Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi, I understand your/his frustrations and can offer some insight. I am a student at a top public university and thought the same thing at first. I would just mass apply to jobs and hope that having X at the top of my resume would get me an interview. That is not how it works. The reason why your university helps in the job/internship hunt isn't because some recruiter is going to pick your resume out of 3,000 and be like wow, he goes to an ivy, he needs an interview. The university matters because of the already established connections that the school and alumni have built with the company. There are two things he needs to do in the next month.
Firstly, there will be a spring career fair and companies will host coffee chats/dinners. He needs to attend as many of those as he can. Those events push your resume to the top of the pile and you will be able to meet recruiters/hiring managers. This is a huge privilege and he should take advantage of that.
Secondly, he needs to fix up his linkedin and start messaging alumni at companies he wants to apply to. People love helping their own, especially those from the same "elite" circle. Find as many alumni as he can and write a quick message that goes "Hey, I am a student at X, studying X. I'm interested in X. Would you have a couple minutes to chat about your role." This way he will establish connections and those people will refer him to intern/new grad roles. Send ten of these messages a day and his schedule will soon be booked with zoom calls. Once I sent this message to an alum at a fintech company I was interested in and he literally replied with his # and was like yeah, I'm off work at 6, call me after then and I'd love to chat.
This process is really tough, especially in this economy. But, he has a golden ticket as long as he knows how to take advantage of it. I was super lost my first two years, but was able to turn it around by spamming people on linkedin and attending networking events. Now, I spent last summer in the business side of a tech company and will be returning to that company after I graduate next May.
This is the way. 100%
OP here. He already sent out several hundreds via linkedin since May 2022 and got a few interests but nothing so far. His cousin, who plays golf for University of Florida, already got several offers from top companies without even trying. The athletic alumni reached out to him. His cousin told him, in a joking manner, that DS spent all this time studying to get into Ivies while the cousin did the minimum to get through high school. Now, the cousin has several internship offers while DS does not. I told DS not to give up just yet but the prospect is not looking good for '23.
Golf troll is back.
Yeah, there is no way that you can sent several hundred linkedin messages and not get a single offer, especially at an IVY. This just seems like a fake rant.
Anonymous wrote:DD’s friend (sophomore) received seven CS internship offers in the fall/December.Anonymous wrote:DC is at a large state university (not east coast) and a freshmen. He is a CS major and applied to several internships. He just accepted an offer with financial/banking company mid December. He was interviewing over Thanksgiving/early December with a few companies.
DD’s friend (sophomore) received seven CS internship offers in the fall/December.Anonymous wrote:DC is at a large state university (not east coast) and a freshmen. He is a CS major and applied to several internships. He just accepted an offer with financial/banking company mid December. He was interviewing over Thanksgiving/early December with a few companies.
Anonymous wrote:What major?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi, I understand your/his frustrations and can offer some insight. I am a student at a top public university and thought the same thing at first. I would just mass apply to jobs and hope that having X at the top of my resume would get me an interview. That is not how it works. The reason why your university helps in the job/internship hunt isn't because some recruiter is going to pick your resume out of 3,000 and be like wow, he goes to an ivy, he needs an interview. The university matters because of the already established connections that the school and alumni have built with the company. There are two things he needs to do in the next month.
Firstly, there will be a spring career fair and companies will host coffee chats/dinners. He needs to attend as many of those as he can. Those events push your resume to the top of the pile and you will be able to meet recruiters/hiring managers. This is a huge privilege and he should take advantage of that.
Secondly, he needs to fix up his linkedin and start messaging alumni at companies he wants to apply to. People love helping their own, especially those from the same "elite" circle. Find as many alumni as he can and write a quick message that goes "Hey, I am a student at X, studying X. I'm interested in X. Would you have a couple minutes to chat about your role." This way he will establish connections and those people will refer him to intern/new grad roles. Send ten of these messages a day and his schedule will soon be booked with zoom calls. Once I sent this message to an alum at a fintech company I was interested in and he literally replied with his # and was like yeah, I'm off work at 6, call me after then and I'd love to chat.
This process is really tough, especially in this economy. But, he has a golden ticket as long as he knows how to take advantage of it. I was super lost my first two years, but was able to turn it around by spamming people on linkedin and attending networking events. Now, I spent last summer in the business side of a tech company and will be returning to that company after I graduate next May.
This is the way. 100%
OP here. He already sent out several hundreds via linkedin since May 2022 and got a few interests but nothing so far. His cousin, who plays golf for University of Florida, already got several offers from top companies without even trying. The athletic alumni reached out to him. His cousin told him, in a joking manner, that DS spent all this time studying to get into Ivies while the cousin did the minimum to get through high school. Now, the cousin has several internship offers while DS does not. I told DS not to give up just yet but the prospect is not looking good for '23.
Golf troll is back.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi, I understand your/his frustrations and can offer some insight. I am a student at a top public university and thought the same thing at first. I would just mass apply to jobs and hope that having X at the top of my resume would get me an interview. That is not how it works. The reason why your university helps in the job/internship hunt isn't because some recruiter is going to pick your resume out of 3,000 and be like wow, he goes to an ivy, he needs an interview. The university matters because of the already established connections that the school and alumni have built with the company. There are two things he needs to do in the next month.
Firstly, there will be a spring career fair and companies will host coffee chats/dinners. He needs to attend as many of those as he can. Those events push your resume to the top of the pile and you will be able to meet recruiters/hiring managers. This is a huge privilege and he should take advantage of that.
Secondly, he needs to fix up his linkedin and start messaging alumni at companies he wants to apply to. People love helping their own, especially those from the same "elite" circle. Find as many alumni as he can and write a quick message that goes "Hey, I am a student at X, studying X. I'm interested in X. Would you have a couple minutes to chat about your role." This way he will establish connections and those people will refer him to intern/new grad roles. Send ten of these messages a day and his schedule will soon be booked with zoom calls. Once I sent this message to an alum at a fintech company I was interested in and he literally replied with his # and was like yeah, I'm off work at 6, call me after then and I'd love to chat.
This process is really tough, especially in this economy. But, he has a golden ticket as long as he knows how to take advantage of it. I was super lost my first two years, but was able to turn it around by spamming people on linkedin and attending networking events. Now, I spent last summer in the business side of a tech company and will be returning to that company after I graduate next May.
This is the way. 100%
OP here. He already sent out several hundreds via linkedin since May 2022 and got a few interests but nothing so far. His cousin, who plays golf for University of Florida, already got several offers from top companies without even trying. The athletic alumni reached out to him. His cousin told him, in a joking manner, that DS spent all this time studying to get into Ivies while the cousin did the minimum to get through high school. Now, the cousin has several internship offers while DS does not. I told DS not to give up just yet but the prospect is not looking good for '23.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi, I understand your/his frustrations and can offer some insight. I am a student at a top public university and thought the same thing at first. I would just mass apply to jobs and hope that having X at the top of my resume would get me an interview. That is not how it works. The reason why your university helps in the job/internship hunt isn't because some recruiter is going to pick your resume out of 3,000 and be like wow, he goes to an ivy, he needs an interview. The university matters because of the already established connections that the school and alumni have built with the company. There are two things he needs to do in the next month.
Firstly, there will be a spring career fair and companies will host coffee chats/dinners. He needs to attend as many of those as he can. Those events push your resume to the top of the pile and you will be able to meet recruiters/hiring managers. This is a huge privilege and he should take advantage of that.
Secondly, he needs to fix up his linkedin and start messaging alumni at companies he wants to apply to. People love helping their own, especially those from the same "elite" circle. Find as many alumni as he can and write a quick message that goes "Hey, I am a student at X, studying X. I'm interested in X. Would you have a couple minutes to chat about your role." This way he will establish connections and those people will refer him to intern/new grad roles. Send ten of these messages a day and his schedule will soon be booked with zoom calls. Once I sent this message to an alum at a fintech company I was interested in and he literally replied with his # and was like yeah, I'm off work at 6, call me after then and I'd love to chat.
This process is really tough, especially in this economy. But, he has a golden ticket as long as he knows how to take advantage of it. I was super lost my first two years, but was able to turn it around by spamming people on linkedin and attending networking events. Now, I spent last summer in the business side of a tech company and will be returning to that company after I graduate next May.
This is the way. 100%
Anonymous wrote:Hi, I understand your/his frustrations and can offer some insight. I am a student at a top public university and thought the same thing at first. I would just mass apply to jobs and hope that having X at the top of my resume would get me an interview. That is not how it works. The reason why your university helps in the job/internship hunt isn't because some recruiter is going to pick your resume out of 3,000 and be like wow, he goes to an ivy, he needs an interview. The university matters because of the already established connections that the school and alumni have built with the company. There are two things he needs to do in the next month.
Firstly, there will be a spring career fair and companies will host coffee chats/dinners. He needs to attend as many of those as he can. Those events push your resume to the top of the pile and you will be able to meet recruiters/hiring managers. This is a huge privilege and he should take advantage of that.
Secondly, he needs to fix up his linkedin and start messaging alumni at companies he wants to apply to. People love helping their own, especially those from the same "elite" circle. Find as many alumni as he can and write a quick message that goes "Hey, I am a student at X, studying X. I'm interested in X. Would you have a couple minutes to chat about your role." This way he will establish connections and those people will refer him to intern/new grad roles. Send ten of these messages a day and his schedule will soon be booked with zoom calls. Once I sent this message to an alum at a fintech company I was interested in and he literally replied with his # and was like yeah, I'm off work at 6, call me after then and I'd love to chat.
This process is really tough, especially in this economy. But, he has a golden ticket as long as he knows how to take advantage of it. I was super lost my first two years, but was able to turn it around by spamming people on linkedin and attending networking events. Now, I spent last summer in the business side of a tech company and will be returning to that company after I graduate next May.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Consider government internships. They generally pay better than a non-profit. There are Federal agencies who oversee finance.
How much does government internship make?
Doesn’t matter. You do it for the experience and connections (we are not wealthy btw)
You can get better pay at financial non-profit and good connections too. Internships at the SEC or Federal Reserve don't pay that much. Non-profit financial SROs pay much better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Connections matter.
Yes, so the schools with good coop program is great for the normal people without connections.
Co-ops aren’t really a thing for front-office finance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Connections matter.
Yes, so the schools with good coop program is great for the normal people without connections.