<p>Can anyone shed any light upon Norte Dam's Investment Banking?... does ND have some sort of Investment Banking Club or Workshop? and How does ND prepare their students for wallstreet... any advice/comment would be greatly appreciated.</p>
<p>... no comments or feedback... are we all too busy watching norte dame football glory days DVD?</p>
<p>We have the number 3 business school in the country.</p>
<p>And you are impatient.</p>
<p>um kevdude.. that doesnt answer my question.. i dont care if you are number 3 or number 333... i just want to know what Norte Dame does to help their students thrive at a Investment Banking Career...</p>
<p>Have you tried going to the website that ND has for Mendoza School of Business? Most of the websites that ND has for each of its schools/majors are very informative. It might be a good place to start! Try searching on those sites for Investment Banking as well. Sorry, we don't know much more about business at ND other than having a family friend that graduated in 2007 with a degree in Finance. Had several very good job offers as well!</p>
<p>1ee304, first of all, are you from West Virginia? Just a guess from your name.</p>
<p>It looks from your prior posts that you are currently at Indiana and are looking to transfer. ND does NOT accept transfers to the business school so ND would not be your best option if that is what you are looking for. If this is not the case, let me know and I will try to look up some information and be more helpful.</p>
<p>The feeling I have gotten (though I am not in the business school) is that what you get is what you put into it. They offer a plethora of classes that cover security analysis to options and futures to prepare you for the field, as well as many visits from major investment banking firms (Deutsche Bank, UBS, Goldman Sachs, JPM, Morgan Stanley, Citi, etc.), but are not mandatory. If you are really looking to get into the investment banking field, they prepare you well and have a great career center to set you up with employers or internships that will get your foot into the door, but things aren't handed on a silver platter. My impression is that this is what it is like everywhere... you can lead a horse to water but you can't make him drink.</p>