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8#
发表于 2013-8-11 10:41
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Well, I have no experience in Risk Management, and I’m not in the business, so take my advice for what it’s worth (which is probably nothing).
I think that unless you’re already working in the industry, it’s hard to break in with the CFA charter. It might be easier with an Ivy-ish master’s, but that’s predicated on the fact that you your friend gets into school, which is honestly probably not very likely.
Since you your friend works in IB, why doesn’t he just talk to some of the people there? Being in IT, he probably has access to the supervisors and other suits–maybe he can get some insight from them as far as what is a good way to go. They would be a better source of info than some random people on an anonymous forum (about half of which will tell you they have no experience, and the other half will pretend like they DO have experience).
Your friend may be bored with IT, but I’m not sure that Risk Management will be a whole lot better. (I used to work Internal Audit–probably similar to RM–and it was one of the most boring jobs in the world.)
Your friend says that he makes six figures, and doesn’t see any growth potential. If he takes an entry-level RM job, he will probably take an entry-level job, and back on the very bottom of the totem pole. It will take years to get back to the level he’s at now.
Your friend lives in Mid-Town Manhattan–why not consider NYU or Columbia? That way he gets a top-notch school and doesn’t have to move.
Your friend wants to know immediately what to do, because he can’t afford to wait. I say that he’ll be far worse off if he makes a rash, uninformed decision. Better to do nothing than to do something stupid. |
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