seremify007
Junior Member
Given the volume of questions on this throughout the forum, here is a nice central location for asking questions on professional services/accounting firms in general.
You're missing a few positions, in addition once you come to Manager level you'll find that it tends to vary a lot more and it's not rare to find people on at a certain position for many years for various reasons/circumstances.2-3 years senior consultant
4-5 years manager
6-7 years senior manager
After that, it really depends as partner is quite hard to break into
#cutdown #igotrektdYou're missing a few positions, in addition once you come to Manager level you'll find that it tends to vary a lot more and it's not rare to find people on at a certain position for many years for various reasons/circumstances.
Haha, na it's good, I think your estimates are actually reasonable for a good auditor - but definitely more variables come into player later in the career progression#cutdown #igotrektd
Someone from the Institute of Charted Accountants is visiting our school to give a talk on chartered accounting, if you still work there do you think that it would be worth going (based on the people you work with/have worked with in the past)?Also varies by firm as some offer time based/lockstep promotions whilst others require business case type approval every step of the way.
Some firms also have a few other positions in the middle (eg assistant manager and director) depending on market/industry.
I think there are lots of surveys out there on the internet for Australia Big 4 for each LoS and years of experience/expected title. I haven't really followed this closely in the past year as I moved overseas but from memory they weren't too far off the mark. Alternatively, wait until BRW publishes their accountants salary tables (they've done it before).What is a typical salary progression for a grad starting at big 4 or accounting in general in audit/tax/consulting?
I'd go to that. Not sure if they're promoting the profession, cadetships, or they are actually representatives of their firms. Either way I'd go so you get a better idea of what's happening and you can always ask their perspectives.Someone from the Institute of Charted Accountants is visiting our school to give a talk on chartered accounting, if you still work there do you think that it would be worth going (based on the people you work with/have worked with in the past)?
I don't think my average day of work is representative of a graduate/cadet/internAlso could you give us a brief outline of what you do in your average day of work :3
I'll take a shot at this. Even though I don't work in this area specifically I know a fair bit about it and people who do.Could you shed some light on Transaction Services in these firms? (pay/progression/exit opportunities etc.)
Do you have any idea of the exit opportunities for real estate advisory? I'm assuming REIT's and other fund managers?I'll take a shot at this. Even though I don't work in this area specifically I know a fair bit about it and people who do.
Firstly, to clarify, when you say Transaction Services are you talking about the area as a whole or specifically transaction services?
For example, EY calls their broader team Transaction Advisory Services and this captures everything from pure M&A advisory to deals modelling to real estate advisory to due diligence, whereas PwC calls the area Deals, and within deals you have M&A, real estate advisory, transaction services etc.
For the purpose of this I'll assume you mean the broader area. Pay and Career progression is in line with the broader structure of professional services firms and you can find plenty of information on this online - I'd prefer not to go into specifics.
Exit opportunities largely depend on the specific area you are in within Deals/TAS. For example you'll see people from valuations or M&A making the jump to investment banking whereas people from TS might go in-house to a Corporate Development role. Another fairly common exit is in-house strategy at a large corporate. I've also seen direct exits into small private equity firms however this is not the norm. I think when looking to exit the decision is around the type of work you want to do, obviously if you love working on live deals and want exposure to bigger deals (rather than the middle market and below where Big 4 tends to play) then IB may make sense. If you're sick of financial modelling and are looking for a role thats a mix of quantitative and qualitative tasks you'll probably get that from in-house CorpDev/Strat.
Something else to keep in mind is that TS service lines tend to be one of, if not the most competitive service lines to break into. They don't usually take many graduates or interns and the people applying are usually the same that are trying for IB. A common route is a couple of years in assurance, consulting or something else before making the switch.
Hope that answers your questions!
inb4 someone says a non client facing role (eg HR, IT, legal, compliance, risk management, etc)Which stream in a big4 firm is the most chills and has the best work life balance?