For Harvard MBAs, Congrats on a Bank Job Really Means 'I'm Sorry'

Did Dimon's Alma Mater Really Send Just One Top Graduate to an Investment Bank This Year?
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Ruined weekends, PowerPoint drudgery and overnight shifts in Manhattan skyscrapers once were a point of pride for the Harvard Business School graduates who went to Wall Street. Now young stars hold heads high about how lucrative and healthy their lives will be -- elsewhere.

"People used to brag and say, 'Oh yeah, 21-hour days, seven days a week for eight months,' that was a badge of honor,'' said Kiran Gandhi, who like others in this year's class applied to technology companies. "The humble brag is now, 'Oh yeah, I work 9 to 5, I get paid a ton of money, and I have a great life.' It's green juice from vats in the office and amazing organic iced coffee cold-brewed -- the quality of life.''