
Quick jump to👉 3 Tips for Students Trying to Break Into IB
Every morning, I woke up to the blue glow of the Citi logo. From my apartment in Canary Wharf, the tower felt close enough to touch after a string of Spring Week rejections, it felt worlds away. I had the drive and the academic pedigree of a Mathematics major, but I was missing the “insider playbook.”
I’ve since realized that breaking into investment banking is about how strategically you navigate the information gap. This is the story of how I pivoted from a “Zero-Offer” Spring to securing a Citi 2026 Summer Analyst offer by mastering the rules of the recruiting game with One Strategy Group.

Getting a offer was an important milestone, but it may came after a long period of trial, rejection, and adjustment. What changed the outcome was better strategy, stronger preparation, and guidance from people who understood the process. Starting early can make a real difference.
OSG Expert Analysis
Why I Got Rejected From Every Spring Week Application
When I first started applying for Spring Week programs, I thought effort alone would be enough. I submitted a large number of applications, attended employer events, and spent hours researching firms. On paper, I was doing what students were told to do. In reality, I was missing the parts that matter most in investment banking recruiting.
The reality of investment banking recruiting is that firms don’t just screen for intelligence. Instead, they screen for fit and technical readiness months before the deadlines even close. I was applying broadly, but my story was unfocused.
My resume listed tasks rather than quantifying value, and I was missing the critical “timing window” that defines the UK recruiting cycle.
It wasn’t until I hit a wall that I stopped treating my applications as a numbers game and started treating them as a strategic puzzle. I realized I didn’t need more applications; I needed a more granular approach to my personal branding and technical interview prep.
Turning a Math Background into a Finance USP
I did not enter university with a lifelong dream of working in finance.
Coming from a Mathematics and Economics background at UCL, I initially felt like I was playing catch-up. I had to learn valuation models, LBO mechanics, and accounting principles from scratch. However, through my mentorship at One Strategy Group, I learned to flip the script.

Instead of viewing my non-finance major as a hurdle, we reframed it as my Unique Selling Point (USP). In a high-pressure interview setting, a math background signals more than just “number crunching”—it signals logical rigor, the ability to decompose complex problems, and a high ceiling for technical growth.
The key wasn’t to hide my academic roots but to translate them into the language of bulge bracket banks. We shifted my narrative from “I study math” to “I apply mathematical precision to financial analysis and risk assessment.” This subtle change in storytelling was the first step in building a profile that stood out to recruiters.
Resume Optimization
The biggest change in my recruiting process was learning how to present what I had already done.
Before that, my applications were too literal. I listed coursework, activities, and experiences, but I was not translating them into signals that investment banking teams care about. I was describing tasks, not value.
Through One Strategy Group career coaching, I was matched with a mentor who understood both European recruiting and cross-cultural positioning. We moved away from passive descriptions and focused on impact-driven results.
Instead of saying I studied Mathematics, we reframed it around analytical discipline, comfort with numbers, and the ability to solve problems under pressure.
My international background became a masterclass in adaptability and cross-cultural communication, traits that are highly valued in global teams at firms like Citi and Goldman Sachs.
Need Help Breaking Into Investment Banking?
Explore more student success stories or speak with the team at One Strategy Group to build your own recruiting plan.
Whether you are an international student, a non-finance major, or someone unsure where to begin, the right structure can save months of wasted effort. One Strategy Group(OSG) career coaching offered 100000+ students structured guidance on resume strategy, networking planning, and technical interview preparation.
Just as important was repetition. Through One Strategy Group mentorship, I practiced behavioral answers, technical interview prep, and live mock interviews until my responses felt clear and natural.
By the time I walked into my actual interviews, the technicals felt like second nature, and my behavioral stories were baked into my muscle memory.
The Citi Superday: From Resilience to the Offer Call
Walking into Citi’s Canary Wharf office for my accelerated interview round felt different this time.
I had seen the office before. I had walked through Canary Wharf and imagined what it would feel like to work there. Now the process was real, and preparation mattered more than motivation.
The Citi Summer Analyst interview moved quickly. Each conversation tested something different. Some questions focused on fit and communication. Others pushed on market awareness, commercial judgment, and how I think under pressure.
Through comprehensive One Strategy Group interview prep, I had already practiced common behavioral questions, technical concepts, and follow-up challenges that interviewers often use to test depth. That meant I could stay present in the room instead of trying to invent answers on the spot.
I also learned that strong interviews are rarely about sounding perfect. They are about being clear, calm, and credible. When I did not know something immediately, I focused on reasoning through the question step by step.
That approach helped me far more than memorized scripts ever could.
When the offer call finally came, I was not overwhelmed. I felt relief more than anything else. Months of rejection, uncertainty, and rebuilding had led to one result.
I had earned a Citi Summer Analyst offer.
3 Tips for Students Trying to Break Into Investment Banking
- Hard work needs direction
Many students work hard but apply without a clear plan. They send applications late, use generic resumes, or prepare only when interviews arrive.
Investment banking recruiting rewards timing, positioning, and consistency. Effort matters, but focused effort matters more.
- Your background can be an advantage
You do not need the perfect profile to break into investment banking.
Students from Mathematics, Engineering, Economics, or international backgrounds often bring skills that firms value. The key is explaining those strengths in a way that feels relevant to the role.
That was one of the most useful lessons I learned through One Strategy Group career coaching.
- Preparation builds confidence
Confidence usually comes after preparation, not before it.
Mock interviews, technical interview prep, market awareness practice, and clear behavioral stories all reduce pressure on the day. When preparation is strong, you think more clearly and communicate better.
For students asking how to get into investment banking, there is no single shortcut. But there is a repeatable process. Build the right story, prepare early, and improve each round.


