- UID
- 293181
- 帖子
- 1076
- 主题
- 333
- 注册时间
- 2005-2-22
- 最后登录
- 2007-6-30
|
2#
发表于 2005-7-26 12:27
| 只看该作者
Quantify the Measure of Some Things If you"ve made it to the interview stage at an investment bank, you can more than likely multiply 23 x 17. Your interviewers know this, and they will be apt to keep most of their questions practical. Still, you do need to know basic valuation techniques: how to use sales, market capitalization, or earnings information to evaluate firms. But remember that such evaluations are as much art as they are science. And don"t use jargon carelessly. "If you"re truly a finance jock, go ahead and dive into the details," says Marmon. "Just know what you"re doing. I remember a job candidate who responded to a question by saying "Well, you need to use a P/E ratio." When we asked him why, it was obvious he didn"t know what he was talking about." If the interviewers want to play brain games ("How many public telephones are there in the United States?"), keep in mind that they"re looking for the quality of your thinking process, not the correct answer. "I once asked a candidate, "If you were a trader, and with one trade you had a 50 percent chance of making $100,000, and with another you had a 20 percent chance of making $1 million, which one would you choose?" The guy went conservative and explained why. He got the job offer." The lesson: The key part of this is the "why," not the "right" answer. "They"re looking for people with strong opinions and convictions," says one trader at Goldman Sachs. "They"re less interested in what those convictions are than in how you"ve arrived at them." A Strong Fish When you get a chance to turn the tables and ask questions, do it wisely. "It can be the most important test you pass," says Neil Rothenberg, a former associate at Dillon, Reed. "Ask provocative questions that imply your long-term interest." Try these: "Could you describe the culture here, using examples?" "How are decisions made within the organizational hierarchy at this firm?" "Has there been any recent attrition in management?" All of these are challenging and all of them suggest you"re looking at the big picture. More important, perhaps, in asking them, you"re answering that big, lurking question: "Yes, I"m prepared to commit for the long haul." |
|