Recruiting Sophomores for Investment Banking Internships

How signing offers 14 months in advance hurts students in the long run

Journey Hayes
ILLUMINATION

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Photo by Sherzod Max on Unsplash

“To find this young talent, the I-banks send their manicured young bankers out to the Whartons, Harvards and Princetons of the world to roll out the red carpet for the top undergraduates and begin the process of destroying whatever noble ideals the youngsters have left.” — John Rolfe, Monkey Business: Swinging Through The Wall Street Jungle

I signed my offer for a prestigious junior-year investment banking internship in April. Sounds pretty standard, right?

Oh, wait— to clarify, April of my sophomore year, 14 months before the internship began.

I was on the early side. After all, diversity programs (read: accelerated interviews) designed for women and minorities typically occur a few months in advance of the normal recruitment process.

However, my friends in the general interview pool still signed offers in May, June, and July — a full 11–13 months before our internships actually started.

Let’s dive into what happened, how interviews initially moved earlier, why nothing will change, and how early offers ultimately hurt students.

Winter, 2018: The initial interview…

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Journey Hayes
ILLUMINATION

Senior studying Finance at a top ten undergraduate business school. Business, life, productivity, and everything else. Follow me on Twitter! @journey_hayes