2004 - Failed L1
2005A - Failed L1 (worse than 2004)
2005B - Passed L1
2006 - Took L2 (did not study much)
2007 - Registered for L2 but didn’t study so I was a no-show
2008 - Failed L2 (Band 8)
2009 - Failed L2 (Band 6)
2010 - Failed L2 (Band 6)
2011 - Passed L2
2012 - Failed L3 (Band 4, with a lot of studying, but no plan of attack for the AM)
2013 - Passed L3
In the meantime:
Toddler son went from a crib to 6th grade, added two daughters, bought a house, worked at two failed firms (big ones) and had a fund closed at another. Two constants during this time was my love for my family and my desire to pass. I can be honest and say at times I wish that desire translated into harder work, but that’s in the past.
I don’t know the CFA’s worth to my career, I’m not a different analyst today vs. yesterday, but it’s not about that anymore. I’m just happy to know I reached a goal that I set. At some point the exam became more than just a professional designation for me. It really became a test of character (diligence, honesty with myself).
For everyone who got it in 1.5 yrs or 3 straight times…congrats. I’m sure you’ve never failed a test in your life; it’s what you’re good at and you deserve recognition. Still, I’m partial to the rest of us who took longer to get to the finish line or are maybe still running. It might just be that they’re learning the exam material AND something about themselevs, and that’s not all that bad.
2005A - Failed L1 (worse than 2004)
2005B - Passed L1
2006 - Took L2 (did not study much)
2007 - Registered for L2 but didn’t study so I was a no-show
2008 - Failed L2 (Band 8)
2009 - Failed L2 (Band 6)
2010 - Failed L2 (Band 6)
2011 - Passed L2
2012 - Failed L3 (Band 4, with a lot of studying, but no plan of attack for the AM)
2013 - Passed L3
In the meantime:
Toddler son went from a crib to 6th grade, added two daughters, bought a house, worked at two failed firms (big ones) and had a fund closed at another. Two constants during this time was my love for my family and my desire to pass. I can be honest and say at times I wish that desire translated into harder work, but that’s in the past.
I don’t know the CFA’s worth to my career, I’m not a different analyst today vs. yesterday, but it’s not about that anymore. I’m just happy to know I reached a goal that I set. At some point the exam became more than just a professional designation for me. It really became a test of character (diligence, honesty with myself).
For everyone who got it in 1.5 yrs or 3 straight times…congrats. I’m sure you’ve never failed a test in your life; it’s what you’re good at and you deserve recognition. Still, I’m partial to the rest of us who took longer to get to the finish line or are maybe still running. It might just be that they’re learning the exam material AND something about themselevs, and that’s not all that bad.