Anonymous wrote:Tech:
1. Berkeley, 1041 employed (Google, Amazon, Facebook)
2. Univ. of Illinois, 598 employed (Google, Amazon, Microsoft)
3. UMich, 568 employed (Microsoft, Amazon, Google)
4. Carnegie, 530 employed (google, Microsoft, Facebook)
5. UWash, 511 employed (Microsoft, Amazon, Google)
Top Feeders to Wall Street and investment banking.
1. NYU, 386 employed (morgan Stanley, J.P. Morgan, citi)
2. UMich, 296 employed (Morgan Stanley, J.P. Morgan, Goldman Sachs)
3. Cornell, 279 employed (J.P. Morgan, Goldman Sachs, Bank of America)
4. Columbia, 259 empliyed (Jo Morgan, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley)
5. Berkeley, 233 employed (Morgan Stanley, J.P. Morgan, Goldman Sachs)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tech:
1. Berkeley, 1041 employed (Google, Amazon, Facebook)
2. Univ. of Illinois, 598 employed (Google, Amazon, Microsoft)
3. UMich, 568 employed (Microsoft, Amazon, Google)
4. Carnegie, 530 employed (google, Microsoft, Facebook)
5. UWash, 511 employed (Microsoft, Amazon, Google)
Top Feeders to Wall Street and investment banking.
1. NYU, 386 employed (morgan Stanley, J.P. Morgan, citi)
2. UMich, 296 employed (Morgan Stanley, J.P. Morgan, Goldman Sachs)
3. Cornell, 279 employed (J.P. Morgan, Goldman Sachs, Bank of America)
4. Columbia, 259 empliyed (Jo Morgan, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley)
5. Berkeley, 233 employed (Morgan Stanley, J.P. Morgan, Goldman Sachs)
What is the source here?
https://www.collegetransitions.com/dataverse/top-feeders-tech (Full List Top 10)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Moral of the story? The ivies are overrated.
Look at the jobs and starting salaries. An IB analyst in FIG and someone in HR have very different career trajectories.
Anonymous wrote:Moral of the story? The ivies are overrated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tech:
1. Berkeley, 1041 employed (Google, Amazon, Facebook)
2. Univ. of Illinois, 598 employed (Google, Amazon, Microsoft)
3. UMich, 568 employed (Microsoft, Amazon, Google)
4. Carnegie, 530 employed (google, Microsoft, Facebook)
5. UWash, 511 employed (Microsoft, Amazon, Google)
Top Feeders to Wall Street and investment banking.
1. NYU, 386 employed (morgan Stanley, J.P. Morgan, citi)
2. UMich, 296 employed (Morgan Stanley, J.P. Morgan, Goldman Sachs)
3. Cornell, 279 employed (J.P. Morgan, Goldman Sachs, Bank of America)
4. Columbia, 259 empliyed (Jo Morgan, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley)
5. Berkeley, 233 employed (Morgan Stanley, J.P. Morgan, Goldman Sachs)
What is the source here?
https://www.collegetransitions.com/dataverse/top-feeders-tech (Full List Top 10)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tech:
1. Berkeley, 1041 employed (Google, Amazon, Facebook)
2. Univ. of Illinois, 598 employed (Google, Amazon, Microsoft)
3. UMich, 568 employed (Microsoft, Amazon, Google)
4. Carnegie, 530 employed (google, Microsoft, Facebook)
5. UWash, 511 employed (Microsoft, Amazon, Google)
Top Feeders to Wall Street and investment banking.
1. NYU, 386 employed (morgan Stanley, J.P. Morgan, citi)
2. UMich, 296 employed (Morgan Stanley, J.P. Morgan, Goldman Sachs)
3. Cornell, 279 employed (J.P. Morgan, Goldman Sachs, Bank of America)
4. Columbia, 259 empliyed (Jo Morgan, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley)
5. Berkeley, 233 employed (Morgan Stanley, J.P. Morgan, Goldman Sachs)
What is the source here?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t think they mean Wall Street the physical location vs Wall Street as a euphemism for finance/banking/PE.
The Claremont kids are headed to LA and SF more than NYC working in those industries.
This is just a wrong assumption. More CMC students in the past 3 years went to NYC than LA: https://www.cmc.edu/institutional-research/factbook/outcomes-6months
A lot of 5C students are from New York/Boston and intend to go back home.
Well there are more headed to LA plus San Francisco than NYC based on your chart…which is literally what I wrote (and NYC exceeded LA by one kid).
Anonymous wrote:Tech:
1. Berkeley, 1041 employed (Google, Amazon, Facebook)
2. Univ. of Illinois, 598 employed (Google, Amazon, Microsoft)
3. UMich, 568 employed (Microsoft, Amazon, Google)
4. Carnegie, 530 employed (google, Microsoft, Facebook)
5. UWash, 511 employed (Microsoft, Amazon, Google)
Top Feeders to Wall Street and investment banking.
1. NYU, 386 employed (morgan Stanley, J.P. Morgan, citi)
2. UMich, 296 employed (Morgan Stanley, J.P. Morgan, Goldman Sachs)
3. Cornell, 279 employed (J.P. Morgan, Goldman Sachs, Bank of America)
4. Columbia, 259 empliyed (Jo Morgan, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley)
5. Berkeley, 233 employed (Morgan Stanley, J.P. Morgan, Goldman Sachs)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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
It also says Columbia has lower placement than Vanderbilt? College transitions hasn't been a good data source for a while.
I don’t see why Vanderbilt wouldn’t. It has a great Econ/HOD department, and Columbia has a lot of other professional careers it feeds better into.
Then you clearly don't work in finance, that's the furthest thing from true. Columbia is a 10 min walk from wallstreet.
Well, when adjusted for the size of the school, the biggest feeders to IB are:
Chicago
Dartmouth
Princeton
Georgetown
Harvard
Yale
Amherst
Middlebury
Williams
Duke
Penn
Notre Dame
Vanderbilt
Brown
Columbia
SMU
Cornell
Rice
Northwestern
Boston College
Stanford
So yes, Vanderbilt is a bigger feeder than Columbia. Which makes sense. I don't think most students today choose Columbia because they want to go into investment banking. I'm a little surprised by how high Rice is and how low Stanford is - I didn't think anyone at Rice was interested in IB and I would have expected more from Stanford. But I am not at all surprised that SMU ranks so high today.
The list above is incorrect !!!
LOL at someone posting that Vandy is a bigger feeder to Wall Street than is Columbia ! What are you smokin'?
The updated 2025 list shows these schools as the leaders when adjusted for enrollment:
1) Columbia
2) Yale
3) Dartmouth
4) Princeton
5) Georgetown
6) Harvard
7) U Chicago
8) Claremont McKenna
9) Duke
10) Amherst College
11) Williams College
12) Middlebury College
13) U Penn
14) Cornell
15) Northwestern University
16) Notre Dame
17) Boston College
18) Brown
19) Vanderbilt
20) Stanford
21) NYU
22) Babson
23) Fordham
24) Wash & Lee
25) Bentley U.
26) Villanova
27) Hamilton
28) U Richmond
29) Bowdoin
30) CUNY Baruch
Again, how do you define "Wall Street." Lots of CUNY alums in back office jobs (which are perfectly fine jobs). Not many of them starting in prime roles (though I do know some).
Garbage in, garbage out. Anyone making decisions based on this list, USN&WR, or something similar is completely uninformed and wasting their time.
Sure, we believe you, an anonymous poster on the internet over vetted information published worldwide.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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
It also says Columbia has lower placement than Vanderbilt? College transitions hasn't been a good data source for a while.
I don’t see why Vanderbilt wouldn’t. It has a great Econ/HOD department, and Columbia has a lot of other professional careers it feeds better into.
Then you clearly don't work in finance, that's the furthest thing from true. Columbia is a 10 min walk from wallstreet.
Well, when adjusted for the size of the school, the biggest feeders to IB are:
Chicago
Dartmouth
Princeton
Georgetown
Harvard
Yale
Amherst
Middlebury
Williams
Duke
Penn
Notre Dame
Vanderbilt
Brown
Columbia
SMU
Cornell
Rice
Northwestern
Boston College
Stanford
So yes, Vanderbilt is a bigger feeder than Columbia. Which makes sense. I don't think most students today choose Columbia because they want to go into investment banking. I'm a little surprised by how high Rice is and how low Stanford is - I didn't think anyone at Rice was interested in IB and I would have expected more from Stanford. But I am not at all surprised that SMU ranks so high today.
The list above is incorrect !!!
LOL at someone posting that Vandy is a bigger feeder to Wall Street than is Columbia ! What are you smokin'?
The updated 2025 list shows these schools as the leaders when adjusted for enrollment:
1) Columbia
2) Yale
3) Dartmouth
4) Princeton
5) Georgetown
6) Harvard
7) U Chicago
8) Claremont McKenna
9) Duke
10) Amherst College
11) Williams College
12) Middlebury College
13) U Penn
14) Cornell
15) Northwestern University
16) Notre Dame
17) Boston College
18) Brown
19) Vanderbilt
20) Stanford
21) NYU
22) Babson
23) Fordham
24) Wash & Lee
25) Bentley U.
26) Villanova
27) Hamilton
28) U Richmond
29) Bowdoin
30) CUNY Baruch
Again, how do you define "Wall Street." Lots of CUNY alums in back office jobs (which are perfectly fine jobs). Not many of them starting in prime roles (though I do know some).
Garbage in, garbage out. Anyone making decisions based on this list, USN&WR, or something similar is completely uninformed and wasting their time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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
It also says Columbia has lower placement than Vanderbilt? College transitions hasn't been a good data source for a while.
I don’t see why Vanderbilt wouldn’t. It has a great Econ/HOD department, and Columbia has a lot of other professional careers it feeds better into.
Then you clearly don't work in finance, that's the furthest thing from true. Columbia is a 10 min walk from wallstreet.
Well, when adjusted for the size of the school, the biggest feeders to IB are:
Chicago
Dartmouth
Princeton
Georgetown
Harvard
Yale
Amherst
Middlebury
Williams
Duke
Penn
Notre Dame
Vanderbilt
Brown
Columbia
SMU
Cornell
Rice
Northwestern
Boston College
Stanford
So yes, Vanderbilt is a bigger feeder than Columbia. Which makes sense. I don't think most students today choose Columbia because they want to go into investment banking. I'm a little surprised by how high Rice is and how low Stanford is - I didn't think anyone at Rice was interested in IB and I would have expected more from Stanford. But I am not at all surprised that SMU ranks so high today.
The list above is incorrect !!!
LOL at someone posting that Vandy is a bigger feeder to Wall Street than is Columbia ! What are you smokin'?
The updated 2025 list shows these schools as the leaders when adjusted for enrollment:
1) Columbia
2) Yale
3) Dartmouth
4) Princeton
5) Georgetown
6) Harvard
7) U Chicago
8) Claremont McKenna
9) Duke
10) Amherst College
11) Williams College
12) Middlebury College
13) U Penn
14) Cornell
15) Northwestern University
16) Notre Dame
17) Boston College
18) Brown
19) Vanderbilt
20) Stanford
21) NYU
22) Babson
23) Fordham
24) Wash & Lee
25) Bentley U.
26) Villanova
27) Hamilton
28) U Richmond
29) Bowdoin
30) CUNY Baruch
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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
It also says Columbia has lower placement than Vanderbilt? College transitions hasn't been a good data source for a while.
I don’t see why Vanderbilt wouldn’t. It has a great Econ/HOD department, and Columbia has a lot of other professional careers it feeds better into.
Then you clearly don't work in finance, that's the furthest thing from true. Columbia is a 10 min walk from wallstreet.
Well, when adjusted for the size of the school, the biggest feeders to IB are:
Chicago
Dartmouth
Princeton
Georgetown
Harvard
Yale
Amherst
Middlebury
Williams
Duke
Penn
Notre Dame
Vanderbilt
Brown
Columbia
SMU
Cornell
Rice
Northwestern
Boston College
Stanford
So yes, Vanderbilt is a bigger feeder than Columbia. Which makes sense. I don't think most students today choose Columbia because they want to go into investment banking. I'm a little surprised by how high Rice is and how low Stanford is - I didn't think anyone at Rice was interested in IB and I would have expected more from Stanford. But I am not at all surprised that SMU ranks so high today.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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
It also says Columbia has lower placement than Vanderbilt? College transitions hasn't been a good data source for a while.
I don’t see why Vanderbilt wouldn’t. It has a great Econ/HOD department, and Columbia has a lot of other professional careers it feeds better into.
Then you clearly don't work in finance, that's the furthest thing from true. Columbia is a 10 min walk from wallstreet.
Well, when adjusted for the size of the school, the biggest feeders to IB are:
Chicago
Dartmouth
Princeton
Georgetown
Harvard
Yale
Amherst
Middlebury
Williams
Duke
Penn
Notre Dame
Vanderbilt
Brown
Columbia
SMU
Cornell
Rice
Northwestern
Boston College
Stanford
So yes, Vanderbilt is a bigger feeder than Columbia. Which makes sense. I don't think most students today choose Columbia because they want to go into investment banking. I'm a little surprised by how high Rice is and how low Stanford is - I didn't think anyone at Rice was interested in IB and I would have expected more from Stanford. But I am not at all surprised that SMU ranks so high today.