February-March: apply to early programs where relevant
Freshman spring is often the first real program window for early insight, exploratory, diversity, women's, first-generation, LGBTQ+, veteran, disability inclusion, and other pipeline programs.
If eligible, apply seriously. A program may be branded as educational, but the application can still be the first time a bank sees your resume. Clean the resume before submitting.
Also start basic technical learning:
- what the three financial statements are;
- what EBITDA is;
- enterprise value vs. equity value;
- what a DCF is trying to do;
- why companies buy other companies;
- what debt and equity financing mean.
You are not trying to master banking yet. You are building the vocabulary so sophomore year is not a cold start.
April-May: secure a useful summer
A useful freshman summer does not have to be Goldman Sachs. It should help your sophomore-year story.
Good options include:
- search fund;
- boutique advisory;
- local wealth management or private banking;
- corporate finance;
- FP&A;
- accounting;
- startup operations or finance;
- small private equity / venture internship;
- business development;
- research;
- any serious professional role with analytical work.
If you do not have a finance role, make the role useful anyway. Track what you did, quantify outcomes, and look for analytical or client-service angles.
June-August: turn the summer into story
During freshman summer, do three things.
First, perform well. A strong reference from a small firm is better than a fancy-sounding internship where you did nothing.
Second, write down resume bullets while the work is fresh. Do not wait until sophomore January to remember what you did.
Third, have a few informational conversations. If you are in a finance-adjacent role, ask colleagues whether they know bankers, lenders, investors, or alumni you can learn from. These can become warm leads later.
Sophomore year
August-September: move from exploration to recruiting
Sophomore fall is where the process changes.
You are no longer just learning what banking is. You are building a live recruiting plan.
By the end of September, aim to have:
- a one-page resume in banking format;
- an updated LinkedIn;
- a first version of your "why banking" answer;
- a bank-office tracker;
- a list of warm leads;
- a technical study plan;
- a market-view habit;
- finance-club and career-center deadlines in your calendar.
Start GOBLIN100 here if you are new or rusty. Waiting until interviews arrive defeats the point.
October-November: warm the leads
This is the most underused window.
Many students wait until applications open to network. That is backwards. October and November are for warm outreach, especially to alumni, upperclassmen, prior program contacts, and bankers with a real connection to your school or background.
Your goals are:
- learn how each bank-office pair recruits;
- identify which contacts are actually helpful;
- understand expected timing;
- get feedback on your story;
- learn what technical depth is expected;
- create a reason to follow up when you apply.
This is also when some early applications and early programs may appear. Submit if the resume is ready. Do not wait for January if a credible process is already open.
December: make winter break count
December is not a vacation from recruiting. It is the last quiet period before many candidates feel the process accelerate.
Use winter break for:
- final resume cleanup;
- application tracker update;
- technical review;
- HireVue practice;
- behavioral answer reps;
- follow-up with warm contacts;
- bank-specific research;
- market-view notes;
- mock interviews.
By the end of December, you should be able to answer:
- walk me through your resume;
- why banking;
- why this bank;
- tell me about a deal or market trend;
- basic accounting and valuation questions;
- what offices or groups are you most interested in and why.
If you cannot answer those out loud, you are not ready for January.
January: applications and first wave
January is often live.
That means:
- applications may be open;
- banks may be reviewing on a rolling basis;
- HireVues may be sent;
- early first rounds may start;
- campus events may accelerate;
- warm contacts may start hearing about candidate lists.
Your weekly cadence should be aggressive:
- submit open applications early;
- follow up with contacts after applying;
- complete HireVues quickly and professionally;
- run technical reps daily;
- do at least one mock per week if interviews are likely;
- keep adding bank-office pairs;
- track every status change.
Do not spend January passively reading guides. January is execution.
February: interviews, Superdays, and compression
February can be heavy for interviews. Some candidates will be in first rounds. Some will have Superdays. Some will still be applying. Some will have heard nothing.
Each status requires a different plan.
If you have interviews: prioritize live practice. Technicals, story, and bank fit need to be spoken out loud.
If you have HireVues: practice recorded answers and complete them early.
If you have no traction: follow up with warm contacts, widen the list, and diagnose the resume.
If you have rejections: separate bank-specific rejection from market-wide rejection. One rejection does not mean the process is over.
February is not the month for ego. It is the month for feedback loops.
March: keep closing, keep expanding
March is where some candidates get offers and others realize their initial list was too narrow.
Keep doing both:
- close active processes;
- add new ones.
This is the time to expand beyond the obvious names if you have not converted. Add:
- middle-market banks;
- regional offices;
- industry boutiques;
- independent advisory firms;
- corporate banking;
- debt advisory;
- valuation;
- transaction advisory;
- private credit internships;
- search funds;
- relevant corporate finance roles.
Do not treat backup paths as failure. A strong finance-adjacent sophomore summer can still support junior-summer or full-time recruiting if you use it well.
April-May: spillover and save-the-process mode
By April and May, some first-wave processes may be done. But the market is not necessarily closed.
Your strategy should change:
- stop relying only on bulge brackets and elite boutiques;
- look for offices that move later;
- target boutiques and regional firms directly;
- ask alumni which firms are still hiring;
- monitor re-posts;
- use career services for late postings;
- consider finance-adjacent roles that preserve momentum.
If you have an offer, accept or manage it professionally and prepare for the summer. If you do not, keep moving. The worst April strategy is doing nothing because the first wave hurt your confidence.
June-August: build or convert proof
If you have a finance internship, treat it like an audition. Ask for work, be responsive, learn Excel and PowerPoint habits, and write down bullets as you go.
If you have a junior-summer IB offer already, use the summer to build maturity, not just relax. Learn the basics that will make you useful when the internship arrives.
If you do not have an IB offer, keep recruiting where processes remain open and build the strongest possible alternative story. A serious sophomore summer in corporate finance, transaction advisory, valuation, search funds, private credit, or a small investment firm can still be useful.
Junior year
Fall: two different paths
Junior fall depends on whether you already have a junior-summer IB offer.
If you have the offer, protect it. Keep GPA stable, stay professional with the bank, learn the basics of Excel and PowerPoint, and keep building market awareness. Do not create unnecessary risk.
If you do not have the offer, keep recruiting. Look for late-cycle IB, boutiques, regional banks, corporate banking, valuation, transaction advisory, and other finance roles. Also prepare for full-time recruiting, because the junior-summer internship is the cleanest full-time path but not the only one.
Summer: the return-offer funnel
The internship is not just experience. It is the full-time funnel.
Your job is to earn trust:
- be accurate;
- be responsive;
- write down instructions;
- ask clear questions;
- turn comments quickly;
- check your work;
- stay calm when priorities change;
- show interest without being performative.
A return offer is the cleanest full-time outcome. If you do not receive one, you recruit from a harder position, so the summer matters.
Late-start triage
Use this section based on where you are now.
If you are a freshman reading this late
You are fine. Protect GPA, build proof, learn the basics, and start light networking. The main risk is ignoring sophomore fall.
If you are in sophomore fall
You are on time, but you need to move. Build the tracker, clean the resume, start warm outreach, begin GOBLIN100, and watch applications weekly.
If you are in December
You are not late, but the quiet window is closing. Use winter break for technicals, HireVue practice, resume cleanup, and follow-up with warm leads.
If you are in January
Assume the process is live. Submit applications, message contacts, complete HireVues, and do daily technical reps. Do not wait for more information.
If you are in February or March
You are in live-fire mode. Prioritize interviews and Superdays if you have them. If you do not, widen your list immediately and get feedback on your resume and outreach.
If you are in April or May
You are in spillover mode. Keep pursuing open IB processes, but expand aggressively into middle-market, regional, boutique, corporate banking, valuation, transaction advisory, private credit, and search fund roles.
If you are already a junior without an IB offer
You need a full-time and backup strategy. Look for late internship openings, boutiques, regional banks, finance-adjacent roles, and senior-year full-time processes. The path is harder, not impossible.
What to do next
Open your calendar and mark the next four weeks. For each week, write the one outcome that matters most: resume, applications, outreach, technicals, HireVues, mocks, or list expansion. Then run the week.
The undergrad IB timeline rewards candidates who act before they feel ready. You do not need a perfect plan. You need a live plan.