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Hi everyone,
I'm currently a senior in college and am planning on taking a gap year or two before med school. I'm a mathematics major and my plan was to work for a firm that makes medical software. However, I recently received an unexpected offer to work for a large investment bank. If I were to work there for a year, does anyone have any insight into how admissions committees might view that? Doing so would certainly allow me to save up some money to help offset the cost of med school, but I also wouldn't want to be viewed as someone who just cares about money. That's not why I want to go into medicine.
Thoughts?
Do you have all the pre-reqs for med school done (chem/biochem, biology)?? Make sure to check out schools you are interested in to confirm you have your pre-reqs all taken care of as a math major. And take the job, you'll definitely be different than the cookie cutter applicant. Cheers.Hi everyone,
I'm currently a senior in college and am planning on taking a gap year or two before med school. I'm a mathematics major and my plan was to work for a firm that makes medical software. However, I recently received an unexpected offer to work for a large investment bank. If I were to work there for a year, does anyone have any insight into how admissions committees might view that? Doing so would certainly allow me to save up some money to help offset the cost of med school, but I also wouldn't want to be viewed as someone who just cares about money. That's not why I want to go into medicine.
Thoughts?
Not in his case.Generally, finance is a great field to go into medicine from. It is proof positive that you're not merely doing this for the money, because you'll be making a lot less money as a doctor.
ballin'Hi everyone,
I'm currently a senior in college and am planning on taking a gap year or two before med school. I'm a mathematics major and my plan was to work for a firm that makes medical software. However, I recently received an unexpected offer to work for a large investment bank. If I were to work there for a year, does anyone have any insight into how admissions committees might view that? Doing so would certainly allow me to save up some money to help offset the cost of med school, but I also wouldn't want to be viewed as someone who just cares about money. That's not why I want to go into medicine.
Thoughts?
Not in his case.
A starting IB salary would be considered "magnificent" if you were offered ~80K. And if you remain an analyst, after the crash, there haven't been many people making half a mil anymore. My cousin's worked for Deutsche for almost 8 years, and makes around 210K, a ridic amount of money still.
If you enter a field like Derm or Urology, you'll be sweating money. And yeah, there's the "but I have loans," "oh and overheads," and this and that. You'll most likely pay off your loans in 5 years if you're smart about it, and still be making a lot, lot more.
I appreciate you perspective Doug, but I think, still, 60%+ of doctors enter medicine for $$$. Might be a bad reason seeing as we're inching towards government control more and more. But if you peruse the facebook pages of most Male Medical students, you'll probably find a Lambo cover pic.
uhh no. All starting ibanking analysts at the bulge brackets and elite boutiques will be making 120-150k their first year out of college. the more important ques is why would anyone want to work 80 hrs a week being an excel monkey during their gap year
OK what's the chance of getting hired by McKinsey your first year out? Being realistic, even if you are given a job as an analyst, it'll be at a place like Deutsche.
OK what's the chance of getting hired by McKinsey your first year out? Being realistic, even if you are given a job as an analyst, it'll be at a place like Deutsche.
Because Excel Monkies make bank, and it's a very satisfying thing to make bank when you get out of college.
lol McK is a consulting firm. You obviously have no idea what you're talking about. Deutsche is a bulge bracket and pays their analysts the amount I said. It's not hard to get into IB if someone goes to a decent school. And no, its not very satisfying. Theres a reason why most people do their 2 years and leave
If you're at a feeder school, pretty good. Also pretty sure McKinsey is consulting, not ibanking.
What? Even if you go to HYPMS, getting into McKinsey is a real challenge... Tons of people at each school apply for a maybe a 10 or less (or somewhere around the range) slots for each school at McKinsey. You need high GPA and something else attractive about you on your resume in most cases to even pass screening. Then you have to beat out the best of the best students at your top school in the case interviews...
Same applies to the other elite consulting firms (Bain, BCG).
Top IB firms (e.g., Goldman) are also similarly competitive to get into.
Yeah, consulting jobs pay about the same as IB.
Many people leave premed for banking, so I wouldn't be so fast in saying it's not a rewarding career.
http://www.glassdoor.com/Salary/Deutsche-Bank-Analyst-Salaries-E3150_D_KO14,21.htm
For what it's worth, my cousins first year salary at Deutsche with bonuses hovered around 75K, right after the market crash. You'd have to put in at least 2-3 years to be making 150K...I think you know that. lol.
... but I'd honestly say it's easier to get into a top level or upper mid level consulting or banking firm (again only from a feeders school) than it is to get into a top 20 med school.
I think that at the very top, they're similar when you count in bonuses, but a mid tier ibanking gig will pay more than a mid tier consulting gig, based on what I've heard from my peers who are going those routes.
First, compensation. You're smoking crack. The IB ramp is WAY (that should be in about 20 point font) faster than in consulting. If you can hack a decade in IB at a name firm you are making $500K-2+ million/year, depending on which side of the house you sit on and how interested you were in staying in NYC vs living in another market.
Most consultants at top firms a decade in are not doing better than $300K/yr. Some make a large multiple of that, sure, but I am talking meat of the curve for both careers.
What I want to convey, though, is that I have lived in both worlds, and for par candidates (raw academic horsepower and people skills) getting in to a top 20 medical school is way easier than getting a solid analyst (IB) or consultant position making >$85K straight out of school. (All bets are off and the above experience does not hold true if you come out of HYP undergrad. It's probably easier to land an analyst job than a top med school seat in that case simply because network effects are stronger in business than in medical admissions.) The work is way more interesting in consulting, however, and I pity investment bankers irrespective of their pay.
Source: me, who has been there and done that (admitted to top-tier med school / former consultant)
ETA: these are all rational results (competitiveness) if you just do some lifetime earnings potential/hour worked * lifestyle (or general "interesting" quotient) calculations for each field, allowing for risk in each variable.
Here's a whole bunch of nonsense to rationalize all that...
Medicine: [(medium lifetime earnings {largely due to huge opportunity cost}*lifetime employment guarantee)/(medium to high hours worked)]*(reasonable lifestyle and inherently interesting work) = medium competitiveness
Consulting: [(medium lifetime earnings)*(risky employment {many "fail out" of best consulting firms and end up in industry with menial jobs for middling pay})]/(medium hours worked*interesting work) = higher competitiveness
Investment banking: [(exceptional lifetime earnings)*(somewhat risky employment {most can hack it, majority of attrition due to structural unemployment viz. economic crashes)]/(insane workload*dull work) = highest competitiveness 2/2 highest denominator by a wide margin
On one side of the spectrum, a good looking, sociable Ivy League kid of average intelligence will have an infinitely easier time breaking into IB than getting into a T20 med school. On the other, a socially awkward genius from a non target will have an easier time getting into a t20 than IB.
First, compensation. You're smoking crack. The IB ramp is WAY (that should be in about 20 point font) faster than in consulting. If you can hack a decade in IB at a name firm you are making $500K-2+ million/year, depending on which side of the house you sit on and how interested you were in staying in NYC vs living in another market.
Most consultants at top firms a decade in are not doing better than $300K/yr. Some make a large multiple of that, sure, but I am talking meat of the curve for both careers.
What I want to convey, though, is that I have lived in both worlds, and for par candidates (raw academic horsepower and people skills) getting in to a top 20 medical school is way easier than getting a solid analyst (IB) or consultant position making >$85K straight out of school. (All bets are off and the above experience does not hold true if you come out of HYP undergrad. It's probably easier to land an analyst job than a top med school seat in that case simply because network effects are stronger in business than in medical admissions.) The work is way more interesting in consulting, however, and I pity investment bankers irrespective of their pay.
the more important ques is why would anyone want to work 80 hrs a week being an excel monkey during their gap year
lol McK is a consulting firm. You obviously have no idea what you're talking about. Deutsche is a bulge bracket and pays their analysts the amount I said. It's not hard to get into IB if someone goes to a decent school. And no, its not very satisfying. Theres a reason why most people do their 2 years and leave
Just chiming in... My SO will be starting at a middle market IB firm this summer (from a good but not target school) and he's making $80k base salary. With all bonuses factored in, he may be able to get to around $120k. However, people he knows starting at bulge bracket firms in New York aren't getting much higher than him, and not anywhere close to the numbers stated in previous posts. Of course it can all vary on the firm, but the days of huge salaries for analysts are long gone.
OP, I'm not in finance and I'm only a premed but I second the post about the time limits -- IB is a HUGE time commitment and you will have very very little free time. I wouldn't count on being able to do anything related to medicine, which could be a problem since it might indicate you're not interested in medicine. For a true career-changer, this wouldn't be as big of an issue, but for a pre-med taking a gap year, this could show a lack of commitment to medicine.
Edit: also, it seems like you only want to take one gap year. Analyst jobs are typically two year commitments, and even if you could quit halfway through, it would be pretty much impossible to apply while working. Analysts are lucky to get an entire weekend off -- there's very little chance you could take off on workdays for interviews or even have time to submit applications.
Uh...no.Once you do I-banking, you won't want to leave 😀
Facebook photos of lambos speak more to the desires of the young male population in general, hell, the male population in general, not specifically the male medical student.Not in his case.
A starting IB salary would be considered "magnificent" if you were offered ~80K. And if you remain an analyst, after the crash, there haven't been many people making half a mil anymore. My cousin's worked for Deutsche for almost 8 years, and makes around 210K, a ridic amount of money still.
If you enter a field like Derm or Urology, you'll be sweating money. And yeah, there's the "but I have loans," "oh and overheads," and this and that. You'll most likely pay off your loans in 5 years if you're smart about it, and still be making a lot, lot more.
I appreciate you perspective Doug, but I think, still, 60%+ of doctors enter medicine for $$$. Might be a bad reason seeing as we're inching towards government control more and more. But if you peruse the facebook pages of most Male Medical students, you'll probably find a Lambo cover pic.
Once you do I-banking, you won't want to leave 😀