Report: 90% of Employers Don't Focus on College Rankings When Hiring

Also if anyone wants to see the actual names of the top 25 schools and percentages in terms of the new class of ib analysts by firm- Look to wso. Lots of data there can be found.

All of these schools are only 1 to 5 percent of an incoming class at any given firm each year. “schools that are often considered semi-targets for Wall Street are actually in the top 10 of total placement.”

This part of an article is helpful.

“Out of more than 440 schools that are represented in the WSO data, NYU, Harvard, Cornell University, University of Pennsylvania, and Columbia University have the highest distribution percentages for graduates represented in large Wall Street firms, soaking up more than 15% of the overall distribution of recruitment and hiring from bulge bracket banks. This extends to more than 25% when you widen the scope to the top 10 schools.”

Or in other words. 75 percent of Placements each year come from outside of the top 10 feeders. At least by wso data.

“NYU is particularly strong at Barclays Capital, Harvard at JPMorgan, Cornell at Goldman Sachs, UPenn at Credit Suisse, and Columbia at JPMorgan and UBS. Where you don’t see NYU as heavily saturated is Deutsche Bank. Cornell, the University of Texas at Austin, Boston College, and Georgia Tech have the highest percentages of graduates there.”