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TRANCHED: Life after CDOs, Week 13

6 August 2008

CDO Joe

For anyone out there who considers this column a purveyor of doom and gloom, the time has come to point out there are also a lot of upsides to being out of the market. Take the personal benefits: I can now get up at a civilised hour, live life at my own pace, come and go as I please, and shave twice a month.

Redundancy can also have huge professional benefits. That might sound counterintuitive, but in reality I have been handed a huge opportunity to make a career change for the better. I’m definitely guilty of looking the wrong way at redundancy: focusing on the negatives, the loss of face, the shabby treatment meted out by those in the recruitment business and the obvious financial implications.

This change in spirit has come about thanks to the basic understanding of one crucial thing: eventually I will get a job that I enjoy, that is challenging, and that provides me with the requisite level of income.

It helps that I’ve had a successful week on the job hunting front. New avenues have opened up like the Champs Elysées on Bastille Day. For someone with good qualifications, the right attitude and a convivial personality, getting a job, even if in markets that were previously unfamiliar, is simply a matter of time, discipline and patience.

Those who’ve been on the wrong end of a redundancy payout might not be quite so assured of redundancy’s virtues. In my case, I’m fortunate that I can pay myself an identical salary for a further year and not even begin to touch my savings and investments. I intend to spend this time wisely, investigating a broad spectrum of opportunities and businesses.

One opportunity this week demonstrated the virtues of my situation perfectly. A friend of mine put me in touch with a contact of his within the insurance market.

Insurance is something that I know virtually nothing about (except that it involves long and boozy lunches), but I had initial discussions with a guy who is putting together a new business line within a firm and seemed genuinely enthusiastic that someone of my background could be just what he was looking for to head up his new team.

I’m not saying he got contracts out for us to sign then and there, after all this was an initial discussion, but the tone and feel of the meeting made me realise two key things.

Firstly: that without redundancy I would have been very unlikely to have found myself in this kind of discussion. And secondly: that I am very much in control of my own destiny when it comes to selecting my next move.

Comments (26)

If you get a job - You won't last long. Finance jobs are based on merit and ambition. The best will always succeed. Think about another career. Teaching perhaps.

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Comments (26)

  • If you get a job - You won't last long. Finance jobs are based on merit and ambition. The best will always succeed. Think about another career. Teaching perhaps.

    Henry 06 Aug 2008

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  • looser Analyst Henry has resurfaced...

    Henry. Good to see you back, We missed you and your charme so much, so much...

    Joe 06 Aug 2008

    RECOMMEND Recommended 1 time | Alert Moderator

  • I have been reading the articles posted on efinancial for the last few weeks and it seems that most of the comments are posted by Henry. I'd assume that a guy who works in a fast paced front office environment wouldn't have so much time as to write multiple comments on all posts. This leads me to beleive (i) Henry has got all the time in the world to write comments (ii) (i) implies Henry must be in some Middle Office/IT function (iii) Henry has very little ambition to do well in his job as he just keeps posting comments (iv) since, he has very little ambition it is a matter of time before he'll be kicked out of the M/O IT function - (iv) implied from Henry's comment above.

    SD 06 Aug 2008

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  • I bet Henry wishes he was Patrick Bateman

    Van Patten 06 Aug 2008

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  • Wow, that was spiteful. Keep it up Mr. Joe. If that is your real name. it would appear that commodities and insurance are fairly rambunctious at the moment. Hmm...is that sufficiently close to the truth?

    Duke of Lancaster VI 06 Aug 2008

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  • Henry - are you teaching?

    SandT 06 Aug 2008

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  • Have you considered Jesus?

    Helpful 06 Aug 2008

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  • If you get rejected from Cambridge, you have failed in life.

    If you don't make a 6-figure bonus by 22 as a 2nd year analyst, you have failed in life.

    If you haven't slept with 24 girls by 24, you have failed in life.

    If you don't have a £1m property by 25, you have failed in life.

    If you EVER get made redundant, you have failed in life.

    It is these sort of goals that ensure I stand out head and shoulders above my rivals. Read it and weep.

    Henry 06 Aug 2008

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  • We should give Henry his own column on this website...be alot more interesting  than CDO Hoe ( i mean Joe)

    Brent 06 Aug 2008

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  • Henry, another Nick Leeson in the making.. ...!

    christianald 06 Aug 2008

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