38 Comments
 

It's a pretty competitve internship to get. Off the top of my head I can think of only one guy who had one - he's at bear stearns now.

Actually, his buddy had one too - his buddy is at a BB, not suer which one though.

 
newbie2bankingBig4 Corpfin = Work harder for same pay as everyone else in Big4
Wrong as hell, I know someone making 70k + an avg 20k bonus in a super competitive corporate finance position straight from college. He had a 3.95 GPA and all this other crazy shit.
It's a dawg eat dawg world.
 

Big 4 (whether it's advisory, corp fin, tax) does not work that way. The base pay is decent coming out of undergrad but no way in hell are they paying $20k bonus to someone right out of school. The salary and bonus structure is very rigid and there is not much wiggle room even for the top staff employees. In fact in two of the 4 that I have intimate knowledge of, there is no bonus for first year. I qualify this by saying that I spent 3 yrs in one of those groups.

 

Any F500 companies that are keen to sophomores in finance roles? I don't fee like lying about my graduation date (I am junior credit wise technically b/c of AP credit but I'm gonna double major) due to ethical reasons.

 

The company I had applied for is a top 5 pharmaceutical company in US (revenue wise), but the deadline has already passed. PM me more more info.

 

Thanks, my background is finance undergrad from non target where I was an athlete. I sold insurance then did a 6 month internship with a life insurance company inside the investments department working with the company's general account investments. That led to my current role and caused me to be recruited for this CF role. I either want to work in CF or in investment analysis to portfolio management (non sales). I want to use my CFA in practice when i achieve it and not as a marketing tool.

 

Is the telecom company F500 or at least highly visible? If so I'd go that route. Dialing for sales probably isn't going to get you into a top MBA program. Additionally, it'll help if you do something substantial on the side. Start a nonprofit or business, or do something that makes you stand out from the applicant pool.

I don't really know what you do at your current job with the info given, but if it is what it sounds like, I don't think your chances at a decent MBA are that good. I'm definitely no expert, just trying to offer some common sense advice.

"You stop being an asshole when it sucks to be you." -IlliniProgrammer "Your grammar made me wish I'd been aborted." -happypantsmcgee
 

Thanks for the input. No it's not F500, but it is visible. At my current role I work for a CFA that runs his practice through a regional firm. He has 2 proprietary equity models that I collect performance data on as well as trade on a block trading platform for 250 discretionary accounts. I do some client contact and solicitation, and I reinvest some of clients bond money as bonds mature. It's not your typical mutual fund peddler, but I still am not running technical or fundamental analysis on current or potential holdings like I did at the life insurance internship. I feel like the FA route is as good as it gets going that route. I'd have the opportunity to buy the book 10-20 years from now and collect 7 figures asking as he doesn't get hit by the per verbal bus between now and then.

My career goal would be to work my way up the CF ladder or get into a more technical finance role. I want to get the best possible MBA regardless of staying or jumping. I hope that gives a better picture.

 

Definitely a better picture. A couple things to keep in mind here (and I'm saying this as someone who has done a lot of research and gotten a lot of anecdotal information, I don't know any of this first-hand):

1) Keep in mind corpfin doesn't have huge payouts like your current opportunity has the potential for. Working your way up the corporate ladder is extremely difficult, but coming in with a top MBA will help a lot.

2) Make sure you know what companies you want to work for and target MBA programs where those companies recruit. A top 10 MBA will get you anywhere. A top ~25 MBA will get you close to anywhere, but you'll have to work for it. Regional MBAs work for companies within that region. Just make sure you perform exceptionally, get internships, network your ass off, etc.

3) MANY corporate finance roles are accounting-related. There are a lot more accounting-focused positions than finance-focused positions, so make sure you know what position/groups you want to apply for.

4) An MBA is kind of your last chance to switch your career track. If you really want to do IA/PM more than corpfin, go for it now. You probably won't get the chance again. If you do get the IA/PM position you want, you'll likely be able to switch to a corpfin position at a later point (I'm not exactly sure how that would work and what positions you'd be looked at for). Going the other way doesn't work nearly as well until later in your career when you have a BSD.

Last piece of advice: start doing something outside of work. Like right now. I'd hold off on applying for an MBA until 2015 and apply in the first admissions round. That gives you the best shot at admissions for most schools. This gives you time to STUDY YOUR ASS OFF for the GMAT (while the scores are by no means end-all, be-all, having a score in the proper range is a checkmark off the list). It also gives you time to get involved in something outside of work. If you can put an AVERAGE of 10 hours/week into something (volunteering with an organization and building a reputation with them, starting a small business, etc), it'll look good for you.

Hope that helps some, maybe one of the CF guys will swing through and give you some more advice. If you're really more interested in investment analysis/portfolio management, I'd go to the Asset Management forum and see what you need to do to break in.

"You stop being an asshole when it sucks to be you." -IlliniProgrammer "Your grammar made me wish I'd been aborted." -happypantsmcgee
 

My biggest fear is that my current role is not going to be relevant to anything than eventual potential take over of the practice. Another problem is that it is very low pay currently. 60+ hours a week of admin grunt work with the occasional Aaa bond buying. I just don't see that getting me into an analyst program. The CF analyst on the other hand is going to involve analyzing projects, forward looking models, following competitors and building models on them as well. I feel like doing that while pursuing my CFA (sitting for level 1 in December) will at least be good to go into an analyst role following the industry or a solid GMAT to MBA. The CF role is more pay and less hours which leaves time to pursue philanthropic endeavors to boost the resume.

Bottom line: Is my current role transferable to a non sales finance position?

 

I honestly can't tell you that, though the one thing that pops into my head is Investor Relations, where you're kinda selling the company to investors.

Honestly it sounds like the CF position is the best bet for you. It doesn't sound like you're in a place that you really like or look forward to continuing with. The CF will probably set you up better for b-school, too. More diverse experience. You'll likely need at least a year in the CF position for it to mean anything in b-school admissions.

Search for Alex Chu and ask in his MBA thread about your situation.

"You stop being an asshole when it sucks to be you." -IlliniProgrammer "Your grammar made me wish I'd been aborted." -happypantsmcgee
 

Couple of ups and downs about it.

Big 4 internships tend to be shorter in length. You are exposed to smaller deals and transactions. They also lack the 'prestige' factor of a BB firm.

On the other hand, the Big 4 where I live offer fewer internships, in some cases only one placement per rotation.

But remember, any relevant work experience in the corporate finance area will be a plus.

 

I know quite a few guys that did a Big4 Corp Fin internship last summer. Every single one of them loved it, and every single one of them are staying on (except the ones that told the company they want to take a year off to travel the world, and have had their start dates moved by a a year). I'm not sure what a BB internship would be like, but it seems that Big4 CorpFin is more work (and no more pay) than Big4 Accounting, but less work (and less pay) than any IB internship.

That's just from my friends at 2 Big4 companies and the things I've heard on this site about IB (never known anyone in IB).

 

I'm pretty sure in the UK at least Big4 CF pays more than than their other groups (roughly 28k vs 24k). Maybe I'm wrong. As for internships I've heard of a few ppl who went on to IBs after graduating with a big 4 internship.

 

thanks for all the responses - i definitely see that big 4 corp fin is a pretty valuable internship.

i have two follow-up questions -

1) out of the big 4, which firm has the strongest corp fin practice?

2) how would the value of the internship be affected if it was in a foreign country, say somewhere in Asia? btw i want to work in the US for FT

 

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