Winter 2025 Scholarship Competition Details
Full-Ride Finance Career Accelerator Scholarship, Valued at $19,900
Founded by McKinsey/Bridgewater alums, Wall Street Guide is running a full-ride scholarship competition for their selective fellowship program. If you are selected, you will receive a $19,900 scholarship to enroll in the 1-1 career fellowship program.
About the competition
The competition is a selective program to identify the next set of finance and consulting talent. To apply, submit your CV and a set of written responses to this link. There will also be an interview round for select candidates.
About WSG
WSG is a selective career accelerator. In their fellowship program, students work 1-1 with current mentors at companies like Goldman Sachs, McKinsey, and Citadel to apply and get jobs in finance and consulting. Currently, the program has students from Stanford, UPenn, Cornell, Brown, Umichigan, BU, and 20+ other universities.
With us, you work with mentors from the world's best companies.





How Competitive Are These Jobs?


Our Team


Our Programs Offer
01
Career Positioning
Networking with Warm Referrals & Target Firm Strategy
Identify top consulting, investment banking, and product management roles.
Talk to accomplished people in the exact roles you aspire for.
Resume & LinkedIn Overhaul
Optimize your profiles for recruiter selection.
Early Applications
Secure interviews before the peak recruiting season begins.
02
Intensive Interview Preparation
Mock Interview
Practice consulting cases, investment banking technicals, and product sense.​
Real Questions
Master firm-specific interview formats.
03
Interviews & Competitive Offers
Final-Round Coaching
Last-mile prep with company employees and alumni
Multiple Offer Strategy
Choose the best career path.
Job Guarantee
We coach you until you land an offer.
Our Story
Stephen Turban
Harvard College '17, ex-McKinsey
When I was a sophomore, I was totally lost career-wise. I was at Harvard and I’d heard about consulting and finance, but I’d gone to a public high school in Missouri and didn’t know anyone who’d actually broken in.
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I got lucky. An upperclassman who interned at McKinsey took interest in me. He showed me how to case prep and walked me through what recruiters looked for. Another mentor introduced me to a McKinsey partner who got on a call with me. That partner then referred me in.
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That’s how I got into McKinsey - luck and a few mentors.
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If I were to do it again, I wouldn’t leave it up to luck. That’s why we created the Wall Street Guide Fellowship to make sure you get the guidance you need early on.
We know what it takes to get these jobs - because we’ve done it ourselves.








