Week 1 of IBD Internship: Training
Hello all. Inspired by another user's idea a few weeks ago, I've decided to keep notes of my internship in progress this summer and begin to release write-ups of each week as the summer goes on in an effort to give back to the community (and because I enjoy writing). If there is enough interest, I'll continue the series.
IBD Internship Orientation Day
Monday morning arrived in the blink of an eye. Instructions were received ahead of time from HR concerning the logistics of orientation day: what to bring, when to arrive, and how to dress. Several of us met in front of the dorm building bright and early, well ahead of our scheduled arrival times, and set out to meet our makers. Orientation is a no-brainer.
- You come in, meet the HR people coordinating the summer analyst program
- Put on a name tag with your group and/or school listed
- Go through any clearance procedures that need doing if your bank didn't have you do them in advance
- Receive free company stuff and your ID badge
- Meet the other interns
- Listen to bankers deliver motivational and cautionary advice about the experience that lies ahead.
How To Avoid Common Internship Pitfalls
Training week is a relatively straightforward beast and should be treated as such. There are some common pitfalls that you will witness.
- Homework: Your homework or preassigned training by HR may or may not be requested; either way, it’s good to start your summer strong by coming in ready to go, fresh on common finance and accounting material, with all of your bases covered.
- Introductions: Now is a good time to shoot your staffers and assigned mentors an e-mail to introduce yourself if you haven’t already.
- Training: The training itself is marginally useful, but it is important to remember that academic settings (even those coordinated by investment banks themselves!) are not entirely reflective of what you’ll actually be doing once you hit the floor. You will get out of the material what you put in; sit in the first few rows, keep yourself energized, and focus on the instructor. Unfortunately, most of us are not wired to be able to sit through hours and hours of lecturing a day and absorb all of the information efficiently.
Internship Training Week
Monday
- 8:30am: Check-in with HR and have breakfast
- 10:30am: IBD group head welcomes the intern class
- 11:30am: HR summer analyst program managers introduce themselves
- 12:00pm: Lunch break
- 1:00pm: Lectures concerning compliance, expectations, summer logistics
- 4:30pm: Break out into summer groups and meet with intern sponsors
- 5:00pm: Welcome reception
Internship survival tip: Orientation day is all about introductions and first impressions. Your HR program managers will be in attendance, and you should take a few seconds to shake their hands. Equally important is taking the time to meet the other interns around you. I've heard several bankers’ accounts of how they still make it a point to meet up with their intern class colleagues to this day. Make it a point to remember everyone’s name. Not because they’re going to remember yours, but because it elevates you in their eyes when you recount theirs effortlessly at a later date, almost as if they now owe you something as they fumble around their minds’ innermost recesses for a remote clue as to your identity.
Tuesday
- 8:00am: Macroeconomics
- Internship survival tip: The first presentation was an overview of the markets. Your role as an investment banking analyst will not have much to do with the markets. However, you should be keeping up with the headlines. Your role is simply this: know how to get information quickly, compile and present it neatly, defend every last minute and irreverent detail with sources to boot, and get shit done when everything around you is falling apart.
- 10:00am: Technology and IT resources
- Internship survival tip: The presentations on workplace technology, IT support, and the resources at your disposal are arguably the most important knowledge dispensed to you and your peers. Make note of any intern accounts and passwords mentioned, which resource to use in a given scenario, and how to get support for them. Each firm is different, but with all the penny-pinching going around, it’s a good idea to perk your head up a couple centimeters to know when you can and can’t have a book printed and bound or when it’s okay to charge equity research to a cost center. Or where to even get equity research. Or any research for that matter.
- 11:00am: Accounting and financial statement analysis
- Internship survival tip: You should definitely pay attention when accounting and financial statement analysis is covered, but don’t get flustered if and when you zone out. A lot of relevant information is covered, and you’ll probably go back through your training materials during the summer as needed anyway.
- 12:30pm: Lunch
- 1:30pm: Accounting and financial statement analysis continued
- 4:00pm: Financial statement analysis application and examples
- 6:00pm: Accounting and financial statement analysis homework assigned
- Internship survival tip: Homework, or extra practice, is assigned throughout the course and/or at the end of each day. This is your opportunity to begin absorbing these concepts through trial and error. Bankers are there to answer questions and provide tips. My experience from this showed me that often times there is dispute over how to handle certain situations pending on the group. This means that your group specific training will be infinitely more effective once you hit the desk.
Wednesday
- 8:00am: Homework review
- 9:00am: Financial modeling
- Internship survival tip: The financial modeling and valuation portions are important primarily as an introduction to the neurotic banker use of Excel. Listening to the walk through of a DCF and accretion/dilution analysis is marginally useful at best because you won’t learn these until you actually do them yourself. The key takeaways from these lectures are the Excel setup and shortcuts.
- 12:00pm: Lunch break
- 1:00pm: Investment banking analyst position
- 1:30pm: Group positions, responsibilities, and hierarchy
- 2:00pm: Introduction to valuation
- 4:00pm: Trading comparables
- Internship survival tip: The least interesting and most necessary training segments revolve around trading comparables and pitchbook formatting. Listen and take notes as the instructor walks you through spreading comps. There are a few sticking points, including where to locate options and restricted stock (and which to use) as well as adjusting for non-recurring items. Top your work off with a sanity check: literally look at the output and make sure the multiples aren't outrageous without a cause.
- 6:00pm: Modeling homework assigned
Thursday
- 8:00am: Homework review
- 9:00am: DCF
- 12:00pm: Lunch
- 1:00pm: DCF continued
- 4:00pm: Combined application of different valuation methods
- 6:00pm: Valuation homework assigned
Friday
- 8:00am: Homework review
- 9:00am: Equity research
- 10:00am: Research, presentation services, and IB resources
- 12:00pm: Lunch
- 1:00pm: Pitchbooks
- Internship survival tip: Pitchbook formatting is also important. As an intern, you are usually given a few slides to work on and in charge of turning the comments and mark-ups provided by senior bankers. There isn't much you can do to practice: the key takeaways are attention to detail and as many formatting tricks as you can take away from the lesson.
- 4:00pm: Closing
This concludes the simplest week of an investment banking summer internship. Thanks for reading and feel free to ask questions.
The very talented author of this post, moneymogul, is also the author of our updated Finance Internship Guide. Want to read more of his stories? Order the guide now for 80 pages of extremely detailed day-by-day reports from an actual bulge bracket investment banking intern.
Read More About Internships On WSO
- Have You Ever Seen An Intern Quit Early?
- Unpaid Internships: Yes Or No?
- Tips For Getting An Internship In Investment Banking As A Freshman
Throwback Thursday, this was originally posted in 2013
Bookmarked for later read, but just wanted to recommend keeping as much anonymity as possible.
Great read !
Thanks. Should have noted that I scrambled details for anonymity purposes so of course this isn't exact and neither will future posts be.
Enjoyed. Thanks
Thank you for sharing this! I look forward to next week!
I had one question though. You had a full weekend?? :p
looks like it!!!
Thanks for taking the time to share this OP.
On training week... This is before he hit the desk, so no one is around to assign weekend work. Let's just say that I doubt his future blog entries will be of similar length.
Thanks, moneymogul. This is really solid.
Yep, this was training week so I had the following weekend off completely. Started on the desk the next Monday. I wrote this a couple weeks back after my training week and have tried to keep up with my writing in my off time so I should be able to keep releasing content for the time being.
Anyway, thanks for reading. Writing about my experience helps me reflect as I'm still on the fence about whether I want to do IB full time or not.
My comment was of course a bit ironical ;-). I definitely doubt also that the coming weekends will be free.
Great breakdown!! I'm a rising junior, and posts like these are extremely useful in giving me an idea of what to expect if I am fortunate enough to land an IB summer analyst role.
Thanks for this information. I enjoyed reading it and I'm looking forward to your future blogs.
Incredibly accurate. It was literally exactly the same for me so far. Keep it up. I'm pumped to see if we have similar experiences or if we diverge...
Thanks for sharing.
Brilliant post man, really appreciate reading in detail the actual work you do / are expected to do.
Thanks for your notes. Love the way you tell your intern experience.
Thanks for sharing. I was wondering what PIB is?
Public Information Book...basically pulls a bunch of public info into one place so the associates/ more senior bankers can review the company filings, press releases, transcripts, research reports, etc in 1 place...
Great Post!
Great post, I bookmarked it as well. Since the training day ends relatively early, is it expected that the incoming class go out afterwards together? Did you notice this at all or was everyone too burnt out from the lectures all day and having to be in early the next day to go out?
I'd say for the most part burnt out. It's definitely not too much to go out for a beer or two afterwards though, but I wouldn't expect any late nights.
Burnt out from training? lol
I dont know why so much as a day is given for accounting.You study this at university , they ask you questions about it in interview and then you study it again. Most of the training should actually revolve around financial modelling,excel,powerpoint,use of cap IQ,reuters and aspects about office administration like IT etc
Great info. Thanks!
You get extra credit for this! +1 SB
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