October 14th, 2006, 2:08 am
QuoteOriginally posted by: DCFCJust to be clear, I think you should apply to graduate programmes.They vary quite a lot in quality, and few are very quant oriented, but if you find a good one grab it with both hands.Since you can't tell how good it is before you apply, you should apply anyway.[...]I think you just need to make sure that a HH doesn't think you've been rejected by 21 firms.Will it be bad for the future to have been 'rejected' by too many grad programs early on in the search for a quant job? I applied to a lot of grad/analyst programs at bigger banks in the last month, knowing I didn't exactly fit their profile, because of approaching deadlines and no quant-specific programs. The initial plan was to give the grad programs a try, but mainly polish quant skills and go via job ads/private recruiters later on. I got a couple of 'automatic' rejections already, does this make me more likely not to get employed by these companies in the future, and does their system even 'remember' past grad applications in contrast to their official CV system?So far I received a few rejections, a few online test invitations and a lot of silence. Most systems have the option to 'withdraw' applications under review. Should I at this stage value my clean computer record higher, than the chance that other grad program applications might be successful (as in getting at least an interview)?