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Which is exactly what I based my decision to get out of the double degree, which would hold me back a year. People, are very uninformed when making decisions regarding university course selection. I chose to enroll in the double merely because my mark allowed me to.Omnidragon said:A lot of people realise that a Big 4 grad job in areas such as auditing is not super-hard to get in. A good but not spectacular mark and a fairly mediocre, yet balanced life, would get you the grad position. If you're going to delay your degree by 2 years to get a leg into an auditing grad job, it might not be worth it.
"Cohorts" of students goes out the window as soon as you leave school. The real world is not like that. Book smarts are a lot different from real world practical results and aptitude for success. In particular to your management consultant comment, i think someone with the extensive experience a traineeship offers is more valuable than a few years at uni with no work experience.Omnidragon said:First of all, I should congratulate those people who have a a cadetship at Big 4. The fact that, at such a nearly age, they went out of their way to find something like that is highly worthy of praise.
However, without detracting from their achievements, I'd say that cadetships aren't something that students who regard themselves as being in the very top cohort of students would probably want to consider.
There are far better opportunities out there if you think you could score very amazing results in your degree, while specialising in something like finance, actuary, maths, mechanical engineering or law. Some of these opportunities include management consulting or certain areas of finance.
A lot of people realise that a Big 4 grad job in areas such as auditing is not super-hard to get in. A good but not spectacular mark and a fairly mediocre, yet balanced life, would get you the grad position. If you're going to delay your degree by 2 years to get a leg into an auditing grad job, it might not be worth it.
Omnidragon said:The impression I've been getting is that a lot of competitive positions still like book smarts. What I'm saying is really just hearsay.
But, nevertheless, alluding to those banking threads, the pattern at, for example, Goldman Sachs seems to be a preference for people with straight 90s and a mediocre yet balanced life rather than, for example, the graduate with mostly low 70s and high 60s and some pre-graduate/part-time work experience at an accounting/finance firm.
Hearsay from people that work at GS?Omnidragon said:The impression I've been getting is that a lot of competitive positions still like book smarts. What I'm saying is really just hearsay.
But, nevertheless, alluding to those banking threads, the pattern at, for example, Goldman Sachs seems to be a preference for people with straight 90s and a mediocre yet balanced life rather than, for example, the graduate with mostly low 70s and high 60s and some pre-graduate/part-time work experience at an accounting/finance firm.
But don't you work more in Ibanking? I've been talking to people that work 100 hour weeks, and when you do the maths, Ibankers don't earn that much more per hour (if we are simply talking about money here)Omnidragon said:I don't see how your post refutes the proposition that the average investment banker makes more than the average accountant. Of course, we have no way of verifying it without sampling the entire global populus of bankers and accountants. As far as a short and succint response is needed, Allan Moss also makes a lot of money.... but what does that prove?
What people are talking about is that your average grad accountant at PwC makes 40k +5% bonus? Your average grad ibanker at UBS makes 80k + 40% bonus?
I walked past the Ernst & Young building today.Minai said:But don't you work more in Ibanking? I've been talking to people that work 100 hour weeks, and when you do the maths, Ibankers don't earn that much more per hour (if we are simply talking about money here)
ok, firstly I've worked as an auditor for vac work at start of this year and will also do so again later. For starters, this doesn't make me knowlegable about the subject at all despite what other vaccas might say. Any student who has done work exp at an accounting firm and claims to know what auditing involves is bsing. cause as an unqualified accountant they dont let u do much auditing. having said that though I'll try my best to explain, without bsing, from my experience. Now thats my disclaimer. So I stress this is my opinion of what happens, at the Big 4 place I was at.what do auditors actaully do?