This week, I’m writing about technical knowledge, and why it matters so much in an interview.

The most important interview of my life!

To prepare for the most important interview of my life with the Goldman Sachs Convertible Bond team, I managed to get hold of a couple of Convertible Bond research reports, and I read them cover to cover. They were quite technical and were promoting yield-enhanced securities. I thought I would be able to show off the great preparation I had done. The head Convertibles trader, Charlie Eve, seemed to be impressed when I brought up the research – but then he cut off my lengthy summary, and asked me what “parity” was. I did not know.

Parity happens to be the underlying equity value of a Convertible Bond – but more importantly, anyone who knew anything about Convertible Bonds would know this basic information. It was embarrassing, but I still got the job offer. Charlie told me afterward that he had been impressed that I was the only person he had interviewed who had gone to the effort of reading some research.

This brings me to my main message – if you want to set yourself apart from the other candidates, you have to get technical.

Technical Knowledge is Key

Everyone at your university is smart, and most are hard-working too. Most are articulate, and most have examples of impressive things they have done in the past, even if they cannot necessarily articulate these with the ideal structure during an interview. Most people understand that to get hired, your interviewer has to like you – which means projecting charm, energy, enthusiasm, and generally getting them to think you would be a fantastic person to have on the team.

Interview Success Requires Practice

Getting the basics right isn’t so difficult, and the Harrison Careers coaching team can quickly fix the weaknesses that our clients show when they are talking about themselves, their achievements, and the competency-style questions.

Great competency answers can certainly get you past the first-round interview – but they do not get you the job offer. Imagine you are the Convertible Bond trader looking to hire a trading analyst from Princeton or Imperial. You would not be interviewing the candidate in the first place if they were not smart and generally pretty impressive. You will also not hire anyone you do not like – but everyone is trying so hard to impress you that you’ll probably like most of them.

Who gets hired? The person who has gone the extra mile!

Where that leaves you as an interviewer is trying to figure out how to decide which of these many great candidates you should offer a job. It usually comes down to how well you think the candidate understands the job, and how good their technical knowledge is of your specific business area. I know this to be true because I interviewed more than 1,400 candidates at Goldman Sachs!

It will not be enough for the interviewer that the candidate understands trading because there have been enough campus presentations that everyone should understand the basics. Instead, an interviewer will hire the person who has gone the extra mile and acquired knowledge that other people do not have. This could be from reading research reports, having extensive contacts with people within the firm, or developing really convincing trading ideas (it’s ok to source these from newspapers, so long as you understand and present them properly). Just talking to your peers who have been through the process probably will not be enough.

If you really want to maximize your probability of getting the job offer, then before you walk into the most important interview of your life, make sure that you know you have more technical knowledge than the candidates you are competing with.

Need help with the tricky technical questions? Click here to Contact Us or register for a Free Trial!