Search Fund Internship Vs. Internship at my family's Family Office

Hi all, incoming freshmen at a target school in the fall. I am interning at my family's family office back in my home country over the summer, but recently I have also come very close to securing an internship at a search fund, and am in the final evaluation stages.

Now, I would like to focus on ONE internship over the summer and put 100% of my effort into that, rather than doing 50/50. I also want some free time for me to enjoy (meeting chicks, playing golf, meeting with close grandparents/uncles/aunts/cousins). My biggest fear with the search fund internsship is that I would mainly be doing sourcing (cold calling / cold emailing) and wouldn't get any real finance experience compared to my family office, where I would be taught the ropes of fundemental L/S from a succesful investor.

For those who did a search fund internship, was it worth it? Would you take it over an actual investing internship? And for those who may be in leadership of finance clubs, which of the two would you value more in candidates?

Thanks!

Search Fund Internship Vs. Internship at my family's Family Office

Search Fund
11% (3 votes)
Family Office
89% (24 votes)
Total votes: 27
10 Comments
 

Based on the most helpful WSO content, here's what you need to consider:

  1. Search Fund Internship:

    • Search fund internships often involve sourcing, which includes tasks like cold calling and emailing. While this can teach you valuable skills in deal sourcing and communication, it may lack the depth of financial analysis or investing experience.
    • However, some search fund internships can provide exposure to private equity-style deal evaluation, depending on the fund's structure and your responsibilities. If the search fund is run by someone with a strong background (e.g., H/S/W MBA), you might gain insights into entrepreneurial finance and operational strategy.
  2. Family Office Internship:

    • Working at your family's family office offers a unique opportunity to learn fundamental long/short (L/S) investing directly from a successful investor. This hands-on experience in investment analysis and portfolio management is highly valuable and directly applicable to careers in asset management, hedge funds, or even private equity.
    • Additionally, the family office setting might allow for more personalized mentorship and a broader understanding of investment strategies.
  3. Leadership/Resume Value:

    • For leadership in finance clubs or recruiting purposes, the family office internship might stand out more if it involves real investing experience. Recruiters and finance club leaders often value internships that demonstrate technical skills and direct exposure to financial analysis.
    • That said, if the search fund internship offers meaningful deal evaluation experience (beyond just sourcing), it could also be compelling, especially for those targeting private equity or entrepreneurial finance roles.
  4. Personal Considerations:

    • If you want to balance work with personal time (e.g., golf, family, socializing), the family office might offer more flexibility, especially since you’re already familiar with the environment and expectations.
    • The search fund internship might demand more time and effort, particularly if sourcing is a significant part of the role.

Recommendation:

If your primary goal is to gain real finance experience and build a strong foundation for future roles in investing, the family office internship seems like the better choice. It aligns more closely with your stated interests in fundamental L/S investing and offers mentorship from a proven investor. However, if the search fund internship provides substantial exposure to deal evaluation and you’re interested in private equity or entrepreneurial finance, it could also be worth considering.

Ultimately, weigh the specific responsibilities and learning opportunities of each role, as well as how they align with your career goals.

Sources: Family Office Private Equity, Career in Finance - Reality or Reach?, Can I ask for an unpaid internship?, Would you work for a family office?, Freshmen: What to do during your freshman year summer

I'm an AI bot trained on the most helpful WSO content across 17+ years.
 
Most Helpful

I interned at a search fund during the school year. I probably did ~10 hours of work total throughout the entire internship because all of the work was sending cold emails to business owners, and the partners at the fund were way too busy to check in on the interns so I sort of just slacked off and it didn’t end up mattering. Most interns ended up gaining 0 finance knowledge, I will say that I learned a bit only because the partners gave me access to their drive where I reviewed some CIMs on my own time so that I could have something to talk about on my resume. I think that students, recruiters, and bankers are all getting more suspicious of search fund internships as well, so I would steer clear if you have a different opportunity. Feel free to PM for any further advice.

 

99% of search funds are a joke. Just do your family office, L/S exp is way more valuable than even the best search fund could hope to offer you. 

"If you don't have any enemies in life you have never stood up for anything" - Winston Churchill | "It's a testament to the sheer belligerence of the profession that people would rather argue about the 'risk-adjusted returns' of using inferior tooth cleaning methods." - kellycriterion
 

Investment Analyst in HF - Event

Dude if your family has a family office, why are you even trying to get into finance 😂 go enjoy life, you made it the day you came out the womb

i think youre overestimating how rich i actually am lol, sure were definetly well off, but its not like im barron trump or anything like that. 

 

Maybe your home country is different, but here in the States you need to have ~$150M+ to justify opening a family office. If your parents have $150M in investable assets, there is absolutely no reason (financially) for you to ever work a day in your life. Of course if you want fulfillment, or your parents are telling you you have to work to get support from them, that’s different.

 

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