Nah I dont work in IB, but is that not a reasonable inference from reading the article?
"One guy was sent home suffering from exhaustion after working all night twice in a row. Sometimes I'd manage to get out by 8pm, but there was this bizarre notion that analysts should not leave before their senior colleagues. It was frowned on."
"One night I left at 11pm and went home to bed. Just after 1am I woke to the sound of my front doorbell ringing. I had not heard my mobile - although it was supposed to be always in earshot - and they wanted me back in the office. Eventually, they had sent a taxi driver round to wake me up."
"During my internship I saw one employee who would slip out in the evening and snort cocaine to pep himself up."
"Of the 32 graduates who joined in my year, there are three left today and all have moved out of that department."
In all honesty Monstar, I am struggle to find any possible inference from this that she is just "not tough enough". Fair enough this is anecdotal, but it's pretty widely accepted that there's a fair bit of substance abuse involved.
Other than that, is it reasonable to expect to be whisked back to the office in a cab in the early hours of the morning?
I get that to succeed in IB it takes a special kind of person, and a fuckload of sacrifices. The reality of the environment is that it's not for everyone. However, the issue that she raises is not solely that the demands of the job are too great, but moreso that they prey on young and naive grads by promising them the world and all it's riches.
A good illustration of this is the popularity of IB as a career. I'd suggest a large majority of people that consider IB as a career don't fully appreciate the demands that they will be placed under, and this couldn't work any better in favour for the firms that are trying to attract the top talent. But that's just my opinion.
Of course, experiences may differ across firms and countries, and the environment that this lady experienced may well have shifted to placing less demand on the fresh grad analysts. I just think that it's downright naive to counter any claims of harsh work environments by saying that a person the soft, especially if you haven't experienced it for yourself.
/rant.