Claude AI Cracked Goldman’s Interview While My Roommate Cracked
David’s dorm room. Two desks. Same dream: Goldman Sachs analyst position.
Left desk: Kevin. 80 hours/week grinding. LeetCode, case studies, networking events. Wall covered in sticky notes. Red Bull pyramid.
Right desk: David. 2 hours/day. Claude open. One prompt refined over and over. Playing Xbox rest of the time.
Goldman Super Day results:
- Kevin: Rejected after final round
- David: Offer. $110K base + $40K bonus
Kevin still doesn’t understand. David won’t tell him about Claude.
Access elite finance interview prep and AI tools at Metapress Career Resources – where ambitious students become analysts.
The Prompt That’s Worth $150K/Year
David discovered Claude could reverse-engineer Goldman’s interview process.
Fed it:
- 500 Goldman interview experiences from WSO
- Every leaked question from past 5 years
- Goldman’s published “what we look for”
- Successful candidate profiles
Claude identified the pattern everyone missed: Goldman doesn’t want the right answers. They want a specific thinking process.
The Master Prompt:
You’re interviewing at Goldman Sachs. They’ll ask [question type].
Don’t give THE answer. Show THIS process:
1. Clarify assumptions (even if obvious)
2. Structure approach using Goldman’s preferred frameworks
3. Mention risk before opportunity
4. Quantify everything, even guesses
5. Reference current market event naturally
6. End with question showing deeper thinking
Sound like: 22-year-old who reads FT daily but isn’t trying to impress
Include: One subtle mistake you catch and correct yourself
Energy: Confident but coachable
This prompt generated answers that beat 95% of candidates.
2 Hours vs 80 Hours: The David Method
Kevin’s Day:
- 6 AM: Wake up, practice mental math
- 7 AM: Read WSJ, FT, Bloomberg
- 9 AM: Classes (barely paying attention)
- 2 PM: LeetCode grinding
- 6 PM: Mock interviews with finance club
- 10 PM: Networking calls with alumni
- 2 AM: Pass out on keyboard
David’s Day:
- 10 AM: Wake up
- 11 AM: Feed Claude the day’s interview prep
- 11:30 AM: Practice Claude’s answers out loud
- 1 PM: Done. Xbox time
- Occasionally: Check markets for 5 minutes
Kevin’s preparation: 1,000+ hours David’s preparation: 60 hours with Claude
The Interview That Shocked Goldman
Technical question: “Walk me through a DCF”
Kevin’s answer: Textbook perfect. Took 8 minutes. Mentioned every step.
David’s answer (Claude-generated): “Before I start, are we valuing a mature company or high-growth? Changes my terminal value approach… Actually, let me structure this differently than the textbook…”
Interviewer’s note: “Best technical answer I’ve heard in 5 years.”
Market question: “Where do you see rates in 2025?”
Kevin’s answer: Quoted three analysts, hedged everything.
David’s answer: “Claude – I mean, clearly – the dot plot suggests… wait, that’s consensus. Actually, I think everyone’s missing the commercial real estate refinancing wall…”
Interviewer later said: “He thinks differently. That’s rare.”
The Roommate Dynamic from Hell
Kevin sees David playing Call of Duty at 3 PM.
“Dude, Goldman interviews are in a week.” “I know.” “When are you preparing?” “Already did today.” “For how long?” “Long enough.”
Kevin’s stress eating. David’s ordering pizza for gaming sessions.
Kevin’s making flashcards. David’s making TikToks.
Kevin’s in library until 4 AM. David’s asleep by midnight.
Interview day:
- Kevin: Didn’t sleep, five espressos, shaking
- David: Full night’s rest, one coffee, relaxed
Results day:
- Kevin: Crying in bathroom
- David: Calculating signing bonus after-tax
Claude’s Secret Weapon: Understanding Goldman Culture
Claude identified what humans missed about Goldman:
They want analysts who:
- Think in frameworks (but flexibly)
- Show intellectual humility (admitting unknowns)
- Demonstrate “structured spontaneity”
- Reference markets naturally (not forcefully)
- Ask questions that show depth
Claude’s insight: “Goldman knows everyone prepares. They’re testing who can hide it best while still delivering. Be prepared but seem natural.”
David’s implementation:
- Memorized Claude’s answers
- Practiced seeming spontaneous
- Added personal quirks Claude suggested
- Threw in calculated “mistakes”
Worked perfectly.
The $40K Prompt Business
David now sells “The Goldman Prompt” for $500.
Buyers: 400+ desperate finance students Success rate: 73% get offers Revenue: $200K in 6 months
Package includes:
- Master prompt for all question types
- Claude training on your specific background
- Voice modulation suggestions
- “Mistake insertion” framework
- Market reference cheat sheet
Kevin found out. Bought it. Too late for him, but his younger brother just got into JPMorgan using it.
Why Kevin Failed: The Overpreperation Trap
Kevin did everything “right”:
- Networked with 50+ alumni
- Completed 200+ LeetCode problems
- Read every markets news
- Practiced 100+ cases
- Attended every info session
But he sounded robotic. Rehearsed. Desperate.
David (via Claude) sounded natural. Thoughtful. Relaxed.
Goldman feedback on Kevin: “Clearly prepared but lacks natural instinct” Goldman feedback on David: “Natural banker mentality”
The irony: David’s never read a 10-K. Claude reads them for him.
The Network Effect
David’s success spread through the university finance club.
Current stats:
- 40 students using Claude method
- 31 got bulge bracket offers
- Average prep time: 50 hours
- Traditional prep time: 500+ hours
The revolution:
- Study groups became prompt workshops
- Mock interviews became Claude training
- Networking became unnecessary
- Stress decreased 90%
The finance club president: “We’re not sure if this is cheating or evolution.”
The MD Who Knows
Goldman MD pulled David aside during summer internship.
“Your interview answers. They were too perfect. You used AI, didn’t you?”
David’s heart stopped.
MD continued: “Good. We need people who leverage technology. But learn the actual finance too. AI won’t save you on a live deal at 3 AM. Yet.”
David now has return offer. The MD became his mentor. They use Claude together for pitch decks.
The Ethical Question Nobody Asks
Is David qualified for Goldman?
Technical skills: Claude provides them Market knowledge: Claude supplies it Work ethic: 2 hours/day suggests no Results: His internship rated “exceeds expectations”
David’s defense: “Goldman wants people who get results efficiently. I’m the most efficient analyst they’ve ever hired. My models are perfect because Claude checks them. My research is comprehensive because Claude does it. I deliver faster than anyone. Isn’t that what they’re paying for?”
His intern class rankings: #2 out of 100 Hours worked: Lowest in class Output quality: Highest ratings
Kevin’s Revenge
Kevin didn’t give up. He learned David’s method.
Now at Morgan Stanley. Same salary as David. Uses Claude for everything.
“I wasted a year of my life grinding. David figured out the game changed. Traditional effort is dead. AI leverage is everything.”
Kevin’s current routine:
- Morning: Claude summarizes overnight markets
- Work: Claude does all analysis
- Evening: Actually has a life now
Plot twist: Kevin’s better at using Claude than David now. His bonus was higher.
The Next Phase: Full-Time Domination
David’s plan for full-time:
- Claude writes all models
- AI handles client emails
- Automated market updates
- Prompt library for every scenario
Estimated hours needed: 20/week Goldman expects: 100/week Plan: Appear busy, deliver perfectly
“Banking is about perception. If I deliver exceptional work, who cares if it takes me 2 hours or 20?”
The Prompt That Started a Revolution
The exact prompt that got David into Goldman (selling for $99):
Context: Behavioral interview at Goldman Sachs
Question: [Insert question]
Respond using this structure:
1. Brief personal anecdote (15 seconds) that seems spontaneous
2. Framework: “I think about this in three parts…”
3. Part 1: Quantified achievement
4. Part 2: Challenge faced and specific solution
5. Part 3: Lesson that applies to banking
6. Goldman connection: Reference something specific about their culture/deals
7. End: Question that shows you’ve researched beyond the basics
Tone: Smart 22-year-old who’s confident but still learning
Include: Specific numbers, dates, and names
Avoid: Clichés like “attention to detail” or “work ethic”
Add: One moment of self-deprecating humor
This prompt has generated $2M in Goldman offers for users.
David’s at his Goldman desk right now. Claude on screen. Working on a pitch deck.
Time spent: 30 minutes. His analyst class average: 6 hours.
His MD just messaged: “Great work on the model.”
David hasn’t opened Excel. Claude did everything.

The revolution isn’t coming to Wall Street. It’s already there, wearing a Goldman badge.
