DONT DO ON-CYCLE...If you’re not prepared
A little rant that is hopefully helpful for you incoming 1st year analysts.
To start off — No, I don’t know when on-cycle will kick off this year.
That being said, in the previous cycle, we saw far too many analysts jump into recruiting when they clearly weren’t ready.
To give you some background on UMM/MF interview processes... my interviews with my firm (MF) lasted from about 8am - 4pm and I met with more than 10 ppl. Interviews are extremely technical. There are cases, models, mental-math, etc, and they WILL ding you for very small mistakes. I’ve talked to many analysts who assume the bar is lower because recruiting is so early. NOT TRUE
By jumping into on-cycle recruiting because you’re excited and everyone else is doing it, you could really put yourself in a bad spot. If you interview with a handful of firms and get no offers, you won’t get a second chance with them. Also, the HH’s you worked with will be less helpful for you in future processes.
WAIT until you are really, really ready. As in over-prepared. Our firm, and many others, intentionally leave many seats open to recruit bankers starting their second years who choose to wait a year before recruiting.
Just something to keep in mind for you new, eager bankers.
What qualities should someone look for in themselves to indicate their readiness?
Do mocks with PE associates in your network. That was my best gauge. Practice timed modeling tests and case studies in interview-like environments. These should be second nature and if you’re struggling with any portion of them... you’re not ready.
Have people grill you on deal experience. Everything from high-level rational to niche metrics. If it’s on the resume you should know everything. If you don’t... not ready
Make sure you can nail variations of the advanced LBO/Accounting technicals in many of the guides. You should also be able to quickly run through paper LBO’s using mental math.
The list goes on and on, but you get the idea. You’re competing with over 1,000 bankers, many of whom think they’re going to Blackstone. Most top firms hire maybe 4-8 people in a given cycle. Not trying to scare you, but there really is no room for mistakes
OK, buddy. Don't go around thinking the ocmpetition is that stiff. There are not "1,000 bankers" competing for PE shops. Most of them don't even get interviews cuz they come from shitty banks and won't even get any exit opps. Realistically, you're maybe only competing against 50-60 bankers max that are good for the top positions. The UMM / MMM places are not that hard to get jobs at. Look at how many PE firms there are nowadays.
this must be a shit post
I think this guy is just trying to scare people off so he can get the UMM / MF offers himself. Make it easier on himself.
Maybe they were too techincal for you because you weren't prepared yourself.
Ever think about that?
Assuming this is a troll, but in the case that it’s not... lol
I only interviewed with 1 firm because I got the offer and accepted on the spot. I’m sharing this post because I’ve seen a lot of kids get screwed over by how ridiculously early these processes are. No point in rushing, if you’re not ready.
Ask any headhunter that works with top firms and they’ll give you the same advice.
Couple of questions:
1) Any resources you used to help prepare yourself best?
2) How important was networking in your process?
3) What size of fund are you at (UMM/MM/MF)? Thanks!
how long did it take you to prep?
bump
Half true. Yes, there will be more spots available for off-cycle now and for second years. However, interviewers and PE firms are more aware that kids will not be as strong if they choose to recruit on-cycle. This doesn't mean it is impossible to recruit, but make sure you are ready. Technicals matter but only as a check the box metric. No major mistakes and you should be fine. At this level, we sort of assume most people who are at out interview process (coming from Bulge bracket or independent banks) will have good enough modeling experience by the end of two years; technicals are just to make sure you prepped enough and care enough to try. Fit matters a lot more -- can this guy be good talking to management teams? Can he potentially be a partner?
IQ matters as well. Modeling isn't hard -- its all about reps. However, we do care about whether an analyst can think critically. Is this company a good investment? Why or why not? Are you asking the right questions? etc. The advice I would give to anyone is recruit on-cycle if you can build a reasonable LBO and know your technicals, and if you KNOW you want to do PE
Incoming analyst at a mid BB in a satellite office. Do you think it would be worth it to lateral to NY top Bb and wait a year for oncycle next year? Also, how much the SAT score matter?
Quidem tenetur nostrum esse aut. Rerum est esse dolores eveniet est eos. Rerum voluptate qui doloremque possimus. Odio impedit laudantium voluptas libero aut blanditiis dicta magni.
Eum ut beatae eos aut quo minus. Animi similique modi soluta similique architecto. Quod consectetur itaque ratione molestias laboriosam.
Fugit sunt a consectetur nemo ea. Et aspernatur maxime consequatur. Voluptatum veniam autem aut iusto dolorem repellendus qui ipsa. Repellendus sed at in culpa placeat dolor. Dolorem voluptatem ab est dicta. Illo consequatur facilis exercitationem magnam qui autem. Consequuntur aut nostrum qui accusantium facere error amet.
Tenetur nostrum voluptatum autem aliquid incidunt ea molestiae. Rerum quaerat voluptate possimus vel eveniet adipisci. Numquam hic ut tempora et. Expedita corrupti non magni ratione et.
See All Comments - 100% Free
WSO depends on everyone being able to pitch in when they know something. Unlock with your email and get bonus: 6 financial modeling lessons free ($199 value)
or Unlock with your social account...