mr_shittles
Big Chief
- Joined
- Oct 24, 2004
- Messages
- 399
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2003
I'm a co-op guy . . . a typical week at work would include:seremify007 said:2. Not all work experience is equal. Ask the coop guy what work he gets to do- then ask a first year undergrad.
1. Writing commentary for our monthly Board Report, a report which is distributed to the directors of the company.
2. Examining broker reports to determine the consensus profit forecast for the company that I work for and how that forecast was arrived at. Then comparing the broker forecasts with internal forecasts and managing market expectations accordingly. The latter function is handled by the investor relations team.
3. A technical accounting project involving stuctured finance transactions, where simeltaneous loans and borrowings are undertaken to and from foreign banks with a view to lowering our borrowing costs. My involvement was in determining the tax jurisdictions for the various entities and how the tax accruals would be recorded in the balance sheet.
I have to say, our work is always different, and very much challenging. One of the reasons co-ops get more interesting work, and undergrads get the photocopying duties is because employers demand more out of co-ops. The selection process for co-op ensures that the calibre of students that you get is always of the highest quality, and more often than not, by working in multiple organisations, they have greater exposure and greater ability to do both technical and strategic work.
I'm a UNSW Co-op and I get the opportunity to work with co-ops, both UNSW and UTS, at the company in which I am at. One of the reasons co-ops tend not to pursue a career at a big4 firm, particularly in audit, is that the work is low-level, menial and non-strategic. Co-ops on the other hand get to deal with individuals higher up in an organisation, and aren't just box-tickers and photocopy assistants.