Becoming an associate requires you to not only know how to build
financial models but to have an understanding of how the bank relates to
things like risk and the various businesses within the bank.
Here’s a sampling of questions you might have to answer during your interview.
1. Provide examples that demonstrate your managerial skills?
You might discuss the experience you’ve had running a team of peers,
supporting the bank’s deals. Talk about leading the team in conducting
research on deal background and financials on multiple deals over the
past year.
2. Discuss your experience working with clients.
Associates will need to have solid client service skills. Here, be
able to demonstrate your ability to work with bankers, lawyers, company
managers and executives. Be sure to emphasize that your work with
clients has included both marketing and banking work. You should also
respond by asking for clarification on the role client service will play
in your job. For example, would the amount of client interaction
increase? Would the client facing be the same or more intense?
3. It’s ten minutes before a big client pitch and you notice a mistake in the pitch book. What do you do?
This one’s designed to see how you’d handle a pressure situation.
There’s no right answer, says Joanna Moody, North American Recruiting
Manager at JPMorgan. An interviewer is trying to gauge your thought
process and your ability to manage unpredictable situations effectively.
4. Why did you get into investment banking?
Besides wanting to make your first million, it’s important to
demonstrate a passion for the job. Be sure to provide examples where
you’ve been successful as an associate. Show that you’ve done the
analysis on deals, but also understand the big picture. This is the time
to go well beyond your B-school knowledge. It’s about ideas. Talk
about how you’d help a client raise cash in on capital markets or advise
in a merger or an acquisition. Always provide real-life examples to
show off the experience and personality traits that an investment bank
and interviewer are looking for.
5. Describe your experience with risk and how you made decisions that involved risk.
As an investment banker, you’ll inevitably face tough decisions,
notes Jeff Leader, partner at Global Search Partners. How you handle
yourself in situations involving risk – to the bank’s money and clients’
success – is critical. Your answer should show that you possess
sufficient analytical skills. This is best achieved by pointing to
examples of situations in which you managed risk in a deal. Enumerate
any assumptions made during your analysis on a transaction.
You can stand out by asking the interviewer how the bank approaches
risk as it relates to your role. Ask whether specific valuation models
are used as templates to evaluate deals, for example Be sure to ask
about risk parameters, and who’s responsible for determining them and
how they’re applied to specific deals, says Brian Berger, senior vice
president at Glocap Search.
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