Wednesday, 22nd July 2009
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The first week is over; the body clock is back into the swing of those mesmeric 6am starts; the body is back running on caffeine as the primary carbohydrate; the perma-smile needed for the first few days has disappeared; and overall I’m pretty excited about how the next 9 weeks are going to pan out.
I thought it was worth while blogging the first week as it seems to be the most important and will arguably set the tone for the remainder of the internship, that and some quite interesting interactions only occur in the first week. One meets their team, one meets the fellow interns, one navigates their commute, one explores their office, one meets senior management, and one is given their tasks for their role.
So, Monday morning, 8:30am, Credit Suisse head office congregated 160 interns who could probably be compartmentalised between rabbits caught in head lights and impenetrable confidence. Small talk, brief introductions and first impressions were the order du jour before being separated out by division and frog marched to our holding cells where we were provided with a splendid spread of fruit skewers, pastries and fresh coffee.
Forms completed, ID cards got, buddies identified. Post formalities, we were ushered into a Credit Suisse branded auditorium for a morning of introductions: to the industry, to legal and compliance, to health and safety, to business continuity planning, to IT regulation. This process despite being a bit tedious was I guess necessary to make sure we weren’t going to get fired and/or sued during our summer stint of employment.

Next came another wonderful spread for lunch, which offered a more “informal†chance to interact with fellow interns; perhaps the word informal is too much of a suggestion and not a reality, there is little informal about the process of networking (introduction, small talk, information gathering, attempt to create a way of matching name to face, impossible: smile and query their university, degree and job, then repeat).
The afternoon consisted of a quiz to test how much we took in during the morning session, it was wholly light hearted and had very much a “who wants to a millionaire†feel about it, buzzers and all. Unfortunately there were no millions on offer (yet). After the fun and games came a serious panel with senior management. The interns were offered really an unparalleled access to a team of Managing Directors from across the banks activities. Questions were posed from one of the recruitment team to the panel and their insight was really something; thoughtful and truthful expression about the economy (challenging), the firm (progressive, exciting), industry (aware of regulators), interns (amazing to get so far, 7000+ applicants to 160, talented, future leaders).
This panel led to another but with former interns who were there to offer the golden rules to a successful summer: socialise, network, be friendly, get your hands dirty, don’t worry if at 4am when you’re finishing work your brain isn’t working 100%…(!). This panel lead to an evening event consisting of dinner and drinks at a local bar (up market, the food was great), time for more networking and a few beers to wind down a long, action packed first day.
Day two was training and having already been through a third party finance training regime at my previous internship, plus being a finance nerd, the whole ordeal was pretty slow. If you’ve read Michael Lewis’s “Liars Poker†I was comparable to those morons sitting at the back of the room shouting out the answers at the detriment of the rest of the class, c’est la vie. The training was conducted by Martin; Martin was a bright and interesting teacher who shared with us his views and knowledge on the banking fraternity, the equity markets and the fixed income world all shaken together with personal stories. By 5 o clock we knew our commercial banks from our retail banks; our primary from our secondary markets; our private equity from our hedge funds; and we were ready to jump into the deep end of the Investment Banking world.

Wednesday, Thursday and Friday were all a bit surreal and now looking back seem to be jumbled into one. We were introduced to our “buddies†on Wednesday morning for breakfast and introductions, this informal setting allowed them to say what they did in some more detail and what was really to be expected over the course of the internship. However I was in the strange predicament as my manager was away in Singapore on business for the next two weeks and I hadn’t been assigned a desk, I was nomadic.
This wasn’t an issue, someone was on holiday, I jumped on his desk and instantly I had made two new contacts either side of me! My team were a stone’s throw away and I was given a general overview of the floor which seemed to consist of 100 teams all within the same sub division. I didn’t realise the complexity of this place, well I did, but now I saw the complexity of the world I was now a part of.
I got the macro view of my world throughout the first three days, I was given a brief outline of the expectations placed on me for the summer. Then there I was shoved into the deep end! So what does one do when they can’t swim? One piggy backs onto someone else. I was told I was kind of involved in a project with a lady who sat near me, so off I went and plonked myself down next to her and grilled her about what she did, how I could help, asked those around her what they did and how it was involved to what I was going to be doing….
It all worked out pretty well, I’m unsure whether this is what my boss intended for me to do, but I’ve got responsibility now, I’m involved in some pretty interesting projects that are happening.
If I’m doing something that is useful to the bank then as an intern within three days, in my opinion I’m of some benefit, and I’m learning, that’s the main thing! First week over and I’m impressed, not too fussed about not having a desk it means I can meet new people, the work I’ve managed to get myself involved with is interesting and I seem to be helping out. What more can I ask for. I’ll let you know in a few weeks time how this plan works when my boss returns and see’s what I’ve actually been doing…..
Cheers
Julian