The 7 "Good" Work Habits of Bad Analysts

Throwback Thursday: This was originally posted July 2012

This is all representative of commonsense (but ultimately bad) advice I got during undergrad and followed blindly during internships. I sorted it all out by the end of my analyst program, but this was frequently accompanied by discomfort, late nights, and general suck.

You might disagree with my stance here. In fact, if you do, feel free to tell me in the comments. I'd very much like to hear that there are workplaces where the following work habits are rewarded rather than punished.

1: Turn changes as quickly as possible.

This is sometimes a recipe for disaster. The earlier you finish, the more time your boss has to second-guess everything. If you know your boss will iterate until the last moment and beyond, it often pays to build in a small amount of downtime for yourself. The finished product will be just as good (or bad), and you'll be slightly more rested for the next shit show they throw at you.

2: Never turn down a project.

Good general principle, but don't be dumb about it. It's nice to accept projects and workstreams up front from a wide variety of people so that your big workload is evident to all. This reputation can last a lot longer than the workload itself, giving you a chance to pick good projects and do well on them. On the other hand, use this reputation to parry anything likely to turn into a fire drill.

3: Read the WSJ and have informed opinions.

At the analyst level, few people want to hear your opinions on the economy. If you have opinions, don't share them unless asked, or unless you are 100% certain you don't sound like a douche. (Hint: In your early 20's, you can never be 100% certain you don't sound like a douche.)

4: Work through lunch.

Sometimes, nothing is going to save your ass. Just go. Find a friend in the same boat and drag them with you. Life will be better afterward.

5: Fire on all cylinders all the time.

Recipe for burnout. If you're chained to your desk 90+ hours a week and pushing yourself the whole time, you are going to make a bad mistake or fall asleep during a meeting. You have to carve out small nonobvious breaks. Critical part of being a good analyst.

6: Search for work to do when you're not busy.

No. Search for high-impact work to do. If there is none, go home and rest.

7: Follow directions exactly.

Wall Street is full of people who'll give you a recipe for making a shit sandwich and then complain when they don't like the taste. Once you know what you're doing, do it the way it should be done. The boss will like this better than the sandwich.

 
linoxgill:

Agreed. And never forget: UNDERPROMISE AND OVERDELIVER!

Agreed, but inevitably I over promise--usually I'm able to deliver on that over promise, but it's definitely hard not to over promise in our hyper-competitive environment.

 

I disagree with number three in that you should absolutely read the wsj and have informed opinions. Are there times to shut up? Absolutely. But I think it would be dumb not to be keep up and be as informed as possible and discuss it with others.

 

.

Personal wealth is not how much you have in the bank or the worth of your portfolio. But, rather how you've used the wealth to make your life and those around you better.
 
bankerella:
1: Turn changes as quickly as possible.

This is sometimes a recipe for disaster. The earlier you finish, the more time your boss has to second-guess everything. If you know your boss will iterate until the last moment and beyond, it often pays to build in a small amount of downtime for yourself. The finished product will be just as good (or bad), and you'll be slightly more rested for the next shit show they throw at you.

I'm not quite sure if I understand this. Do you mean one should refrain from returning changes/updates quickly? Won't one be known for working slowly?

 
prospective_monkey:
bankerella:
1: Turn changes as quickly as possible.

This is sometimes a recipe for disaster. The earlier you finish, the more time your boss has to second-guess everything. If you know your boss will iterate until the last moment and beyond, it often pays to build in a small amount of downtime for yourself. The finished product will be just as good (or bad), and you'll be slightly more rested for the next shit show they throw at you.

I'm not quite sure if I understand this. Do you mean one should refrain from returning changes/updates quickly? Won't one be known for working slowly?

I'm kind of confused, too.

 
prospective_monkey:
bankerella:
1: Turn changes as quickly as possible.

This is sometimes a recipe for disaster. The earlier you finish, the more time your boss has to second-guess everything. If you know your boss will iterate until the last moment and beyond, it often pays to build in a small amount of downtime for yourself. The finished product will be just as good (or bad), and you'll be slightly more rested for the next shit show they throw at you.

I'm not quite sure if I understand this. Do you mean one should refrain from returning changes/updates quickly? Won't one be known for working slowly?

I'd exercise best judgement. There is a line between acceptably slow and unacceptably slow. What I'm saying is that in my experience, the better analysts come down on the line of acceptably slow as opposed to "wow, that guy is blazingly fast".

Everyone loves it when you whip through changes in fifteen minutes, but that love turns to hate pretty fast when they catch a mistake. They remember that much more clearly than they will remember the ten times you were slightly slower than they wanted you to be.

So, two good reasons to be a little slower in the long run: it allows you to spend more time either on product quality or on self-care (food, rest). Obviously, it's up to you to choose how you mix the two.

 

When turning changes I would always do them as quickly as possible, but i wouldn't necessary hand them on once they're done. Interns are notorious for not prioritizing work when it needs to be. Therefore as an intern you always want to get everything done as quickly as possible, take a break and then take some time to review. But get it done quick just in case the analyst comes rushing over asking for it.

 

I'm liking your posts more and more. Good shit.

Under my tutelage, you will grow from boys to men. From men into gladiators. And from gladiators into SWANSONS.
 

Great post: I'll add my comments.

1) Perfect work >>>>>> Fast work. 2) Manage expectations. If you're swamped, don't be afraid to tell the staffer 3) Keep reading and having opinions, but don't contradict your bosses (at least, not a lot) 4) Either lunch or dinner must be sacred. Value your sanity 5) Think of sleep is a highly-valued commodity 6) ^^ 7) Follow content pretty exactly, but take some liberties on the formatting. Their job is to know what to say, your job is to make it look pretty.

 
illiniPride:
Great post: I'll add my comments.

7) Follow content pretty exactly, but take some liberties on the formatting. Their job is to know what to say, your job is to make it look pretty.

So funny you say that. I had an impulse to go back and clarify that point but didn't follow up on it. Thanks for doing it for me.

This list largely came into existence for me during the earliest sliver of my analyst experience, before I was given any discretion over content. I had repeating issues with a VP who kept giving me a very clear and detailed recipe for a shit sandwich (in terms of exactly what to put where on each slide) and then hating the results. When I started disobeying his direct orders and doing what I thought would work better, he loved me.

Funny: he didn't have any power over the content either, now that I think about it. Maybe that's why he was in such a foul damned mood all the time.

 
Best Response
bankerella:
illiniPride:
Great post: I'll add my comments.

7) Follow content pretty exactly, but take some liberties on the formatting. Their job is to know what to say, your job is to make it look pretty.

So funny you say that. I had an impulse to go back and clarify that point but didn't follow up on it. Thanks for doing it for me.

This list largely came into existence for me during the earliest sliver of my analyst experience, before I was given any discretion over content. I had repeating issues with a VP who kept giving me a very clear and detailed recipe for a shit sandwich (in terms of exactly what to put where on each slide) and then hating the results. When I started disobeying his direct orders and doing what I thought would work better, he loved me.

Funny: he didn't have any power over the content either, now that I think about it. Maybe that's why he was in such a foul damned mood all the time.

The life of a VP: Well-well look. I already told you: I deal with the god damn Analysts so the MDs don't have to. I have people skills; I am good at dealing with people. Can't you understand that? What the hell is wrong with you people?
 
FrankD'anconia:
Damn it. There was a movement in my pants because I thought Bankerella was back, then I realized this was just an old post.

I didn't notice until I read your comment

Because when you're in a room full of smart people, smart suddenly doesn't matter—interesting is what matters.
 
ricky212:
FrankD'anconia:
Damn it. There was a movement in my pants because I thought Bankerella was back, then I realized this was just an old post.

I didn't notice until I read your comment

Fuck.

 

This list is dead on. Dumbfounds me that #1 is true even in a fast paced, live risk environment such as a trading desk. Even if you are right and you can work extremely fast on something, people will always second guess you thinking you didn't do your "research". Go figure.

 

marry me

You killed the Greece spread goes up, spread goes down, from Wall Street they all play like a freak, Goldman Sachs 'o beat.
 

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