Advisers at career services are bracing their students for what is an unpredictable job hunting season at best. Roxanne Hori, assistant dean and director of the career management center at Northwestern's Kellogg School of Management, said speakers at a convocation for second-year students explained the realities of today's job market. "It was pretty sobering because it was right on the heels of the Lehman announcement (BusinessWeek.com, 9/17/08)," Hori said. "I had a number of students that said they appreciated that we were so honest with them so that they knew what they were walking into."
Heightened Interest
Hori said she has had many conversations with former bankers who now consider consulting an option but urges them to thoroughly prepare for interviews. "We try to filter out the people who thought [consulting] would be an easy alternative. The message we send is: If you don't mind being rejected, interview away."
At Katzenbach Partners, a consulting firm of 150 people with a small entering class, recruiters also sense more interest among top candidates. Both the attendance at campus presentations and the number of unsolicited e-mails that land in recruiters' in-boxes are up. This means students have to spend more time making their stories and arguments for switching industries more compelling, according to Kristen Clemmer, director of recruiting.
"We have been very open to seeing those types of candidates," Clemmer said of the banking types. "I notice at the beginning of the recruiting cycle that certain candidates have figured out a way to tell their story in a more compelling way."
Uptick in Crossovers
Consulting firms say it's still too early in the recruiting season to make definitive statements, but King said that he sensed more overlap with investment banks than usual in applications. "We see candidates moving between consulting and finance in every stage of the business cycle, but there is an uptick in crossover applications."
If there's any good news in all this, it's that the crisis is occurring early in the recruiting cycle so second-year MBA students in the midst of recruiting have time to weigh their options and ride out the financial storm, said Al Cotrone, director of career services at the University of Michigan Ross School of Business. "If there is a silver lining in this cloud, the timing of this means that students could consider other options." Cotrone said.
In the meantime, consulting firms are the beneficiaries, although they have more difficult decisions to make and more applicants to choose from. "We are in a luxurious position in that we do have a lot of great candidates coming to us," Katzenbach's Clemmer said. Such is also the case at Booz, where recruiter Rath says the company is in a position to acquire ex-bankers with "great strengths and superstar talent."
But just because banking is struggling doesn't mean all students are ready to wave white flags. Many of the want-to-be bankers plan to stay put, without plans to flee to consulting firms or elsewhere, Michigan's Cotrone said. "They're hearing the opportunities will still be there," he said. "They understand pretty clearly that there's always going to be a financial industry, even if it might look different than it did three weeks ago."
Teichman is a reporting intern at BusinessWeek. |