<p>SEO is probably harder to get in the the Kelley workshop.</p>
<p>I remember uhyea said that people should try to get corporate experience before trying to get into the ibank workshop, but how would one do that when ur still in school? Was he talking about being an intern?</p>
<p>yeah you can intern during your summers/the year</p>
<p>at my school hedge funds recruit during the year and banks offer summer internships.</p>
<p>I want to work for something like DFAS or GE or something like that next summer, but even those jobs are pretty competitve.</p>
<p>I see. Would I have to go out and seek an internship, or do companies offer them at the school? And in which summers do u do them? After sophomore? After junior? Or both?</p>
<p>I can’t believe i started this thread, it has driven people insane.</p>
<p>Really after your sophomore year. People come to IU and recruit for internships.</p>
<p>University of Richmond was number three in academic quality and it has literally no MBA program, so the quality of faculty is not reflected in the graduate program for someone who brought that up earlier.</p>
<p>idk, maybe it’s just me but when I see #17 miami of Ohio and right next to it #16 Carnegie Mellon the whole thing is ridiculous. M of O is a respectable good school but in no way is it on the par with CMU which had acceptance rate in the teens this year, avg SAT near 1400 (old) and top companies recruiting on campus…I can’t imagine Goldman and Lehman recruiting too heavily at Miami of Ohio. You can’t compare the 2 yet they’re only one spot apart. Crazy…</p>
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<p>just try to intern as soon as possible. I’m pretty much set for one with a BB this summer and i’m only a freshmen.</p>
<p>dcfca, how did you pull that off?</p>
<p>U have one after ur freshman year and u havent even got into ur business major yet?!</p>
<p>Just so people know life isn’t about the Goldman Sachs internships because essentially nobody here is going to work there. Unless you go to penn or are top 5 in your business school class they aren’t looking for you, trust me on this. </p>
<p>So there is nothing wrong with being recruited by big name companies that don’t involve ibanking but pay high wages. Places like microsoft, boeing, coca cola, GE, Phillip Morris, and other places like that. </p>
<p>And it is not like a medium sized company like bear sterns won’t pay you big bonuses if you earn them. It’s not just Goldman and Morgan Stanley spitting out the big bonuses</p>
<p>farbdogg, I have no problem working for GE or Phillip Morris. Bears & Stearns would be a dream. I’ve never really even thought I had a shot in hell at Goldman Sachs.</p>
<p>That would be sweet to work for Coca-Cola, all the free coke I want.</p>
<p>Seriously though, any job that pays me near 50 when I graduate would be great.</p>
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<p>it was posted on our job board and I applied. But it’s only for the PWM division so it’s not like a super internship or anything like that. But having their BB name on my resume and the internship should help out when I apply for bigger things.</p>
<p>It’s kinda funny though because I had accidentally botched part of my resume, I wasn’t expecting it. Originally I was applying for energy trading internships but I havent had any responses. Prolly want older kids.</p>
<p>I would love to do private wealth management, actually I’m more interested in PWM, than M&A etc.</p>
<p>Whats PWM division?</p>
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<p>Do u or anybody actually happen to know the average salary of a first year graduate in an ibanking firm? Because I have heard from people who say 40K and others say 100K+.</p>
<p>Top Firms total compensation will be around 100k. Other firms just vary.</p>