<p>is Emory’s Goizueta Business School even somewhat recruited for iBanks?
I’m a prospective student probably going to Emory and can’t determine if i want to do iBanking or law</p>
<p>wth duh emory is</p>
<p>i just havent seen it on any of the lists people are posting even though it’s #5 business school. </p>
<p>If I wanted to do iBanking would it be better to enter Emory’s Goizueta Business School or get an engineering/math degree at Georgia Tech (#5 engineering school) and then get an MBA?
I’m totally lost…a little help please</p>
<p>emory lol ya u are lost</p>
<p>The following would be my list (who am I missing in your opinion?):</p>
<p>Harvard
Yale
Princeton
Brown
Penn
Columbia
Cornell
Dartmouth
Stanford
Williams
Duke
Amherst
Tufts
NYU (Stern)
Emory (Goizueta)
UC Berkeley (Haas)
USC (Marshall)
Indiana (Kelley)–and only from here if you attend their IB Workshop program
Notre Dame
Texas
North Carolina (Kenan-Flagler)
Boston College (Carroll)
Wake Forest
Michigan (Ross)
Virginia (McIntire or Darden)
Georgetown (McDonough)
Illinois
UCLA (Anderson)
Northwestern (Kellogg)
University of Chicago</p>
<p>P.S. I’m including Emory and Texas and leaving out Wisconsin.</p>
<p>Id take out wake forest and illinois
and put in MIT Sloan</p>
<p>and those are in no order right?</p>
<p>haha my college is not on anyone of those bank’s list , that is SO encouraging …:(</p>
<p>Not so sure about Tufts either.</p>
<p>If you have great grades (3.8 and above) and strong work experience (I’d say minimum of 2 good internships) then you can honestly be competitive from any school. I say this not from some theoretical point of view but through experience. </p>
<p>It’s obviously much easier at a “target” because the recruiters come to you. That said, if you aren’t a top student, good luck getting the top interviews.</p>
<p>Dilo26386 nailed it. I 100% agree everyone has a chance as long as they fit these requirements. I know plenty of people from non-target schools who got the grades they needed, plenty of good extra-curriculars, and work experience who are getting into the IB field.</p>
<p>what is a good finance career with good hours, good pay (can probably get to 200k+ with experience), and provides of chance for promotion to leadership positions</p>
<p>I’d give up ibanking for such a position since i want to start a family eventually and I don’t plan to be the work-obsessed-ghost-dad</p>
<p>Believe me, ALOT of people would ditch ibanking if such a position existed.</p>
<p>Yeah, I forgot MIT (Sloan), thanks kmzizzle–and yes, my list was in no particular order. I think you are right in taking out Illinois–but I’m not quite as sure about taking out Wake Forest.</p>
<p>And, yes, you can be competitive from any school with top, top, top grades, and great internships–but I thought we were trying to put together a list of which schools place quite a few people in IB–not just one or two exceptional ones.</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>Sales & trading. I’m sure associates make atleast over 200k and are out of the office by 7-8 pm.</p>
<p>shouldnt CMU Tepper be on that list too?</p>
<p>sales and trading pay is structured differently. Generally, the base salary will be very low, ~40k a year. Then, the bonus can easily be 2 or 3 times the base. However, the bonus is based on performance. So a good trader can easily make 200k, but there are those that make just above the poverty line as well. IB trades in long hours for guaranteed salary, as pretty much everyone makes the same base and bonus.</p>
<p>^ the base pay for S&T analysts at BBs are the same as those in IBD.</p>
<p>How does Cornell place with IB banks?
So-so recruiting, or what?</p>
<p>IBanks love Cornell, particularly Goldman Sachs and Citi.</p>
<p>citi’s CEO is a USC grad? how come citi doesn’t recruit at USC?</p>