Showing posts with label jobs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jobs. Show all posts

MBA:The Path to your dream job

Category: , , , By Stuart
Hi Guys,
for all those who wanted to know the path from B-school to Business Practice ($$$$$$$$ Job)i.e getting a top dollar job with a "sexy" firm (MC/IB, et al), fellow blogger Necromonger (
http://onwardtomba.blogspot.com) has written a post that demystifies the entire job application and offer process. His post applies to all leading B-schools including the FT toplist and St. Gallen (except the Indian B-schools he mentions!). For a background, Necro is an Indian who worked in the US for years and now is doing his MBA at INSEAD.

I directly quote from his blog :

This post is to summarize some principal possible differences between recruitment in the top Indian business schools like IIM/ISB vs. top International schools (typical FT top 10 or M7 + LBS/INSEAD). Keep in mind the following


Recruitment is a long cycle - The process of finding a job can takes months, sometimes 4-6 months. The process involves substantial amount of career coaching, CV polishing, schmoozing, meeting with recruiters, follow-ups, attending cocktails and networking sessions, and then finally rounds of interviews. Jobs are not a "given", the idea is you learn all the skills needed to "earn" one.

There is no "placement week" with "zero day placements" and everyone getting jobs in 2 days - There is a recruitment season which lasts 2-4 months, but nothing stops someone from looking for jobs much earlier.

A lot of graduates get jobs outside career services / campus placements - A pretty high percentage - often as high as 30% (could be more depending on the year, school etc.) get jobs outside placements. They do so for variety of reasons - but the most important one is that search for the right job in a company of interest. Getting jobs like this is again a long process that involves lot of research, networking and persistence.

Astronomical salaries are usually outliers - Yes, someone from Columbia this year got half a million. Many from INSEAD do get high salaries. But keep in mind that these are statistical "outliers." They do not represent typical salaries. When I read many reports on IIM/ISB I read about many "1 crore" salaries which translates to over 250,000$ base salary for associate or 3rd year analyst positions. I might be wrong, but such salaries from banks may be specially given to IIM / ISB students because I don't think any of the international schools get such salaries on a regular basis. I don't know. But the typical average in most of the top schools is around 110,000 USD.

You are often pitted against those from other top schools - There are many interesting jobs and positions often open only to a select set of schools. What that means is you are not competing for it with just your class mates, but also with those from the other top schools - you compete on a whole new level. Without mentioning names of companies, I can tell you there are specific roles that companies open only to the typical FT top 10. The flip side is you are competing with all of them. Most of the companies recruiting are high profile and have access to the best talent around the world, so they're not standing in a queue to recruit you.

Job placement is a whole lot about specific roles and fit - A lot of placement is for specific roles and positions. This makes fit very important. There is very little of "we'll come in a bus, pick a bunch of grads, and then put them anywhere in the organization." I can say that this is a critical difference between lot of international blue chips that come on campus vs. Indian company style recruitment (of which I can speak of with considerable experience).

Placement is truly global - jobs are offered around the world, and often in very interesting management rotations that take you to multiple countries.Does it mean that it's a hopeless case to get a job? Uh..no. Most of them get great jobs in interesting companies and with pretty good salaries. But you need to work really hard to get them. In the process, you become a whole lot polished as a person. And this is a reason why some schools don't really worry you with grades (INSEAD doesn't) so you can focus on all the other critical skills you should be polishing as an MBA, and it's not all about theory and books.


Stuart's 2 Cents:

What necro has outlined is purely factual. If you come to St. Gallen, you do get premium attention from the hordes of recruiters in German speaking europe who rate HSG as Ivy league.


For most positions in german speaking regions esp. people jobs like consulting, you need good command over the German language.

Else u will have to seek London/US/Asia openings for which usually the Zurich Office of the Consulting firms conduct the initial screening (first round of interview) and u have a subsequent round of interview at your target office (UK, etc)

For Investment Banks, the situation is slightly different, but with the Sub Prime (or Sub Crime!!) crisis most major banks are taking a big hit, so this year may not be the best time to get into them. When they're losing CEOs, they're looking for CEOs too and in the short term, fresh hirings may witness a downward trend.
 

Investment Banking days

Category: , , By Stuart

The Investment Banking Days (IBD) is an annual event at HSG. In this 2-week long event (October 1 – October 12’07), various investment banks come to campus and conduct workshops and interviews for prospective interns and full time positions for the following year.

(
http://www.investmentbankingdays.com/)

This event is NOT exclusive to the MBAs but is more for the Bachelor’s , masters and PhD students of St Gallen. While we MBA students were invited to the workshops, only few interviews were offered primarily because the Investment Banking in Switzerland is a small market for experienced hires like MBAs. Fresh graduates and less experienced people are preferred because they can start from scratch as analysts.

MBAs on the other hand, are advised to apply at the London Office as the Big Ben is a bigger financial hub. However, my friends were also able to obtain individual contacts, dinner invitations and recommendations from I-bank representatives, who they had impressed during the workshops… so these are leads you could convert..

The MBA office also held an MBA only Apero with these bank reps for better access to the banks..

So u see.. it depends on ur skills and abilities.. one more thing, I banks prefer people from quantitative backgrounds (Economics, Mathematics, Commerce.. etc) and also professionals with prior Finance /I banking experience.

This year the following I-banks have come to campus.. JP Morgan, Goldman Sachs, Credit Suisse, UBS, Morgan Stanley, Deutsche Bank, Bank of America, Barclays Capital, Citi, HSBC, Dresdner Kleinwort, Pricoa Capital, Sal Oppenheim, Royal Bank of Scotland, Lehman Brothers, Société Générale, Exane, PW Partners, Bank am Bellevue & Rothschild.

The workshops are usually about current issues.. here’s the list of the workshops:
MSREF - Private Equity Acquisition Process -Morgan Stanley
M&A - Defence Strategies in a Competitive Bid Situation -UBS AG
M&A Workshop -Lehman Brothers
Convertible Bonds - Financial analysis and workplan of a transaction -Barclays Capital
Different perspectives on an M&A target -Citi
Managing Credit Risk in volatile Markets -Goldman Sachs
Lunch & Learn: Corporate Finance in der Praxis -JP Morgan
Women's Round Table - Manage your career -JP Morgan
Grow or go? M&A issues for a global company -Rothschild GmbH
Cross-Border M&A, an example from the Healthcare Industry - Bank of America
Managing at the Top: Global Markets at Deutsche Bank -Deutsche Bank
Your step into the Financial World - M&A in Practise -Deutsche Bank
Stepping into the global footprints of HSBC with Investment and Private Banking -HSBC Bank plc
Investor Solutions Case Study -Dresdner Kleinwort
Independent Financial Advice -PW Partners
How to Sell Innovative Structured Products? -Société Générale

And each of these I banks are conducting interviews for short listed candidates… We also had a few fun events.. like Go-Karting (sal Oppenheim)…

The benefits of this event are very evident:
Banks get to know good candidates.. candidates learn about prospective I-Banking roles and the university leverages its popularity in a win-win manner. I spoke to these bank reps about St Gallen.. and they unanimously said that they love St Gallen.. and that’s why they come here every year in droves!!

 

Novartis Presentation

Category: , , , , By Stuart

On Wednesday we had a presentation by senior executives including the head of Business Processes and Analysis division of Novartis.


They were here to sell their Finance development program (FDP) for executives and were keen for talent from St Gallen.


The FDP is basically a starting point for high profile financial executives into Novartis and intends to groom them to step into CFO roles within a period 5-6 years..


The presentation was interesting and the program seems to be well thought out.. basically the FDP participant starts in Basel (which is the group HQ) and works there for about 15 months in different divisions and then be posted to another country as head of FRA (Financial Reporting and Advisory)..


From there to another international division (like BPA) and finally as a CFO for a company, which is when he/she will have graduated out of the FDP program.


Interesting huh? Yeah.. esp if u are a typical bean counter and like book keeping .. the responsibility , career growth and responsibility. Some guys were interested in M&A and strat planning which had other entry points…


Takeaways: just three weeks and we have the first company trying to sell itself to us.. great way to start ur MBA! And it helps to have a small batch.. u get to interact with these people one on one… so if u r keen to get in at least u could face an interview.. where u can sell urself .. and possibly land a job.



 

Career Services

Category: , , , By Stuart