Help, is IB a Career Worth Pursuing Out of College?

I'm a 2nd-year Finance student at a top 30 Business School in the Twin Cities (Nothing close to Ivy-worthy). I'm near the point where I need to decide on a career path, does anyone have any advice on pursuing IB, Public Accounting at the Big 4, Consulting, or Corporate Finance? I need some career advice from any business professionals who would advise themselves on a career path when they were 19-20 yo.

Thank you, any help is so very much appreciated.

18 Comments
 

IB is a huge grind to get into especially from a non-target. Pay is nice but I don't think anyone is sitting there at 3am saying "gee whiz, at least I make six figures formatting power points". Opens a lot of doors career-wise and generally only a 2-year commitment.

Big 4 accounting is popular at my school, lifestyle is better than IB and they all compete with each other to be the best place to work. You won't make six figures until at least 5-7 years out of college. Career options are more limited than IB but you can do financial analysis type roles forever.

I don't know much about consulting or corp finance. If you have time this summer or fall you might benefit from calling some school alumni in each role to get their thoughts on what direction you want to go in.

Array
 

The thing with IB is that most people do it for the Exit opportunities. The same is true with BIG 4 accounting. During tax season you work a lot, sometime comparable to IB with less pay, but having BIG 4 in your resume give you exit opportunity. Corporate Finance is a little like IB, more flexible but less exit opportunities, consulting is good, the entry level harder, you work a lot of hours but less than IB. So to answer the question yes IB is a career worth pursuing out of college, (I assume by career you mean staying in the bank and reaching MD level.)

 

This is similar to what bankerella posted. Interesting.

When luck shuts the door you gotta come in through the window - Doyle Brunson
 

This is similar to what bankerella posted. Interesting.

When luck shuts the door you gotta come in through the window - Doyle Brunson
 

Umm only 1% of bankers ever making it to MD? I think Bankeralla's data had 33% of Associates making it to MD (and if we assume, say, 33% of Analysts make it to Associate, that means 11% of Analysts end up as MDs, or 1 in 9......and that's not counting Analysts who go get an MBA and later return to banking as associates)

 

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