Tuesday, July 15, 2008

How To Answer Investment Banking Fit Interview Questions

If you've managed to land investment banking interviews, you need to keep in mind 3 big themes as you go through interviews and try to get a job:

* You can "burn the midnight oil" - you work hard, consistently.
* You "don't shake the Jello" - you do not make mistakes.
* You "want to be Gordon Gekko" - you love business and finance.

Burn The Midnight Oil
More than just claiming you "work really hard" you need very specific stories here. When I was interviewing for these jobs in my senior year of college I discussed my experience working at a big company and how I regularly put in 100 hours a week and lived at the office toward the end of my internship there.

How can you show just how hard you work?

* Starting your own company: Not even banking is this much work.
* Taking leadership of a large project that takes several months to complete.
* Working 2-3 jobs at once and multi-tasking all the time.
* Running a political campaign over many months.

Don't talk about Finals Week or how you worked hard for 1-2 weeks with something. In banking you'll often be exhausted for months at a time, so come up with something at least this long in duration.

Don't Shake The Jello
As a junior investment banker, your most important duty will be checking numbers and not making mistakes. As with showing your interviewers that you can burn the midnight oil, you need specific stories here to stand out.

The way to show your attention to detail is by emphasizing that whatever you did was used by real, paying customers or read/viewed by a lot of people. Having wide exposure implies that you had to get your work right.

A perfect example of this kind of experience would be running a website or publication with thousands of daily readers. If you were editor of this publication, you would have to spend hours checking for mistakes and errors before publishing anything. And by relaying such a story, you could get across your leadership abilities as well.

If you have nothing like this, make a list of every single organization you've been in and every single project you've worked on over the past 3-4 years. Find the one where you were most attentive to detail and speak to that.

Want To Be Gordon Gekko
Even if you're not quite Mr. Gekko himself, you have to convince me that you're actually interested in finance.

This sounds elementary but you'd be surprised how many people don't do this. Why are you applying for this job if you're not interested in it? Yes, it pays a lot of money but you'll never be able to stick with it unless you're genuinely interested in the industry.

Here's an example dialog showing how to convey your interest in an industry:

Interviewer: "Tell me about a market you're interested in."

You: "I really enjoy following the alternative energy industry because it's so new. There has been a lot of activity lately in the solar cell manufacturer sector, driven by technological breakthroughs and favorable government subsidies worldwide."

Interviewer: "Did you invest in any companies? It seems like there's a lot of hype surrounding everything solar."

You: "I agree, most solar companies are overvalued. After researching the major companies, I invested in Solar Company X a year ago. They were trading at a discount to their competitors, despite growing at a 50% rate with 10% profit margins. And their Price To Earnings ratio was only around 30 rather than the 40 to 50 other companies had."

Interviewer: "Sounds good, but why were they valued so much lower than the competition?"

You: "They came in below earnings expectations just before I invested, and announced expansion plans and new capital expenditures at the same time. Investors questioned why they were spending more and more on product development when they were getting less profitable."

Interviewer: "So why did you invest anyway?"

You: "I found a much stronger correlation between annual stock returns and growth compared to profitability. Investors were focusing on short-term results instead of thinking long-term and looking at other companies in the industry. It is a nascent, high-growth industry so growth matters more than short-term profits."

This response shows you've put some thought into this stock pick and can explain in simple terms the qualitative and quantitative reasons for investing.
It's important to do both because candidates often focus on one or the other without considering the whole picture.

Ian Spellfield, a former investment banker, advises students and young professionals on
understanding investment banking and how to get an investment banking summer internship.

Article Source:
http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Ian_Spellfield

Investment Banking Interview

2 comments:

kriss said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
kriss said...

wow :-)
seems like me last interview... and i'm in ;-)