The Basics of Tech Banking?

Hello WSO, I have a few questions in relation to tech banking:

  1. What are the top TMT groups in IB?

  2. What work experience did you have prior to taking on a tech IB role?

  3. How does an entry-level tech banker differentiate from a traditional IB role? Hours/work/lifestyle, etc.

  4. What are some of the common exit ops that tech bankers typically take? (personally VC is something I see as an end goal)

  5. Do you find the work interesting?

Any more information in addition to the questions would be greatly appreciated!

35 Comments
 

Your thoughts are right on the terms of the banks.

All of them are better out on the westcoast than in NYC. NYC has a pool where you have to get placed during training. SF/Menlo Park you can apply directly.

GS/MS are better than CS, CS is better than UBS.

-- Interview Guides GMAT Tutors WSO Resume Review --- Current: Senior Analyst - Hedge Fund Past: Associate - Tech Buyout Analyst - Morgan St
 

bb.MandA.3rdyear,

Would you happen to know what the bonus for 1st and 2nd year analysts has been for MS - Tech (Menlo Park) and GS(SF) - TMT ?

I know the compensation structure has a base of usually $55,000 / $60,000 plus a variable bonus ?

I heard the bonus varies between 30,000 - 50,000. Is that correct for 1st year analysts ?

 
"nickyyon" If possible, could someone hear help to summarize the tech value chain/supply chain? I know its rather vague though.

Yeah, would like to know as well

Array
 

You're fine. At the analyst level, being in a tech group does not prohibit you from joining a generalist PE firm or even one with a different industry focus. It will make your life easier if you're interested in joining a tech specific PE firm. Just to give you an example, take a look at the associates at ABRY Partners...

~~~~~~~~~~~ CompBanker

CompBanker’s Career Guidance Services: https://www.rossettiadvisors.com/
 

turns out all comp sci classes can be taken pass/fail. intro to java is the first course in the sequence. is java worth knowing?

 

If you do a technical minor/major, the only place it helps is in interviews -- you could really lobby how interested you are in the space and point to your coursework as proof of your interest. But as far as the work goes, it's just about the businesses' fundamentals.

Stick with boosting your GPA as high as you can or go with Turtles' advice on getting experience at a top-notch tech company.

 

Listen to the rising sophomore with the certified user star ...

I am permanently behind on PMs, it's not personal.
 
Best Response

I work in a Tech M&A group at the moment and can say the CS majors I've met have been among the most competent people here, not because they know the industry better, but because knowing how a computer actually functions will make you a lot more fucking efficient when you're stuck in front of one for 90 hours a week. CS just happens to lend itself well to shaping logical and process oriented individuals; a solid handle on those qualities will help a person succeed at pretty much anything they choose, not just banking

Regarding actual application of "Tech knowledge": In general, you'll never need to know how an application software was created, you just need to know how it works, how it makes money, and how to convince someone it could make even more money (with your help & at the right price).

Besides, there will be people in your group that have never coded a day in their life and just studied Econ, but have spent every day of the last 2 years reading TechMeme/TechCrunch/VentureBeat/etc and will know more about the space than every programmer in the group anyway.

“Millionaires don't use astrology, billionaires do”
 
Nouveau RichieI work in a Tech M&A group at the moment and can say the CS majors I've met have been among the most competent people here, not because they know the industry better, but because knowing how a computer actually functions will make you a lot more fucking efficient when you're stuck in front of one for 90 hours a week. CS just happens to lend itself well to shaping logical and process oriented individuals; a solid handle on those qualities will help a person succeed at pretty much anything they choose, not just banking

Regarding actual application of "Tech knowledge": In general, you'll never need to know how an application software was created, you just need to know how it works, how it makes money, and how to convince someone it could make even more money (with your help & at the right price).

Besides, there will be people in your group that have never coded a day in their life and just studied Econ, but have spent every day of the last 2 years reading TechMeme/TechCrunch/VentureBeat/etc and will know more about the space than every programmer in the group anyway.

"Besides, there will be people in your group that have never coded a day in their life and just studied Econ, but have spent every day of the last 2 years reading TechMeme/TechCrunch/VentureBeat/etc and will know more about the space than every programmer in the group anyway."

The CS who contents himself with being a nerd is not even in the same labor market as the tech financier.

 

You won't really use skills like Java in Investment Banking, so adding a minor/major is something you should do because you're interested in it (not to gain banking-relevant skills). If you're the type that took on an engineering/CS major or something, it is noticed and helps to convey your interest in that space.

Other than that, tech relevant roles help for sure (like if you interned at Facebook or something).

At the end of the day, though, networking hard with the TMT-tech groups is probably the biggest thing you can do.

 

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