times are tough, we had MBA's graduate in December that still dont have a job. Everyone has the right idea with networking, using your college's career center, etc.
Also, if you have any aspirations of doing it big, it will be a must for you to go back and get your MBA, but only after you have obtained 3-5 years work experience. It would be pointless to go back to school unless you get that experience first.
I have my own doubts about what job offers I will be receiving when I finished my MBA in December. I am hoping the market turns around by then, but it probably wont. I am just trying to network my ass of, and I have to do it harder because my school isnt a top ranked B-school, so I got two factors working against me. In the end, the market will correct, jobs will open up, and things will be fine. Until then, it will be an uphill battle. If you get any job offer in the industry you want to be in, regardless of money or what you would be doing, id take it and start gaining realworld experience. My suggestion - NETWORK your ass off. College career center, look up alumnis on Linkedin, do all you can. If you do that, I am sure with a degree and a solid internship, you should find something, but probably not in I-Banking.