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Module 04 · Section 4.5 · Self-Study

Assessment Centre Prep —
Everything you need for the day itself.

An assessment centre is three back-to-back 30–60 minute interviews with S&T professionals, usually in a single morning or afternoon. The questions are predictable. The format is predictable. What separates candidates is preparation — knowing exactly what to expect, how to handle back-to-back sessions, and what to say at the end of every interview.

What to expect
Interview dos & don'ts
48-hour checklist
Questions to ask
Following up
How this fits the course
Module 3
Getting the interview — CV, cover letter, networking, timeline.
Module 4.1 — Behavioural
The answer bank — 100 questions, STAR structure, interviewer logic.
This page — Superday
Day-of execution — what to expect, how to perform across back-to-back rounds.
Night before — quick reference
Markets prep (30 min)
Check 10Y gilt, S&P, EUR/USD, oil. Note one thing that moved and why. Refresh your sell-side view in one sentence per asset class.
Stories (20 min)
Re-read your three strongest STAR stories. Confirm your "walk me through your CV" flows in 90 seconds. Know your strongest why-this-bank answer cold.
Logistics (10 min)
Confirm the address, arrival time, and contact name. Check dress code. Charge your phone. Print nothing — you won't need it.
Morning of
Arrive 10 min early. Read one headline. Be genuinely curious, not performing curiosity. Energy and composure matter as much as answers.
Jump to section
On the dayDos & don'tsBack-to-backChecklistQuestions to askFollow-up
What to expect on the day

The S&T assessment centre format is almost identical at every major bank. Understanding the structure before you walk in removes the only remaining source of genuine surprise.

3
Interviews
30–60
Minutes each
1-on-1
Format (usually)
5
Question types
The five question categories — in order
Every S&T interview runs through the same five categories, roughly in this sequence. Understanding this map means you always know where you are in the conversation and what's coming next.
40% of time
Behavioural
Always opens the interview. Can run the entire 25 minutes at some desks. Walk me through your resume, why S&T, why this bank. The most important category.
20% of time
Market-based
Where is the 10-year? What's driving equities? What's one trend you're following? Shows genuine interest in markets — not just interest in finance.
20% of time
Investment-based
Pitch a stock. Pitch a macro trade. How would you invest £1m? Tests presentation skills and conviction — not whether you're right.
10% of time
Your questions
The most underrated part. Most candidates waste these 5 minutes. Having two or three strong questions is one of the easiest ways to stand out.
10% of time
Product-specific
Only triggered if you mention a specific desk. Don't over-claim expertise in products you don't know. Saying "I'm broadly interested in fixed income" is safer than "I love CLOs."
How the three interviews differ

Don't expect all three interviewers to cover the same ground. Each typically has a different angle. A rates trader will likely ask more market and product questions and skip straight past the soft behavioural questions. A salesperson might spend the entire 25 minutes on behavioural and situational questions — how do you handle a client who is angry, how do you manage relationships under pressure. An HR or junior interviewer typically opens with resume walk-through and closes with "any questions."

Adapt your energy to the interviewer in front of you. If they jump straight to "where's the gilt 10-year?", they want to get into substance quickly — oblige them. If they ask about your rugby, lean into it — they are assessing whether they'd enjoy sitting next to you for twelve hours a day.

Interview dos and don'ts

These rules come from the SalesAndTrading.org guide and are consistent with what every senior S&T professional says when asked. None of them are surprising in isolation — the mistake is ignoring them under pressure.

✓ Do
Keep every answer under two minutes. Your total interview is 30–60 minutes. One answer over two minutes uses more than 10% of your entire slot. Time yourself out loud in prep.
Be genuinely humble. The one trait interviewers actively filter out is arrogance. Self-deprecation where appropriate — "I'm probably not the most technical person in the room, but..." — is always well received.
Ask at least two questions. Never zero. Never "when will I hear back?" Ask questions that show you understand the business and the person's role in it.
Bring five copies of your CV and a pen. Shows preparedness. They probably have it, but showing up with your own copy is a small signal that lands well.
Thank the interviewer at the end. A brief, simple "thanks for taking the time" is enough. Nothing more is required.
Say "I'm not sure, but my best answer would be..." when you genuinely don't know. Prefacing a partial answer honestly is far stronger than bluffing and getting caught.
✗ Don't
Name one specific desk you want to be on. It reads as arrogant before you've done the rotations. Name a broad area (fixed income, credit, rates) or two or three desks, and always follow with "but I want to stay open."
Bluff on market-based questions. If you say "I follow Bloomberg terminal closely" you will get asked what functions you use. Only say what you can back up with specifics.
Mention high school unless exceptional. UCL, internships, leadership roles — all post-18. National athletics or award-winning academic work from school can be mentioned briefly. Everything else stays off the table.
Pick The Wolf of Wall Street as your favourite film. Or Margin Call. Or any finance film. You want to signal you are an interesting, well-rounded person — not someone whose entire personality is finance.
Ask when you'll get a decision. Never ask this. It signals desperation and wastes your 5-minute question window on the one question that actively damages your impression.
Ramble on investment ideas. No one wants a five-minute pitch. 90 seconds maximum. End with your stop-loss and invite follow-up: "happy to go deeper on the risks if useful."
Handling back-to-back interviews

The biggest mistake candidates make on a assessment centre is treating each interview as isolated. They are not — the three interviewers will debrief together, and your consistency and energy across all three sessions matters as much as any single answer.

Interview 1
Set the tone — usually HR or a junior analyst
This is typically the most behavioural-heavy interview. It often opens with "walk me through your resume." Use it to establish your narrative clearly. Your story of how you got to wanting S&T at this bank should feel natural and consistent. If it goes well, your energy going into interviews 2 and 3 will be much better.
Interview 2
Usually a senior associate or VP — deeper substance
Expect more market and product questions here. This is where your market levels, trade pitch, and views on the yield curve come into play. You are likely to get follow-up challenges on your answers — "but what if rates don't fall?" — which are not hostile. They are testing whether you hold your view under pressure or immediately crumble. Hold it, acknowledge the risk, and stay composed.
Interview 3
Often a director or MD — personality fit
By the third interview your energy naturally dips. This is when most candidates who are eventually rejected drop their guard — they stop smiling, their answers get shorter, their body language closes. A more senior interviewer is often the person with the most sway in the final decision. Treat the third interview as the most important, not the least. If you are asked the same question you already answered in interview 1, answer it with the same energy and slightly different framing — never say "I already answered this one."
The reset technique between interviews

Between each interview you will likely have a few minutes waiting in a corridor or meeting room. Use this time deliberately. Take three slow breaths. Mentally file away anything that went badly in the last interview — it is done and cannot be changed. Remind yourself of your two or three strongest answers and hold those in mind. Walk into the next room as if the day is just beginning.

Do not mentally replay a question you think you got wrong. Candidates who carry anxiety from one session into the next compound their mistakes. The person interviewing you next has no idea what happened in the previous room.

48-hour prep checklist

Two days out, you should be reviewing and consolidating — not learning new material. The goal is to move from knowing the answers to owning them.

48 hours before
Check your market levels. Write down from memory: BoE Bank Rate, 10yr gilt yield, S&P 500 level, GBP/USD, USD/JPY, gold price, WTI oil. These should take 30 seconds cold.
Rehearse your resume walk-through out loud. Time yourself. It should be 90 seconds to 2 minutes. Cut anything that is not directly relevant to S&T. Do not end mid-story — close with "which is why I'm sitting here."
Lock in your trade pitch. One pitch you can deliver in 90 seconds clean. Entry, target, stop. Thesis in one sentence. One risk. Practise until it sounds conversational not recited.
Prepare three questions for each interviewer type. Have questions for: a junior (what surprised you about the desk), a VP (how has the product mix changed since you joined), a senior (what does the bank do differently to competitors in this space).
Re-read the bank's recent research. One Barclays Markets Weekly or equivalent. Know one specific thing they have said about rates, FX, or credit this month. Being able to say "I read your rates strategy note last week and found the argument about the 2s10s steepener interesting" is very different to generic flattery.
Print five copies of your CV. And your cover letter if you have one. Put them in a portfolio or folder — not folded in a back pocket.
Evening before
Check the FT markets summary. Anything that moved significantly in the last 24 hours — a central bank decision, a major data print, a geopolitical development — could become a question.
Lay out your clothes. Dark suit, white or pale blue shirt, conservative tie or no tie (check what the bank's culture suggests). Decision fatigue is real — remove morning variables the night before.
Map the route. Arrive 15 minutes early — not 5, not 30. Know which entrance to use. Know the floor. Bank buildings are often confusing and arriving flustered is an avoidable mistake.
Stop preparing by 9pm. Cramming at midnight adds nothing and subtracts energy. What you have not consolidated by this point will not be sharp under interview pressure anyway. Sleep matters more than another review.
Morning of
Skim the FT or Bloomberg headlines. 10 minutes maximum. You are looking for anything that happened overnight that might come up. No deep reading.
Eat breakfast. Not optional. Cognitive performance under stress drops significantly without fuel. Coffee is fine; avoid anything that makes you jittery.
Leave your phone on silent in your pocket. If there is a waiting room, do not sit scrolling. It signals anxiety. Sit calmly, breathe, review your three key points mentally.
Questions to ask your interviewer

The five minutes at the end of each interview are yours. Most candidates waste them with weak questions or ask nothing at all. Strong questions do three things simultaneously: they show genuine curiosity, they signal you have done real research, and they give the interviewer something interesting to talk about — which means they leave the conversation in a positive state of mind.

The rules

Ask two or three questions maximum — never more. Never zero. Never ask when you'll hear back. Never ask a question that could be answered in two seconds with a Google search ("how many people work in the division?"). And never ask the same question to all three interviewers — if they compare notes, it signals you prepared a single list and rotated through it mechanically.

For any interviewer — ask this first"What do you think makes for a great summer analyst? Is there anyone from previous years who particularly stands out to you?" — Interviewers love giving their opinion on this and it signals genuine interest in being excellent, not just getting the offer.
For a trader or quant-oriented role"Technology and automation are clearly reshaping the floor. How do you see that affecting your desk specifically over the next few years — and how has it changed the kind of skills you look for in juniors?" — Adapt if their desk has been negatively affected by automation.
For a senior MD or director"From your vantage point, do you think the regulatory constraints post-2008 — particularly the Volcker rule and Basel 3 — have permanently reshaped how risk gets warehoused in this market? Or do you expect the pendulum to swing back?" — Shows historical awareness and invites a genuine opinion.
For a VP or associate who joined recently"What surprised you most about the desk when you first arrived — something you didn't expect from the outside?" — Gets you an honest answer and shows genuine curiosity about the day-to-day rather than the glamour version.
For a salesperson"What does the client base look like on your desk — is it mostly real money, hedge funds, or a mix? And has that mix shifted at all in recent years?" — Shows you understand that different client types drive completely different sales cultures.
For any interviewer — on desk selection"I know I should stay open-minded about where I end up — but broadly, for a junior starting out today, what would you say to look for when choosing a desk? More flow-based vs more structured, larger vs more niche — or is it entirely personality-driven?" — Invites their honest take and signals humility about not knowing where you'll fit.
Following up after the assessment centre

The process does not end when you leave the building. What you do in the 24 hours after the assessment centre can marginally affect the decision, and it costs nothing to do it well.

Yes — but keep it brief. One short paragraph per interviewer is sufficient. The goal is not to impress them with your writing; it is to show professionalism and reinforce one specific thing from the conversation.

The formula: thank them for their time → reference one specific thing you discussed → reaffirm your enthusiasm briefly → close cleanly.

Example: "Thanks so much for taking the time today. I really enjoyed the conversation about the 2s10s steepener trade and your point about DMO supply keeping the long end anchored was something I hadn't fully considered — I'll be thinking about that. I left the conversation even more excited about the programme than I went in."

Send within 24 hours. Email is fine — LinkedIn is slightly less professional but acceptable if that's how you have their contact. Do not send to multiple people on the same email chain.

What they're really testing: Interviewers debate how much weight thank-you notes carry. Most say they notice absence more than presence — a missing note can feel like a lack of interest. A well-written note rarely changes a decision, but a poorly written generic one can mildly hurt your case.

Answer honestly. This question is almost always asked because they are considering giving you an offer and want to understand your timeline and competing options. It is not a trap.

Finance is a small world — people cross-check with peers at other banks regularly. Lying about where you are interviewing is a genuine risk that can follow you.

If you are interviewing at a competitor: say so plainly without elaborating on the stage you're at. "I've been speaking to a few other banks in markets — Deutsche, HSBC, and Nomura — but I'm genuinely most excited about this process."

If you are only interviewing here: say so. It will not be held against you. Most candidates for their first role have a limited pipeline and that is completely understood.

What they're really testing: The interviewer asking this question usually already likes you. The honest answer that signals genuine enthusiasm for their firm specifically is the best answer.

Almost certainly not — unless you froze completely and said nothing. The way S&T interviewers evaluate market questions is fundamentally different from product questions.

For market levels (where is the gilt 10-year?): not knowing the exact number is very different from not knowing the approximate range or recent direction. If you say "I think it's around 4.3–4.4%, it's been relatively range-bound recently as the BoE has started cutting but the long end is pinned by supply" and you are slightly off, that is a good answer. If you say "I'm not sure" and stop, that is a problem.

For product questions you don't know: "I'm not certain on that one, but my intuition would be..." followed by a logical attempt is always better than silence. Interviewers are assessing how you reason, not testing your memory.

One weak answer in a 25-minute interview does not lose an offer. A pattern of weak answers does.

What they're really testing: Interviewers are specifically watching for how you handle not knowing something — the ability to stay composed, attempt a partial answer, and not catastrophise is itself a useful data point about how you'll perform on the desk.

This is not a sign the pitch is bad — it is standard practice. Interviewers challenge trade pitches to see whether you crumble or hold your conviction under pressure.

The correct response: acknowledge the challenge as legitimate, explain why you still hold the view despite it, and if it genuinely invalidates your thesis, say so. "That's a fair point — if the BoE does pause unexpectedly and inflation re-accelerates, the front end wouldn't come in as I'm projecting. That would be my stop-out scenario, which is why I'd set the stop at X basis points."

You do not need to win the argument. You need to demonstrate that you have thought about both sides and can hold a position calmly under scrutiny. That is what being a salesperson requires every day.

What they're really testing: The interviewers who challenge your pitch most aggressively are often the most interested. Passive non-engagement with a pitch is a worse sign than vigorous pushback.
The five most important behavioural answers to lock in

These five questions are asked in almost every S&T assessment centre in some form. Your answers should feel natural and consistent, not recited. The framework below is a starting point — build the answer around your own specific experiences.

Rules: Under 2 minutes. Nothing before university unless genuinely exceptional. 30–60 seconds per major line item. Tell a coherent story that ends with a clear reason for wanting S&T at this specific bank.

Structure: Where you're studying and why it suits you → year abroad or significant experience → first internship and what you learned → second internship and what confirmed your direction → why S&T, why fixed income, why now.

Barclays-specific close: End with something that directly connects your experience to the programme. If you did EM credit at HSBC, land on "which is why Barclays' strength in Rates, FX, and Credit specifically feels like the right next step." Do not end on a vague aspiration — end on a specific connection.

What they're really testing: The resume walk-through sets your narrative for the entire interview. Everything they ask next is coloured by how you framed this answer. A weak walk-through that sounds confused or lacks direction makes every subsequent answer harder to land.

The worst version of this answer says you follow the markets since you were a child or that you love investing on your own. That signals you think S&T is about picking stocks, which it is not.

The best version clearly communicates: (1) you understand what S&T actually is, (2) you have specific experiences that pointed you toward it, and (3) you have a personality reason that is honest and specific to you.

Structure: What S&T offers that IB doesn't for someone like you (front-row seat to live markets, client-facing from day one, product depth) → your internship experience that confirmed this → a honest personality reason (extroversion for sales, analytical focus for trading) → a brief IB acknowledgement that is respectful, not dismissive.

On IB: Don't say it's boring. Say it's a great career but the parts of finance that interest you most — how markets price risk in real time, how clients think about their hedges and their portfolio — are more directly visible from S&T than from coverage banking.

What they're really testing: The interviewer is checking whether you actually know what S&T is. Many candidates conflate it with asset management or think it's primarily about picking stocks. A crisp, accurate description of S&T as market-making and risk management for institutional clients immediately signals you've done your homework.

Everyone knows you are also interviewing elsewhere. The interviewer does not expect genuine exclusivity. What they do expect is that you have done enough research to have a specific, substantiated reason that isn't just league table rank.

Barclays-specific structure: Product strength in the areas you care about (Rates, FX, Credit — name specific desks or franchises) → the STS rotational programme structure and what it offers a junior → something you heard from someone you networked with (if you've spoken to people at Barclays, name-drop the desk or the type of person without being specific — "from what I've heard in conversations with people on the desk") → a cultural reason that feels genuine.

You can also mention: the Barclays Markets Weekly / Equity Gilt Study specifically, the firm's UK anchor with global scale, or the risk-disciplined culture post-2012.

What not to say: Barclays has great people. Barclays is a top bank. Barclays is a great brand. These are untestable generalities and every candidate says some version of them.

What they're really testing: This question filters candidates who have done real research from those who have done surface-level research. The interviewer has heard "great culture, strong platform, excellent people" approximately one thousand times.

This question is specifically testing whether you follow real markets — not just whether you know financial theory. The story should be recent (within the last month), macro in nature, and you should have a view on it — not just a summary.

Structure: What you read and where → what was interesting about it → how it connects to a broader market theme you're watching → a tentative view or question it raises for you.

Good topics for 2026: The private credit expansion into consumer and leveraged lending (and what that means for systemic risk when public IG spreads are already tight) · BoE's cautious cutting cycle vs ECB divergence · The AI capex cycle and whether monetisation is keeping up · EM FX and the nearshoring story in Mexico and Morocco · Gilt supply and DMO issuance volume relative to BoE QT.

Important: Only mention sources you genuinely read and can discuss in detail. If you say you read Barclays Markets Weekly, you may be asked what it said this week. If you say you follow Barclays FX Strategy, you should know one recent view they've published.

What they're really testing: The classic mistake is giving a summary with no opinion. "I read an article about the Fed cutting rates" is not an answer. "I read a piece about how private credit is moving into consumer debt and it struck me that tight public HY spreads might be giving a misleading signal about where credit stress is actually building" is an answer.

This is a trap for candidates who either say "I have none" (naive) or spiral into a long list of existential concerns about automation and regulation (negative and unfocused).

The best answers acknowledge real concerns — because they exist — while framing them as manageable and outweighed by the upside.

Structure: Acknowledge that unlike investment banking where work is relatively consistent across coverage groups, S&T has massive variance between desks → the risk of ending up on a desk that turns out not to be the right fit → the regulatory and technological changes that have reshaped some desks more than others → close with why the rotational structure reduces these concerns and why the pros outweigh the cons for you personally.

On automation specifically: If asked directly, acknowledge that electronic trading has compressed spreads on flow-heavy desks and some roles have become much smaller. But frame it accurately: the desks that require structural product knowledge, client relationships, and complex derivatives are not the ones being automated away. Discretion about which desks you're interested in helps here.

What they're really testing: Interviewers ask this to see whether you are naive (no concerns) or thoughtful but not catastrophising. The answer should demonstrate that you have a realistic view of S&T and have done the research to understand what the job actually is — including its genuine limitations.
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