yes, but your missing the point completely. you dont join a big 4 accounting firm to hopefully become a partner, you join it to get your CA and then GET OUT.turtleface said:Mid tier aren't always that bad, most are run by ex-big 4 partners, just like Caliburn and Carnegie Wylie are run by ex-heads of investment banking at Citi/Goldman or something like that.
and whilst the fact that you can make partner faster is overexaggerated, it is sometimes true. A mid tier junior partner after 6 yrs on 250K is much more than a level 2 manager on 120K in big 4
also at the Big 4 there is a huge risk of being pigeon holed. e.g. You'll be so specialised you'll be useless for everything else. Accountants need to understand everything, Audit, FA, MA, tax, corporate finance, corporate law, superannuation, financial management but at big 4 you'll probably get chucked into one of them and only know just that one area, whereas in mid tier you get to learn everything...though you're doing the work for smaller often no-name clients...maybe occasionally a rich or famous individual (a la Greg Lay and his alleged dodginess (now pretty much cleared despite refusing to testify in case "he incriminates himself" thats the stupid law for you...) with Steve Vizard)
Its a bit of the stereotype going on. Besides the fact that more of the top CEOs are accountants (With a lot of accounting experience) than any other professions, very few of the new accountants do the drudgery work now. They're being replaced by Software. Take for instance consolidations, they're all done by programs now . Accountants are now full on into the strategy and operations, thats why management accounting is fast overtaking financial accounting for importance. I think thats why CPA Australia calls their members FAB professionals now (Finance, Accounting Business Professionals- lame I know)financially minded businesspeople, (rather than merely accountants)
you'd probly be 50-70 by then, its irrelevant really. the career path is more important than short term salaries, as they'll get you there in the end.volition said:what kind of pay are we talking if you "leave after you get your CA" ? And how long would it take on average to get partner in Big 4?
sorry i meant if they leave big 4 and got another job. I think at big 4, once you get your CA (after 3 years) its 65-70K (guessing) so its lower than if you leftAs for CA... you can also start travelling alot more once you get it. My sister's salary didn't actually go up that much (well not anywhere near 50%) when she finished her CA modules; what really sent it high was when she started getting paid in pounds rather than dollars!
lol yeah i saw that in BRW, and during that "join deloitte" event I think they mentioned it too.redruM said:That partner in Deloitte was made in the Eclipse (IT) divison.
yeah probably, with this deloitte guy I think he had his own website design business and it got acquired by Deloitte, so they made him a partner. heh very convenient, no need for 10 years, I'd like to be in that positionAren't the IT divisions (in the Big4 firms in general) supposedly accelerating partner promotions to make it more enticing to join? I heard that about the KPMG IT Audit division from somewhere as well.
I heard about this guy, from the son of the cfo of deloittes, ooh i have connections go me!turtleface said:yeah probably, with this deloitte guy I think he had his own website design business and it got acquired by Deloitte, so they made him a partner. heh very convenient, no need for 10 years, I'd like to be in that position
oh really? You know Matt Broadfoot?jpr333 said:I heard about this guy, from the son of the cfo of deloittes, ooh i have connections go me!
Did the surname Korda or Mentha give it away? lolturtleface said:A guy I know at uni (unfortunately not a good mate or anything so I'm not really connected) is the son of Ansett Administrator (Liquidator) and the Founder/Managing Partner of KordaMentha.