As far as I know, it's the equivalent of a cold sales job. You're going to be recommending/selling securities that may or may not pan out for your clients. You're going to be cold calling high income individuals all day who probably don't want to be bothered by some 20something stock broker. You must believe in the products you sell even if you don't. You'll only make money if you're one of the best & if you're willing to bust your ass. It's not a 9-5 in which you can sit back and do your job and bring in constant pay.

With that said, it can open up better sales opportunities like Institutional Sales and so forth.

That's really all I know.

 

It's sales. High turnover, inconsistent pay, no actual skill set (besides being able to sell, IF you're successful). Upside is if you're good (read: REALLY good) you can make solid money and move on to better sales jobs. Most people aren't good and don't cut it.

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

What I can say is your major matters more for which field is suited for you rather than your college. As a Physics major I'm not going to try and get into M&A or IB but I could get a good S&T position.

What college you go to will matter when it comes to which places will actually interview you. You would be surprised how hard it is to get interviews if you don't go to a target school of a BB firm. In fact, it's almost impossible to get an interview if you aren't in a target school and don't have a connection in the firm.

Once you get the internship, at least for S&T, it's a different story. After 10 weeks with you nobody really cares where you went to school, they either like you or they don't. The people that you will work with will come from Universities you probably have never heard of, and they could be a making a lot of money at a firm like CS or Goldman.

 

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