Internal Wholesaler career path may lead to...?

Eh, the chick in 19 of 42 is slightly better but still not sales bimbo material I don’t think.
 
Re: 19 of 42
the chick in red might not be the “sales bimbo material” but she’s got wicked assets I can tell.
 
I like the new pic that just went up, not sure it’s the most ingenius move in the world to take a picture of yourself and post to facebook while driving, but who am I to complain.
 
LOL!! I didn’t even think about pic 19!!
Glad you like the new pic that went up tonight. I wasn’t actually driving while I took it … just stopped at a really long red light ;) I like to multitask …
 
I used to work as basically an internal at a large well known firm. The job was geared towards institutional clients, there were some pros and cons to it. Going from being an internal (or even sales in general)to being an analyst at the same firm, regardless of having a CFA, is pretty slim. While I am sure there are stories of some people that have done it, I did not see it.
I would not totally discourage your friend from switching to internal wholesaler, I am guessing the career growth is greater on the sales side then back office. I would suggest make the switch, keep studying for the CFA and see what happens.
 
If someone wants to move from the back office to an analyst job, moving to an internal wholesaler job won’t hurt or help. Basically, in this job market, you are F’ed. It’s not going to happen. You are better off trying to figure out how to get into a top b-school.
Hoever, after being an internal you could move to many different positions, some more analytical than others. You can become a product specialist, where the CFA is valued, or platform distribution sales (more institutional) or product management (more marketing). None of these are the same as being an anlyst, but can be $200K+ type jobs (not the marketing jobs).
Sweep the leg’s salary ranges are accurate, if you are an external wholesaler making only $200k something is very wrong. An experienced wholesaler in a major metro area makes around $400k on average with a significant SD. In a lot of firms the sales guys make more than analysts or PMs. The unfortunate reality is that there are a lot smart number crunchers but only so many people with the communication skills to sell a product. Just food for thought.
 
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