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Record number secure coveted internships
By Ann Brown April 17, 2008 -- Some 40 students from the Florida A&M University (FAMU) School of Business and Industry (SBI) are heading to Wall Street. This marks a record number of students from the historically black university to be accepted into Wall Street internships. The students at FAMU competed for their position with not only other students from HBCUs, but from traditional and Ivy League schools such as Harvard University and University of Chicago. FAMU has been making a planned effort to increase the number of black professionals on Wall Street. "I met with our dean last semester and presented her with a Wall Street Initiative," says finance professor Karl Lawrence Ph.D., who is coordinating the initiative. "I set a target of placing 30 students in Wall Street internships this year, 60 during 2009, and 100 students during the summer of 2010. I also set a goal of placing 25 students on international internships with Wall Street firms by 2010." The students have been placed with companies such as JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs, Citigroup, and Barclays Capital, among other firms. "This is a significant achievement because it delivers a strong message that, contrary to traditional beliefs, African Americans are interested in Wall Street careers, " Lawrence says. "Our students also welcome the opportunity to compete against students from Harvard, Penn, and other Ivy League schools." Barclays Capital, which began internship recruiting efforts with FAMU in 2005, "shares the vision of FAMU of increasing the number of African American interns, as well as other diverse interns within the investment banking industry," says Teresa Foxx, director and general manager at Barclays Capital in Miami. Tara Udut, Barclay's head of campus recruitment for the Americas, says the selection process is in-depth and includes a general information session, several follow-up events for interested candidates, and on-campus interviews. Fourth-year student Tiffani Renee Davis, who is completing a five-year professional MBA program at FAMU, is set to start her 10-week internship at JPMorgan on June 2. "Internships provide the opportunity to be exposed to a potential career," says Davis, who will work in corporate finance and investment banking. "Wall Street presents a challenge to me. I would like to work on Wall Street for a few years [upon graduating]." According to Lawrence, students who secure permanent positions with Wall Street firms can expect to make $90,000 to $100,000 during their first year. "Roughly 80% of our students typically accept permanent placement offers from companies that they intern with," he says. "However, our current goal is to achieve a 100% permanent placement offer rate." Eleven of the 40 FAMU students headed to the Wall Street this year were placed by Sponsors for Educational Opportunity (SEO), a nonprofit organization whose focus is to place qualified students of color in internships in investment banking, corporate law, asset management, global corporate finance, information technology, accounting, and philanthropy. "For the past four years, 25 students from FAMU have been accepted into the SEO Career Program, says Tamesha Harper, SEO's program manager for the southeastern region. "According to our data from 2004, 100% of our FAMU interns have received offers from our partner firms." Lawrence says he aims to make FAMU "the leading supplier of talent to Wall Street." One way is by developing talent via an expanded mentorship program that teams FAMU alumni working on Wall Street with current SBI interns. Marvin Wilmoth, a JPMorgan investment banker, is a former intern who has been mentoring since launching his finance career four years ago. "Having a mentor from your Alma mater helps guide interns through the summer in order to give them a greater chance of receiving a full-time offer," he says. "I feel it is my duty to help those coming behind me," adds FAMU alumna Simone E. Facey, who has signed on to mentor an intern this year. "I previously went through the internship program. It provided me with the ability to experience the career first hand." While a void of African Americans still exists on Wall Street, Facey, who is now in investment banking at JPMorgan, says "Companies are taking strides in regards to diversity recruiting. Programs like SEO are providing minority students with the ability to intern in finance and are shaping the future of the industry." _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ A RATTLER TO THE VERY END! |
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