Thanks galan I really appreciate the feedback. Regarding networking, the CFA Institute Investment Research Competition provided me with a lot of networking opportunities and I met a lot of individuals working buy side or sell side. Other than the competition, I haven’t done much networking. Where would I go? Would you suggest attending random CFA Society events? The problem is that I’m in DC and the jobs are scarce.
Honestly, I would probably enjoy ER a lot more than IB. Also, I think the competition is at least something I have under my belt related to ER that I can speak to in interviews. I’ve worked with Capital IQ, Ibbotson Valuation Edition Yearbooks, Duff & Phelps Risk Premium Report, Bloomberg, and Pratt Stats. I gained valuable experience interviewing management, and developing/defending a recommendation. Also, I met a woman during the competition who teaches a U of Missouri and she said one of her students competed in the competition, presented the report to an employer, got an interview, and ended up beating out an Ivy grad for a sell side job at a good firm.
I’m definitely willing to take a pay cut though so I don’t think that would be an issue. It’s what I want to do so I don’t care about pay as much. But the reason I should be hired over a UPenn grad is I have experience developing a financial model and performing a valuation via the competition, I have an excellent understanding of the financial statements (I’m willing to go toe-to-toe with an Ivy grad), my learning curve wouldn’t be as steep as an undergrad because I’m familiar with a dynamic, high performing culture, and my soft skill are probably more advanced from a communication and presentation prespective (I know your question was rhetorical but wanted to provide an answer).
Also, it never hurts to be hunger. Who would you rather have on your team, Guy A who gets the job because he’s Ivy and does a consistently solid job or Guy B who is more or less the underdog coming from a non-Ivy, but is hunger and willing to do whatever it takes to get on the team, absorb everything like a sponge, and stop at nothing to live out his dream? It’s like a classic sports story. I’m Guy B and I’m telling you I will do whatever it takes. If I have to race a marathon, develop a financial model, and recite Shakespeare to get in the door then I’m going to do it.
I completely agree with you though. I’m at a HUGE disadvantage not going to a better MBA program, but I don’t think it’s a ultimate deal breaker. I did what you said and reached out to a former PwC alum who works at Oppenheimer doing investment banking to get his feedback.
What else would you recommend to break into ER? I’m very different than the typical PwCer, my undergrad was actually Finance and I came into the firm by way of the Advisory practice, but, as I mentioned, everything I do is basically audit with a management consulting twist.