#1 Your School Matters #2 Networking Matters even More #3 Have a strong LinkedIn Game #4 Do not rely on others #5 Prepare for the HireVue interview #6 Be Focused #7 Be Persistent
This is a great video. I think that after you get the internship you should also try to talk or have "coffee chats" with as many people as possible during that internship. This increases your chances of getting a full-time offer. I am in the same boat. Good luck!!
Don't rely on others is key here, specifically not taking everything a senior or peer says at face value. Only realize it when it happens, not before! Keep your doors open
Thanks for the info. I myself have applied to 100+ finance internships so far, hoping to apply to more. I’ve sent dozens of emails trying to network, and I’ve only been successful with connecting to a few analyst across several companies. I don’t think I’ve even been close to attaining a spot in a superday and I honestly feel extremely lost right now. With the amount of time I’ve put it I’m really close to giving up, but I want to keep going until I get a great internship. Really just not sure what to do at this point.
I know it’s a tough situation to be in, and at times it’s easy to feel super discouraged, but the most important thing is to not give up. Remember, at the end of the process the only thing that matters is one “yes”.
I feel the same way. I've applied to over 50 and have been getting rejection letters after rejection letters. I really wanted to go into investment banking, but it seems so competitive that I also applied to many asset management, wealth management, consulting, etc positions. At this point, I don't know what more I need to do to improve my chances of getting an internship for 2023 internships which will be my junior year.
@@naeembakht7157 I actually received an offer for an internship that was finance related and ended up doing it over the summer. Recently, I accepted an offer as a business analyst for a financial institution, so I’m proud to say that everything worked out eventually. 👍
Great tips! I really can’t emphasis LinkedIn enough for expanding your network and finding job/intern opportunities. Also I would add the importance of commenting/liking/contributing in some way in other connections posts as this really increases your visibility.
Cameron, I’m an FP&A co-op for a utility company here in Tampa and just started about two weeks ago. I know I haven’t had a complete experience since I just started and the position is temporarily remote (you know why) but I just feel as if im not learning anything and there was no structured training or anything. The other co-op works opposing shifts to mine so we have barely had one conversation. I had mentioned this to the other co-op about how I feel like im not doing anything productive and im just getting paid to do nothing really, but in my back of my head I know I must be doing something or working on a particular task. The other co-op told me that when he started out it was the same and that he would just go over the financials of the company and try to understand them but that’s about it. The FP&A team have told me to look at the project models and try to understand them, however it’s difficult to understand what they mean when you probably only looked at models once in school lol. It’s a stressful situation and im not trying to overthink it. Any tips would help if you have any!
Also, I did want to mention I have received an offer for a tech company to do an internship with them for FP&A in clearwater for the summer of this year. Which I will likely take if I don’t get an extension on my co-op (I graduate this sem)
I would definitely go for that tech position for this summer. As far as your current situation goes, I would just try to ask as many questions as possible and try to show your superiors that you’re doing your best and want to learn. All you really can do in that position.
I’m kind of in a similar role as a FP&A Co-op at a Fortune 500. Some tips id have is to try and connect with your supervisor as much as possible. Talk to him and see how the structure works for your department and what would be expected for you. Another aspect that helped a lot would be meeting with your supervisor every month to go over your progress, what your doing well and what you can improve on. If you think you can see yourself at the company, tell your supervisor that. My supervisor had me attend 5 or 6 meetings with different department leaders and I learned so much about the Company. Hope this helps!
@@drp8604 a lot has changed since I posted that comment. I actually found myself work to do and they even helped me apply to an open position within the company, they said they would get back to me later though, but I’m liking the vibe of the company mostly the people.
That video was super amazing and provided a insight into getting a internship. I want to prepare for a fintech internship but have no clue. Would love your guidance if possible.🙂
Yes, but there are very few of them, and they are usually extremely competetive. Some I know about include McKinsey, JP Morgan, and Deloitte. You could probably find more by looking up finance internships for freshmen. Don't apply for the ones classified as Programs or Summer Analyst because those are reserved for sophomores and above.
Yes, sorry. I thought I had answered this question but it must’ve been one similar. Eric was right, most of the “Summer Analyst” and Development Program roles are pretty strictly focused towards students going into their senior year for that summer (current juniors). But like Eric said, there are some “Insight Programs” or “Summits” that are available for students to apply to. These are pretty limited, but they are out there.
Also, for smaller companies (local or not) they might just be looking for interns to file papers and do random administrative tasks, so for those it shouldn’t matter as much that you’re a freshman. At this point it’s just important to make the connections and have something to show on your resume, even if it doesn’t directly correlate with your career aspirations.
I’m an electrical engineering student and I want to enter the finance field as an analyst. What do you suggest? Or what are your thoughts on that? (I am thinking of writing CFA level 1 and SIE exam by the end of this year and I graduate next may)
I think it’s definitely possible. Engineering is a very valuable major, and the technical aspect can certainly be applied to finance. CFA1 will give you a bit more financial expertise, which will help if you don’t come in with any prior finance internships.
Hey Kevin- My spreadsheet actually wasn't quite as informative as I made it out to be in the video. You'd be much better off just making your own since I didn't add links or specific roles on my spreadsheet for each application. If you need any help let me know!
I think school matters for certain finance jobs more than others. Depends on what you want to do within finance. Finance encompasses such a large amount of careers that you have to be more specific as to what you want to do. If you want to get an investment banking internship then yes your school matters. If you want to do commercial banking or internal corporate FP&A for instance, school matters less.
I definitely agree. I do feel that anyone can work their way up to major roles regardless of education, but some jobs aren't going to be attainable right out of college without the right "brand" behind you.
I’m going to be joining Regions Bank this summer. I got the internship independently, but the school also has so many resources for finding great internships.
Hello! You can try to apply to Consumerchoice (a Singapore-based company)! I'm currently an HR intern there and their OJT Program is realllyyy good. If you're interested, you can email us at internship@consumerchoice.com for more info! Thanks and stay safe! :)
Good video! Just wondering what kind of relevant experience did you posses when applying for these internships as a rising senior? I am a sophomore in economics right now and am trying to chart a course to set myself up for good placement.
Great question. After my freshman year I worked as an Estate Planning Intern at my father’s law firm. This obviously doesn’t directly relate to finance, but it gave me valuable work experience that I could translate into a lot of “buzz words” on my current resume. After my sophomore year, I had an internship as a Summer Research Analyst at a local hedge fund. This was an incredible opportunity, and although it wasn’t super technical and intense it still provided me with insight into a career in the finance industry, which gave me plenty of material to talk about on my resume and in interviews. Hope this helped!
The Patagonia, the "Conquer, Dominate" posters... God, American investment bankers are insufferably cringe. Learn some class like the British investment bankers!
Thankyou very great video and tell me this master in finance or mba in finance matter or undergraduate degree in finance is sufficient and if does please give me the target 25 to 40 target school as I am international students
Thank you for sharing this experience. Very very helpful and its always a relief to see that I am not the only one struggling to break into WS. 😌
Happy to share! We’re all in this together.
#1 Your School Matters
#2 Networking Matters even More
#3 Have a strong LinkedIn Game
#4 Do not rely on others
#5 Prepare for the HireVue interview
#6 Be Focused
#7 Be Persistent
Is this how I know I made it?
@@Galbra1th I think so! Great video btw! You have a talent for communicating clearly.
This is a great video. I think that after you get the internship you should also try to talk or have "coffee chats" with as many people as possible during that internship. This increases your chances of getting a full-time offer. I am in the same boat. Good luck!!
Agreed. Great advice!
Don't rely on others is key here, specifically not taking everything a senior or peer says at face value. Only realize it when it happens, not before! Keep your doors open
100%
Great video. A lot of people need this.
I agree!
Boss shit G, you’re doing better than 95% of these finance youtube gurus!
Haha I appreciate it!!
wow, amazing speech, esp the dimond digging
Thank you!
Thanks from a current UF finance student!
Gator Nation represent!
Thank you for this videos! I am applying for internships for next summer and your advice has been really helpful!
Thanks for watching Nicolas! Really appreciate the support and best of luck on the journey ahead!
Thanks for the info. I myself have applied to 100+ finance internships so far, hoping to apply to more. I’ve sent dozens of emails trying to network, and I’ve only been successful with connecting to a few analyst across several companies. I don’t think I’ve even been close to attaining a spot in a superday and I honestly feel extremely lost right now. With the amount of time I’ve put it I’m really close to giving up, but I want to keep going until I get a great internship. Really just not sure what to do at this point.
I know it’s a tough situation to be in, and at times it’s easy to feel super discouraged, but the most important thing is to not give up. Remember, at the end of the process the only thing that matters is one “yes”.
I feel the same way. I've applied to over 50 and have been getting rejection letters after rejection letters. I really wanted to go into investment banking, but it seems so competitive that I also applied to many asset management, wealth management, consulting, etc positions. At this point, I don't know what more I need to do to improve my chances of getting an internship for 2023 internships which will be my junior year.
Any luck? Or did you give up
@@naeembakht7157 I actually received an offer for an internship that was finance related and ended up doing it over the summer. Recently, I accepted an offer as a business analyst for a financial institution, so I’m proud to say that everything worked out eventually. 👍
Let’s goooo! Congratulations!
Great tips! I really can’t emphasis LinkedIn enough for expanding your network and finding job/intern opportunities.
Also I would add the importance of commenting/liking/contributing in some way in other connections posts as this really increases your visibility.
Facts. Thanks Joseph!
@@Galbra1th No worries, thank you !
I big thank you for this video. All my love and postive vibes.❤️🌻
Thank you!
Thanks a lot !!!! What a great idea I was truly needed to hear this.
Happy to help!
Man tip #4 couldn't be more true. Great advice, keep up the awesome work!
Saddened to hear you can relate, but glad you enjoyed the video!
I appreciate the effort and sharing the experience. It means a lot to us. Thank you Sir. You made my day. 😊😊😊
Of course! Glad you enjoyed the video - thanks for watching!
Cameron, I’m an FP&A co-op for a utility company here in Tampa and just started about two weeks ago. I know I haven’t had a complete experience since I just started and the position is temporarily remote (you know why) but I just feel as if im not learning anything and there was no structured training or anything. The other co-op works opposing shifts to mine so we have barely had one conversation. I had mentioned this to the other co-op about how I feel like im not doing anything productive and im just getting paid to do nothing really, but in my back of my head I know I must be doing something or working on a particular task. The other co-op told me that when he started out it was the same and that he would just go over the financials of the company and try to understand them but that’s about it. The FP&A team have told me to look at the project models and try to understand them, however it’s difficult to understand what they mean when you probably only looked at models once in school lol. It’s a stressful situation and im not trying to overthink it. Any tips would help if you have any!
Also, I did want to mention I have received an offer for a tech company to do an internship with them for FP&A in clearwater for the summer of this year. Which I will likely take if I don’t get an extension on my co-op (I graduate this sem)
I would definitely go for that tech position for this summer. As far as your current situation goes, I would just try to ask as many questions as possible and try to show your superiors that you’re doing your best and want to learn. All you really can do in that position.
I’m kind of in a similar role as a FP&A Co-op at a Fortune 500. Some tips id have is to try and connect with your supervisor as much as possible. Talk to him and see how the structure works for your department and what would be expected for you. Another aspect that helped a lot would be meeting with your supervisor every month to go over your progress, what your doing well and what you can improve on. If you think you can see yourself at the company, tell your supervisor that. My supervisor had me attend 5 or 6 meetings with different department leaders and I learned so much about the Company. Hope this helps!
This is great advice!
@@drp8604 a lot has changed since I posted that comment. I actually found myself work to do and they even helped me apply to an open position within the company, they said they would get back to me later though, but I’m liking the vibe of the company mostly the people.
Great vid. Thanks brodie. Hoping to secure 2022
Appreciate it man! Best of luck.
not the patagonia sweatshirt lmfaooo good advice bro keep it up
Hahaha had to do it for the memes
It’s disheartening at this point after 120 applications and never a interview
Trust the process!
Great content very insightful and beneficial !
Thank you!
Appreciate your sharing. All the best!
Thanks! You too
Yo nice video, don’t know if you are still here at UF, but go Gators and I’m going to Merrill Lynch this summer.
Just watched, I’m trying to expand my LinkedIn, lmk if I can add you.
Appreciate it! I’m still here for another week and then I’m graduating. Best of luck!
@@Galbra1th congratulations! Have fun in the real world.
9:35 are you talking about JPM? If so the exact same thing happened to me
Nah not JPM haha. But I’m sorry to hear that :/
Thanks man, super helpful!
No problem! Happy to hear.
I’ve had a similar experience with 4 recruiters like that 😕😕
Sorry to hear. I wish you the best of luck!
Great video, Thanks a lot!
I appreciate it!
Back in the day after I got an offer, I had to provide my transcripts for an internship! Is it the same today?
Yep, still the same! Nowadays they often ask for an unofficial transcript as part of the actual application.
That video was super amazing and provided a insight into getting a internship. I want to prepare for a fintech internship but have no clue. Would love your guidance if possible.🙂
I really appreciate it! If you want to talk more you can reach out on IG - @Galbra1th
amazing mentality!!
Thank you!!
Patagonia jackets Lmao.. WS man
Do companies accept internships from freshmen?
And if not, what should I be doing freshman year summer?
Yes, but there are very few of them, and they are usually extremely competetive. Some I know about include McKinsey, JP Morgan, and Deloitte. You could probably find more by looking up finance internships for freshmen. Don't apply for the ones classified as Programs or Summer Analyst because those are reserved for sophomores and above.
Yes, sorry. I thought I had answered this question but it must’ve been one similar. Eric was right, most of the “Summer Analyst” and Development Program roles are pretty strictly focused towards students going into their senior year for that summer (current juniors). But like Eric said, there are some “Insight Programs” or “Summits” that are available for students to apply to. These are pretty limited, but they are out there.
Also, for smaller companies (local or not) they might just be looking for interns to file papers and do random administrative tasks, so for those it shouldn’t matter as much that you’re a freshman. At this point it’s just important to make the connections and have something to show on your resume, even if it doesn’t directly correlate with your career aspirations.
What double major would you recommend, Finance- Accounting or Finance- Economics?
That’s a tough question. All depends on what you want to do and what your school is more known for.
I would say no4 messed this summers for me :( he’s totally right. It hirts more than anything
Sorry to hear that. Wishing you the best of luck on your journey!
I’m an electrical engineering student and I want to enter the finance field as an analyst. What do you suggest? Or what are your thoughts on that? (I am thinking of writing CFA level 1 and SIE exam by the end of this year and I graduate next may)
I think it’s definitely possible. Engineering is a very valuable major, and the technical aspect can certainly be applied to finance. CFA1 will give you a bit more financial expertise, which will help if you don’t come in with any prior finance internships.
if u apply to so many firms wont u be destroying relationships when u have to eventually turn some down when u get multiple offers?
any updates where you work now?
Just posted a new video talking about my role!
Hey love your video is there anyway you can share your spreadsheets ???
Hey Kevin- My spreadsheet actually wasn't quite as informative as I made it out to be in the video. You'd be much better off just making your own since I didn't add links or specific roles on my spreadsheet for each application. If you need any help let me know!
Where is your desk from? I’m looking for one just like it
Pretty sure it’s just an “Amazon Basics.” Got it on Amazon for $80. Great deal.
I'm a freshman at my college and few alumni are in investment banking any advice for networking
Reach out to them!! Start those connections early!
@@Galbra1th I did. All 6 have not gotten back. Any additional advice
What website can k use to apply
LinkedIn will consolidate a lot. Otherwise you’ll have to go to their individual careers websites.
where did you end up landing?
Ended up with Regions Bank, but I’m working for KPMG consulting in NYC after graduation.
I think school matters for certain finance jobs more than others. Depends on what you want to do within finance. Finance encompasses such a large amount of careers that you have to be more specific as to what you want to do. If you want to get an investment banking internship then yes your school matters. If you want to do commercial banking or internal corporate FP&A for instance, school matters less.
I definitely agree. I do feel that anyone can work their way up to major roles regardless of education, but some jobs aren't going to be attainable right out of college without the right "brand" behind you.
What is the salary range?
Really depends on the role and city.
so how much did you actually get in. and which ones was it.
I got several offers. I eventually decided to go with Regions Bank. I have numerous videos talking about that experience.
Great Video
Thank you!!
Would you use LinkedIn to apply to the internships?
Depends on the application. I certainly did use LinkedIn for many of them.
Hey Cameron, I was curious to which company you got an internship with? I am curious because I am also thinking of attending UF as a transfer student.
I’m going to be joining Regions Bank this summer. I got the internship independently, but the school also has so many resources for finding great internships.
Hello! You can try to apply to Consumerchoice (a Singapore-based company)! I'm currently an HR intern there and their OJT Program is realllyyy good. If you're interested, you can email us at internship@consumerchoice.com for more info! Thanks and stay safe! :)
Citi bank has anti nepo policies no?
hey man nice video. How do I get your spread sheet?
Which spreadsheet? The one with all the internships I applied for?
Yes
Is it a good idea for an economics major to intern at facebook?
If you have the opportunity that would be an incredible internship.
Are you really asking this question?
@@tinat5484 I dont remember asking you this question LOL
No sound
I just checked and it seems all good on my end..
@@Galbra1th its just really quiet. Have to turn volume up all the way to hear u and ur still quiet
@@Galbra1th it's too low i cannot listen
@@wiwisjxkalnz Yeah sorry about that. Not much I can do post-production. It sounds fine on my computer. Maybe try some different headphones?
Turn it up then
Good video! Just wondering what kind of relevant experience did you posses when applying for these internships as a rising senior? I am a sophomore in economics
right now and am trying to chart a course to set myself up for good placement.
Great question. After my freshman year I worked as an Estate Planning Intern at my father’s law firm. This obviously doesn’t directly relate to finance, but it gave me valuable work experience that I could translate into a lot of “buzz words” on my current resume. After my sophomore year, I had an internship as a Summer Research Analyst at a local hedge fund. This was an incredible opportunity, and although it wasn’t super technical and intense it still provided me with insight into a career in the finance industry, which gave me plenty of material to talk about on my resume and in interviews. Hope this helped!
Good content, however, could've been concised to 4 minutes.
Agreed. But then I wouldn’t be able to throw in any mid-roll ads haha
Go Gators!
Go Gators indeed!
uncle this video not enjoyed because video volume so low
Sorry about that..
100 😂 down bad
Low key
The Patagonia, the "Conquer, Dominate" posters... God, American investment bankers are insufferably cringe. Learn some class like the British investment bankers!
You can buy school but you can’t buy class
@@Galbra1th You're just proving my point.
@@sanktalucia4959 emerging market behavior
men the sound is TRASH
Grow up dawg
A bunch of blabbering
True
Thankyou very great video and tell me this master in finance or mba in finance matter or undergraduate degree in finance is sufficient and if does please give me the target 25 to 40 target school as I am international students
Depends on your timeline. Both are great, but a solid MBA program would be like 9 years away if you still need to decide on undergrad.