|
||||||||||||||||
TOP STORIESOUT OF LEHMAN: Snooze you lose, schmooze you win18 November 2008COMMENTSTo all those people undermining this person, if you were made redundant in this market do you honestly think you would stand a good chance of getting another fo job? Read all comments »Networking – the very mention of this word is enough to make most people shudder. The first few months in business school taught us that having a stunning CV or a stint in Iraq just wasn’t good enough to get you shortlisted for banking interviews. We were taught the nuances of networking – start with an icebreaker (complaining about London weather – check), have an interesting story about yourself (self-deprecating humour – double check), and show enthusiasm even if you know you are going to receive a healthy measure of repetitive BS. And finally, even if the MD ends his presentation by saying, ‘There is no such thing as a stupid question’, don’t bite it.
When I stepped into Lehman as a full-time associate, I thought I was done with networking. Little did I know that I would have to endure another full month of schmoozing! As generalist associates we had to fight and find our way to a desk. Some desks were more popular than others and competition was intense. We worked on our elevator speeches, mingled with the recruiting desks over multiple cocktail sessions, mock-interviewed each other, and underwent a formal speed-dating session. I met more people at Lehman in the two-hour speed dating session than I ever did over 10 weeks of my summer internship.
Without doubt, the recruitment season in business school and the one month of networking at Lehman were the most stressful experiences of my life. But it turned out to be a blessing in disguise. I was on the top of my game when I was laid off by Lehman. I could interview any time, impress anyone with my charming stories, and needed less than three floors in an elevator journey to secure an interview call. Given my peculiar profile (euphemistic reference to lack of relevant experience), networking stood by me when headhunters failed to help.
On the morning of 15 September I sent out an SOS message to my closest friends. Without blinking twice, I shamelessly sent out my CV to everyone in my contact book. I dug through the alumni network at business school, sought help from my professors and career services team, updated my profile on LinkedIn, wrote to my ex-colleagues, called my mentors at Lehman, and met bankers with whom I interviewed on campus – I basically didn’t leave any stone unturned.
In some ways, the high-profile bankruptcy worked to my advantage. Maybe if I had worked in a boutique investment bank that went belly up, nobody would have even noticed. The extensive media coverage helped to carry my message across.
Did it work? Eventually yes, but I spent close to a month biting my nails off wondering when and from where my next break would come. It finally appeared through a classmate of mine.
Very soon, I will be taking up a contract position in a capital markets middle-office desk. Certainly not my dream job, but it will help me keep my foot in the door, and give me the time and cash flows to keep looking for one. I will live to fight another day.
COMMENTSSham, Capital Markets, Tue 18 Nov 08You're the king of the world, congratulations on your networking prowess Anon :-) Keep up the good work champ! You're the best. You're the one. You've got it all lined up! Add your comment »toolonginthetooth, Capital Markets, Tue 18 Nov 08Cmon fellas..leave the young lad alone..he has done very well and will no doubt be shamelessly networking at a "drink up " near to you as soon as his contract is up..looking forward to the weather reference and the self deprecating humour..always a winner with me !! Add your comment »still@lehman, Operations, Tue 18 Nov 08obviously not very good whilst at Lehman - we've just got 2009 / 2010 contracts with a 25% increase in salary and guaranteed bonus (i'm in MO)..so whilst your contact list may be extensive...your common sense isn't... Add your comment »Trader, Derivatives, Tue 18 Nov 08kudos for your tenacity and shameless networking, but big minus for your timing.
Biff, HR & Recruitment, Tue 18 Nov 08Yup, your networking has helped you secure a short term job in middle office. Now that's a winning network.
willy, Accounting, Tue 18 Nov 08Lets hope that the manager of this "middle office desk " doesnt read this site and put two and two together eh? Might have to dust down the networking skills again Add your comment »IDBGeezer, Capital Markets, Tue 18 Nov 08still@lehman....you sound like just the sort that Lehman likes/d..egotistical, economic with the truth and frankly delusional ..you prawn !! Add your comment »anonym, Quantitative Analytics, Tue 18 Nov 08ok, that sounds embarrasing and desperate Add your comment »nolonger@DB, Derivatives, Tue 18 Nov 08important thing is to stay in the game. if you're FO material, shouldn't be hard to transfer MO->FO. Add your comment »
LATEST FINANCE JOBS
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||