Turning an informational interview into a possible job opp.

I joined the recruiting season relatively late. I've been cold calling and emailing a bunch of i-banks. One of them asked for my resume and said they are not actively hiring, but would like to me with me. I am meeting with the MD/head of the group that I want to be in.

My question is, how do I convert this informational meeting into an interview? Also, if they are fully staffed or at budget capacity, is it appropriate to offer to work at a discount if I think they like me enough, but it's just admin issue standing in the way of hiring me? Any other words of wisdom would be helpful.

16 Comments
 

Offering to work at a discount is selling yourself short. Just be yourself and have a good conversation. This is, in fact, an interview. If he likes you, he made find you a position. Don't bring up a job, he knows why you're there.

A lot of hires start out this way.

 

If you are smart and ambitious and genuinely want to get people's advice, they'd be happy to help you and if they like you they will try to help you get a job as well. But it's important to remain humble and just try to learn from them as opposed to actually "using" them to get a job.

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I actually came of like an ass, I look forward to helping kids out like I need. I just don't want them to feel like I'm using them if I want them to eventually forward my resume.

 

This is how I got my (ER) SA. I knew the portfolio manager on a limited basis since I had to deal with him on a few occasions during trade settlement issues. I just emailed him and asked for an informational chat. He did and was really upfront about not having an internship.

Well, after the phone call, I wrote 4 emails over a 6 month span and I ended up with a real interview. I found out a few weeks after I had been hired that both PMs on my $15B fund started in trade settlement and neither went to a target (both went to MBA programs ranked 20-30). Turns out they liked the chance to bring in someone from a non-target for a change.

 

Check out (in Wall Street Mentor's forum) the interview with Scott Morris at the top of the list of 200 banks.

It's not JUST about learning about the company (although this can be helpful). You want to talk to these people about their experience. People LOVE talking about themselves, By showing interest in what they're doing and where they've come from your developing a rapport with them in the hopes that they begin to see you as a person and like you. That will help you, at the very least, pull a first round interview (not guarantee, help).

"You stop being an asshole when it sucks to be you." -IlliniProgrammer "Your grammar made me wish I'd been aborted." -happypantsmcgee
 
Best Response

I should tell you I've never even tried to meet up for an informational interview. That being said, from what I've seen on here and from common sense, you're trying to build a rapport with someone to give you a leg up on the competition. You do that by subtly appealing to their ego. That doesn't mean asking someone directly, "so why don't you tell me about yourself?" That's a little broad. Ask questions like:

What made you choose to do XXX? Follow up: That's very interesting, and why did YYY Company appeal to you over all the other companies out there? When you were in school, what did you do to better prepare yourself for a career in finance? Follow up: Wow, that sounds like it was really exciting, did you find that that helped a lot or is there something you wish you had done while you were in school?

Basically the point is to make the interview interesting and educating for you, while letting him/her talk about what a badass they are.

"You stop being an asshole when it sucks to be you." -IlliniProgrammer "Your grammar made me wish I'd been aborted." -happypantsmcgee
 

Just like sex, if you're unsatisfied after an informational interview it means you are not doing it right.

"Greed, in all of its forms; greed for life, for money, for love, for knowledge has marked the upward surge of mankind. And greed, you mark my words, will not only save Teldar Paper, but that other malfunctioning corporation called the USA."
 

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