Close with a couple guys at Lincoln. Really strong culture and pay street, sometimes better depending on performance. They’ve been given a bad rep due to an analyst passing away, but from everything I’ve heard the culture is actually pretty good (at least in terms of banking). They have high dealflow by volume and most transactions range between $100-300M, but they’ve recently had a few push towards $1B. Big international focus as well.

I have less insight on Blair, Baird, and Stifel but they are all well-regarded. Don’t know as much on B. Riley. Can’t really go wrong with any of these firms.

 

I think the thumbs down was because the info regarding deal size is not accurate. Lincoln has a solid culture and awesome deal flow by volume, but they do mostly lower value deals certainly not "most" in the 100-300 range. Vast majority will be <100. That may not matter, but it is in contrast to the traditional MM leaders (Baird/Blair, etc.)

 
Most Helpful
Associate 2 in IB-M&amp;A:
Has anyone worked at any of these firms, or heard anything about the cultures, deal flow, organization, management, hours, etc? Any insight would be great. Thanks -

Going to be a bit group/office dependent

In aggregate:

Blair (HC, tech, business services all strong groups) Baird (very good industrials, business services)

Lincoln (decent culture, smaller deals than the two above, on average - the quality of materials gap between the tiers cannot be ignored) Stifel (bigger deals, but lower volume, lots of shit work, pitches, poor culture)

B. Riley (worst pay of the group, poor culture from what I've been told, weakest reputation and deal flow)

 

Baird and Blair are quite similar and generally regarded as the top in the middle market. I know Baird has seen like 6 straight years of record revenue and Blair has mirrored that growth. Both are also privately held, so bonuses are all cash and you have the ability to buy into the company which is pretty cool. Compensation is generous.

As noted above, Baird may have the strongest focus on industrials while Blair it's tech and healthcare--but we are splitting hairs. They are both top in the MM and see strong deal flow across the groups. Baird does have protected Saturdays, but hours will be fairly long and group dependent at either. Culture is subjective but there is a noticeable difference in people's attitudes at these midwest-based firms, and particularly these two with the private model.

Lincoln plays a bit below these two, newer overall, smaller size deals, but very strong deal flow by volume. Nearly exclusively sell-side M&A, vs. a Baird where you could still have some capital markets exposure (if that matters to you). Similar cultural benefit--but perhaps less structurally so.

I don't know anybody at Stifel and don't know anything about B Riley unfortunately so will refrain.

 

People may disagree, but generally I think that Blair & Baird have stronger brands than RBC, and maybe marginally so vs. Jefferies. They know what they are (MM) and are among the best at it, whereas I feel like the perception is RBC and Jefferies sometimes try to go upmarket, but then are not BBs...if that makes sense. Jefferies Houston is a different animal so I won't touch it.

Baird/Blair attract top talent who often self select for location, culture or MM (particularly post-MBA, healthy Booth/Kellogg representation). There seems to be wild longevity at both firms--maybe due to culture/private ownership model?

Lots of intangibles and subjectivity so perhaps that isn't helpful, but anecdotally, there were people at my school (top 10 MBA) who picked Baird/Blair over middle BBs (Barclays, Citi, CS) and a few who wanted Baird/Blair but got dinged landed at RBC, UBS, Wells, and HL.

Could be different from an analyst perspective.

 

Ad impedit minus praesentium velit debitis consequuntur. Soluta ut dolor repellat voluptatem velit et ut. Iste ex fugit rerum dolor non quis commodi.

At velit deserunt tempore fuga quia nihil repellendus. Eligendi rerum cum ipsum voluptas et voluptatibus. Dolores autem hic soluta vero amet aliquid.

Architecto molestiae est quidem illo. Itaque qui dignissimos ullam expedita. Veniam cupiditate dolor autem nobis provident reprehenderit. Sit quae exercitationem et repellendus. Reiciendis facilis harum eligendi voluptatibus laborum sed beatae. Voluptas asperiores explicabo consequatur odit.

Laborum nihil dolorum aliquid nam ab quam molestiae. Expedita quis sunt voluptatem ut. Beatae facilis cupiditate eius ea sapiente adipisci iste. Aspernatur sunt error et natus hic quaerat. Optio eius quasi at aliquid dicta voluptatem.

Career Advancement Opportunities

April 2024 Investment Banking

  • Jefferies & Company 02 99.4%
  • Goldman Sachs 19 98.8%
  • Harris Williams & Co. New 98.3%
  • Lazard Freres 02 97.7%
  • JPMorgan Chase 03 97.1%

Overall Employee Satisfaction

April 2024 Investment Banking

  • Harris Williams & Co. 18 99.4%
  • JPMorgan Chase 10 98.8%
  • Lazard Freres 05 98.3%
  • Morgan Stanley 07 97.7%
  • William Blair 03 97.1%

Professional Growth Opportunities

April 2024 Investment Banking

  • Lazard Freres 01 99.4%
  • Jefferies & Company 02 98.8%
  • Goldman Sachs 17 98.3%
  • Moelis & Company 07 97.7%
  • JPMorgan Chase 05 97.1%

Total Avg Compensation

April 2024 Investment Banking

  • Director/MD (5) $648
  • Vice President (19) $385
  • Associates (86) $261
  • 3rd+ Year Analyst (14) $181
  • Intern/Summer Associate (33) $170
  • 2nd Year Analyst (66) $168
  • 1st Year Analyst (205) $159
  • Intern/Summer Analyst (145) $101
notes
16 IB Interviews Notes

“... there’s no excuse to not take advantage of the resources out there available to you. Best value for your $ are the...”

Leaderboard

1
redever's picture
redever
99.2
2
Betsy Massar's picture
Betsy Massar
99.0
3
Secyh62's picture
Secyh62
99.0
4
BankonBanking's picture
BankonBanking
99.0
5
CompBanker's picture
CompBanker
98.9
6
GameTheory's picture
GameTheory
98.9
7
dosk17's picture
dosk17
98.9
8
kanon's picture
kanon
98.9
9
Jamoldo's picture
Jamoldo
98.8
10
DrApeman's picture
DrApeman
98.8
success
From 10 rejections to 1 dream investment banking internship

“... I believe it was the single biggest reason why I ended up with an offer...”