lateral” means that you interview and start right away rather than at the same time as the entire class of Analysts or Associates.

You can’t win these types of roles coming from just any job – for example, a 45-year-old plumber will not win lateral IB roles no matter how well he/she knows accounting and finance.

Typically, you must:

  1. Be out of school for less than 2-3 years; beyond that, you start to look over-qualified for Analyst and Associate roles, and banks rarely hire for mid-level positions.
  2. Be working in a closely related field, such as Big 4 valuation or transaction advisory services (TAS), corporate development, or possibly corporate finance.

So, if you are in avery different field currently – even something like audit – you need to move closer before you can switch into banking.

For examples of how to do this, see these reader interviews:

  • From Regional Audit to Investment Banking: How to Break in *Without* the Big 4 Pedigree – He was initially at a regional audit firm and then switched to valuation and then IB.
  • From Valuation Advisory to Investment Banking: How to Make the Lateral Leap – He was initially in commercial banking and then switched to valuation and then IB.

Investment Banking Recruitment Guide: The Full Process (9)

In North America, the investment banking recruiting process usually goes like this:

  1. Network months in advance and submit your application.
  2. Complete a HireVue interview or other pre-recorded video interview, or possibly a phone interview with a human.
  3. Then, come into the bank’s office for a “Superday,” where you interview with many bankers at all levels (Analyst through Managing Director).

However, there are significant differences in other regions – most notably in theU.K., where the final step of this process is anassessment center rather than a Superday.

At this “assessment center,” or “AC,” you will complete exercises such as group presentations, report writing, role-playing, and e-tray/in-tray (to simulate your responses to emails) in addition to the standard interviews.

ACs test your ability to perform in real life more effectively, but you’ll also have to spend additional time preparing for them.

There are some other differences in the U.K. as well, such as “competency questions” and math/verbal/logic tests in your online applications and “spring weeks” to set yourself up for internships at banks. For more, please see our detailed coverage of these topics:

  • Overview of U.K. Recruiting Differences
  • Spring Weeks in the U.K.
  • Differences in the Application Process in the U.K.
  • Investment Banking Assessment Centers

Other regions tend to be in between the U.S. and the U.K.; for example, banks might give you case studies, group presentations, or other exercises, but they won’t necessarily conduct an entire day of testing at an assessment center.

MBA-Level Recruiting

If you’re using business school to get into investment banking, there are a few important differences.

First, MBA-level recruiting isfar more developed in the U.S. than it is in other regions. Yes, banks still hire students from top European schools such as INSEAD and LBS, but the process is more of a “thing” in the U.S.

Second, you still need relevant experience to get in. There is no time to “reinvent yourself” or make a dramatic transformation in the months before interviews begin. As a result, you might need a steppingstone role before business school to boost your chances.

Third, in most cases, you need anindustry and geography, such as technology in San Francisco or industrials in Chicago. This pairing should ideally match your pre-MBA background.

You should also know the bank’s deals very well, which means reading through filings and studying the deals.

It can be tougher to get in from part-time and evening programs, and from ones located outside of financial centers, so be careful of all those points before you leap.

Finally, interviewers look for different qualities at this level. Many interviews are more case study-based, and interviewers try to assess your commitments outside of work, humility, and ethics because all of those will influence your long-term success in the role.

The links below are some of our best interviews on MBA-level recruiting:

  • MBA Investment Banking Recruiting – From boutique consulting firm to MBA to bulge-bracket bank.
  • Big 4 TAS to MBA to Investment Banking – What it sounds like.

Investment Banking Recruitment Guide: The Full Process (10)

Investment banking has become a highly competitive and sought-after field.

Banks have shifted from hiring raw graduates and “training them on the job” to expecting new hires to hit the ground running and add value from day one.

That’s why many future investment bankers invest in specialized courses and training to help them get noticed, get hired, and get promoted.

Some of the courses offered by Mergers & Inquisitions and Breaking Into Wall Street include:

Completing these courses will help you win interviews and job offers for roles that pay $150K+, and position you for top-tier exit opportunities such as private equity.

Investment Banking Recruitment Guide: The Full Process (11)

Investment Banking Recruitment Guide: The Full Process (12)

Investment Banking Recruitment Guide: The Full Process (13)

Investment Banking Recruitment Guide: The Full Process (14)

Investment Banking Recruitment Guide: The Full Process (2024)

FAQs

What is a good weakness to say in an investment banking interview? ›

Any “weakness” that you cite in an interview should: Be Real, But Not TOO Real – Pick something that is a real weakness, but which is not a “deal-breaker weakness.” For example, you could say that you sometimes take too long to make decisions, which makes projects take more time.

How many rounds of interviews is normal for investment banking? ›

The types of investment banking interviews you'll face

Investment banks typically hold two rounds of interviews, although some hold more than this.

How to pass an investment banking interview? ›

Preparing for an investment banking interview requires a lot of preparation. Before going into an interview, research the particular bank, familiarize yourself with the deals it has done in the past or is currently working on, and be prepared to talk about the economy and financial markets.

Why is it so hard to get a job in investment banking? ›

Investment banking recruiting is an extremely competitive process, so you'll want to do whatever you can to stand out during the recruitment process. Banks value the quality of your job experience, and the quality of your schools attended, and how hard you network or “hustle” for the role.

What is the star method when interviewing? ›

The STAR method is a structured manner of responding to a behavioral-based interview question by discussing the specific situation, task, action, and result of the situation you are describing.

What is 70 30 interview rule? ›

When I'm evaluating new career opportunities, I have a go-to rule for determining whether or not I'll learn enough on the job: the 70/30 rule. When I start in a new role, I want to know that I can confidently perform 70% of the job description, and I want 30% of it to be completely new to me.

Why is the final interview only 30 minutes? ›

Typically, open hiring interviews are shorter, from 15 to 30 minutes, as the recruiter needs to interact with as many candidates as possible. Some companies that offer open hiring events may provide time slots you can book for an interview, which may be up to an hour.

How many interviews does JP Morgan do? ›

Nevertheless, the JP Morgan interview process typically consists of two major portions – an automated, virtual first round interview through the HireVue platform, and a second round of behavioral and technical interviews.

How do I stand out in investment banking application? ›

Investment banking recruiters look for relevant skills and experience that demonstrate you're capable of handling the job. Highlight transferable skills, such as teamwork, communication, or analytical abilities. Showcase relevant experience, such as internships or relevant coursework.

How hard are investment banking interviews? ›

The questions can seem daunting, but remember: you are not expected to be an expert already. The interviewer wants to see that you have some core investment banking skills and can handle a bit of a challenge, so these questions are common for entry- and junior-level roles.

How do I actually get into investment banking? ›

Becoming an investment banker requires several years of higher education in addition to licensure. It also requires strong mathematical and analytical capabilities, which may be challenging for some people. In addition to a bachelor's degree, investment bankers may need a master's in finance or an M.B.A.

Why are investment bankers so rich? ›

Investment bankers make money through the fees charged to their clients. As discussed above, this includes underwriting fees for arranging the sale of securities and advisory fees for providing strategic guidance.

What GPA is required for investment banking? ›

The typical investment banker has a graduate degree in business from an Ivy League school or other top-tier university and superior educational credentials [i.e., excellent grades (minimum 3.50 GPA), active participation in business and investment clubs, and participation in at least one internship or summer program at ...

How to get into investment banking with no experience? ›

7 Steps To Breaking into Investment Banking
  1. Step 1: Win “Steppingstone” Internships or Jobs. ...
  2. Step 2: Craft Your Story. ...
  3. Step 3: Bankify Your Resume/CV. ...
  4. Step 4: Network Your Way into Interviews and Offers. ...
  5. Step 5: Prepare for Investment Banking Interviews.

What are the weaknesses of investment bankers? ›

Long working hours, a high-pressure work environment, and a lack of work-life balance are common downsides of working in investment banking. The work can also be highly competitive, and the industry is known for its high turnover rates.

What are your weaknesses in a banking interview? ›

A great example of this would be: “My biggest weakness is public speaking as I am naturally introverted. However, I am currently taking a class where I speak in front of a group weekly. This ensures that my public speaking skills will improve.”

What is the best thing to say is your weakness in an interview? ›

For instance, you could say something like, “I hold myself to very high standards and sometimes put too much pressure on myself. I've learned to recognize when I'm starting to do this, such as spending a little too much time on bigger projects like quarterly reports, and I'm usually able to keep myself in check.”

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