Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Columbia is the winner for Wall Street by a long shot. They only have about 2,000 grads per year.
Cornell is twice the size.
Really? There at least a dozen schools including three NESCAC LACs which place considerably better than Columbia on a per capita basis.
Data please.
https://www.collegetransitions.com/blog/top-colleges-for-investment-banking-careers/
I hope you don't beileve this. NYU is not that low
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Columbia is the winner for Wall Street by a long shot. They only have about 2,000 grads per year.
Cornell is twice the size.
Really? There at least a dozen schools including three NESCAC LACs which place considerably better than Columbia on a per capita basis.
Data please.
https://www.collegetransitions.com/blog/top-colleges-for-investment-banking-careers/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Columbia is the winner for Wall Street by a long shot. They only have about 2,000 grads per year.
Cornell is twice the size.
Really? There at least a dozen schools including three NESCAC LACs which place considerably better than Columbia on a per capita basis.
Data please.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Getting hired" by a company doesn't account for what roles they are hired in. Lots of schools send tons of kids to mid and back office jobs at banks, or FP&A at FAANG. Perfectly fine jobs but not what Ivy Leaguers are aspiring to.
This. “Tech” and “banking” are not all the same jobs. MIT, ivies and Williams and a few others dominate top tech roles and top banking/quantitative finance roles.
Williams does not feed well into Quant finance. It feeds into IB well though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Columbia is the winner for Wall Street by a long shot. They only have about 2,000 grads per year.
Cornell is twice the size.
Really? There at least a dozen schools including three NESCAC LACs which place considerably better than Columbia on a per capita basis.
Wrong. The NESCACs start placing around 10th best.
https://www.wallstreetoasis.com/forum/school/best-wallstreet-feeder-schools-per-capita
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Getting hired" by a company doesn't account for what roles they are hired in. Lots of schools send tons of kids to mid and back office jobs at banks, or FP&A at FAANG. Perfectly fine jobs but not what Ivy Leaguers are aspiring to.
This. “Tech” and “banking” are not all the same jobs. MIT, ivies and Williams and a few others dominate top tech roles and top banking/quantitative finance roles.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can’t put too much stake in analyses like these. As many people have noted it isn’t adjusted for school/program size, but it also doesn’t account for the quality or selectivity of roles (e.g., a GS TMT IB analyst role is much more desirable for most and harder to come by than, say, compliance at JPM, but they’ll both be counted the same way here).
Don’t overthink it - Stanford and MIT are still king for tech, Harvard and Wharton for finance. Much ink has been spilled looking at the top schools in these fields; the most useful information comes from looking in aggregate across sources.
I guess graduates from the other 3,996 schools are doomed.
/s
Anonymous wrote:"Getting hired" by a company doesn't account for what roles they are hired in. Lots of schools send tons of kids to mid and back office jobs at banks, or FP&A at FAANG. Perfectly fine jobs but not what Ivy Leaguers are aspiring to.
Anonymous wrote:Can’t put too much stake in analyses like these. As many people have noted it isn’t adjusted for school/program size, but it also doesn’t account for the quality or selectivity of roles (e.g., a GS TMT IB analyst role is much more desirable for most and harder to come by than, say, compliance at JPM, but they’ll both be counted the same way here).
Don’t overthink it - Stanford and MIT are still king for tech, Harvard and Wharton for finance. Much ink has been spilled looking at the top schools in these fields; the most useful information comes from looking in aggregate across sources.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Columbia is the winner for Wall Street by a long shot. They only have about 2,000 grads per year.
Cornell is twice the size.
Hmm, does Stern have 600 graduates?
Anonymous wrote:Columbia is the winner for Wall Street by a long shot. They only have about 2,000 grads per year.
Cornell is twice the size.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Columbia is the winner for Wall Street by a long shot. They only have about 2,000 grads per year.
Cornell is twice the size.
Really? There at least a dozen schools including three NESCAC LACs which place considerably better than Columbia on a per capita basis.