Goldman Seeks to Improve Working Conditions for Analysts - Truth or PR stunt?

Even senior investment bankers in bulge brackets don't think you have to kill several nights of sleep in order to succeed. It's just in the minds of the young analysts who think they have to.

Goldman Sachs said it has spent the past year working to improve the work-life balance of most-junior employees, known on Wall Street as analysts, by reducing their hours and other measures.

From WSJ:

Goldman Seeks to Improve Working Conditions for Junior Staffers

Maybe you don't have to work seven days a week to succeed at Goldman Sachs Group Inc.

The New York banking company said it has spent the past year working to improve the work-life balance of most-junior employees, known on Wall Street as analysts, by reducing their hours and other measures.

The moves come as banks across the industry struggle to keep young workers who increasingly are favoring the better hours at hedge funds and private-equity firms and the lavish perks at technology startups over Wall Street's grinding analyst programs.

"Banks over the last couple of years, especially the [biggest], are frustrated that they cannot retain people," said Matan Feldman, founder and managing partner of Wall Street Prep Inc., a training program for investment bankers.

Goldman long has been viewed as a fast track to wealth and a wellspring of talent. Some of its top executives began their careers in its much-copied analyst program, which started in 1982. Since then, the programs have become synonymous with grueling work loads, late nights and depressingly frequent orders for takeout food.

But earlier this year, Goldman formed a task force made up of senior staff from different businesses within the firm to improve quality of life and promote career-development opportunities for junior employees. It has implemented the task force's suggestions.

This isn't the first time banks have faced a war for talent. In the dot-com boom in the early 2000s, college graduates increasingly turned to technology jobs over investment banking. Banks pumped up their salaries and made lifestyle concessions, such as free dinners and car service home, for analysts staying late.

But this time banks, which are under public and regulatory pressure to keep pay down, can't merely boost compensation to lure young people.

One of Goldman's goals is to find ways to help young employees finish their work during the regular five-day workweek and avoid all-nighters. Weekend work should be reserved for "critical client activity," the task force found.

For example, when a more-senior analyst commissions a client presentation, the task force has advised asking for a short outline rather than a full presentation that could run 100 pages or more.

Goldman also created new technology that makes it easier for senior bankers to let analysts know what kind of information they need. In an attempt to minimize email traffic, the technology lets senior bankers input specific requests through a portal that can be accessed by the analyst anywhere. This allows senior bankers to be more explicit in their requests, ensuring the junior analysts have a shot at getting the information right the first time, a Goldman spokesman said.

The task force came on the heels of Goldman's decision last year to do away with the two-year contracts for most analysts hired out of college. Instead, the firm said it would hire recent college graduates as full-time employees.

http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB100014240527023034710045791640510…!

 
Orkid:
The moves come as banks across the industry struggle to keep young workers who increasingly are favoring the better hours at hedge funds and private-equity firms and the lavish perks at technology startups over Wall Street's grinding analyst programs.
Oh no! Our 2nd year analyst left, which is what most banks tell them to do, 2 years after starting his 2-year analyst program!
 
prospie:
Orkid:

The moves come as banks across the industry struggle to keep young workers who increasingly are favoring the better hours at hedge funds and private-equity firms and the lavish perks at technology startups over Wall Street's grinding analyst programs.

Oh no! Our 2nd year analyst left, which is what most banks tell them to do, 2 years after starting his 2-year analyst program!

And this is what I get for quoting ignorant authors. :( Well played bro, taught me a lesson...

Don't waste your life only thinking about money and prestige
 
Orkid:

And this is what I get for quoting ignorant authors. :( Well played bro, taught me a lesson...

Oh, I was just making fun of the author. Also, not sure if anyone has mentioned this yet, but recently an analyst in London died trying to pull an all-nighter or something, so I could see these pieces as a response to that.
 

So, if a client called on Friday asking for a bunch of shit an analyst has to do, GS will tell them "Sorry, our analysts won't be in the office until Monday, so you will have to wait until then." Yeah, fucking right.

 

Definitely PR. Why else would you publish it on the WSJ. If it were an internal initiative to reduce hours, who the fuck on the outside would care. The fact that they're pushing it to press means it's just a "oh shit, gotta make sure we look good during recruiting season" thing.

Currently: future neurologist, current psychotherapist Previously: investor relations (top consulting firm), M&A consulting (Big 4), M&A banking (MM)
 

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Currently: future neurologist, current psychotherapist Previously: investor relations (top consulting firm), M&A consulting (Big 4), M&A banking (MM)

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