You're trying to do something rather audacious. That's great, I'm all for it. I did something rather audacious as well after business school. However I'd say that a solid 80% of the value I received from business school was from building a network and 100% of my ability to start my first business was due to the network I built at school. So, if you've got access to alumni and classmates that's where you have to start if you want to do something like this. You're actually in the perfect informational interview stage, the "hey, this might be crazy but can I bounce some ideas off you" stage that most alumni, at least at my school, enjoy talking through with students. What you're trying to do has a low chance of success but you can probably figure out something similar with the help of your network. What you're trying to do has zero chance of success the way you're trying to make it happen.I'm 100% committed to trading and if that doesn't work, maybe I'll look into some quantitative finance related role. I don't mind working 80+ hour weeks for the right shop. It's not the hours that's my problem. It's how to pitch myself since my biggest weakness is networking and interviewing, a couple skills that I'd pretty much given up on developing. I plan to try something new i.e. getting myself in front of people and pitching through cold calling/emailing. Career wise I am stuck between "experienced" and "junior". I am looking to pitch myself as experienced and the only hang up is the hard numbers, which I don't have access too unfortunately. I guess I could always ask, but it would be a strange question to ask out of the blue.
I would like to run a market making desk first before I decide to go buy side as I don't have much research skills under my belt. And my school is not located in NY unfortunately.
As an aside, if you're going to business school but have decided that a. You're not able to network and b. You've given up on it and aren't going to try....then you're absolutely wasting your time at business school. I'm an introvert, hated networking and even the concept of networking. I was able to figure out my own way of doing it in a way that didn't seem crass or transactional and involved deeper relationships with fewer people, but it was a tough and painful road to get there. If you're not willing to put that effort in, then frankly I don't see the point. Sorry to be blunt, but I recognize what I see and am so thankful that someone gave me similarly blunt advice at the time.

