<p>I'm an economics student from a 3rd world country's university that you can not ever heard and/but I want to get hired in Wall Street. When I search for the requirements for it, they said me like below:</p>
<p>Get +3.5 GPA, aim 3.8
Do Summer internships at multinational companies' treasury or fund management departments
Get Good GMAT point</p>
<p>Isn't that all, is it ?
Could you advice me more detailed if so?</p>
<p>If you want to break into Wall Street, you need to go to a school that sees recruiters from Wall Street. Third world countries rarely see recruiters. You also need to have a tremendous grasp of the English language, which it appears you are still working on. </p>
<p>As for the things you listed, yes a 3.8 GPA is what you should be shooting for to get your foot in the door with the big banks, and doing summer internships will build your resume, but it is just as difficult to get an internship as it is to get a full time job. Coming out of undergraduate, you will not have taken your GMAT, so that is not relevant.</p>
<p>But if i make my doctorate at an American university as graduated from bachelors level? Could it be more efficient to break into WS?
Can you please design my way?</p>
<p>A doctorate degree I don’t think would help you break into WS. A masters degree, such as an MBA or masters in finance or economics would be more applicable. Internships and networking will be crucial to get your name out and make favorable, lasting impressions.</p>
<p>What NovaLynnx said, though an MBA does not help you all that much if you don’t have any experience under your belt; it will be hard to get into a reputable MBA program without experience anyway.</p>
<p>I’m sorry but you’re not going to go to Wall Street by studying in an unheard school at a 3rd world country. Stop wasting your time and set more realistic goals and expectations. </p>
<p>Wall Street firms have offices around the world and probably at your country too. Build up your experiences and get a job there; that would be a realistic game plan, but still difficult to pull off.</p>