DonnieDrastic
MSFHQ,
Are you able to touch on the background profiles of domestic students which land IB jobs coming out of MSF programs? I've been browsing a few graduate forums that cover the MSF and some of the people going into MSF programs and I'm always a little distraught by the posts sharing how domestic students which come into the programs with good undergraduate backgrounds, do well in the MSF, and claim to have been actively networking yet come out the other end with no offer in hand, at least not in whichever particular field they were gunning for. Granted, this is the Internet and a lot of the things floating around can be outright lies, but have you personally seen students with backgrounds like the one above fail in terms of getting their target job? What would you mostly attribute that failure to?
EDIT: For example, I've seen people mention how they have come across MSF students with previous IB internships (likely boutique, I'm assuming) land no full-time IB jobs coming out of MSF programs while other students with no previous IB internships or experience land full-time IB jobs. My guess is that the student with the experience not landing the full-time job wasn't able to impress their interviewers how the student without the experience was?
Getting into banking isn't rocket science. It is a function of networking, coming off well, getting interviews and executing on these interviews. When researching programs you should try and find out how many students interview for jobs they want. Placements are on the student at the end of the day.
Some students party too much in school. Some struggle in graduate school and don't effectively network. Some get interviews, but do poorly. Some run into tough hiring cycles. All really depends.