Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

I have been thinking of changing career for a while now - going from an accountant role to more of an analyst role. Just wondering if anyone here is working in the financial/business analyst field - and what path they took to getting there (i.e experience etc). As I have an IT and accounting background, and now doing my CPA - it should be ok in the education department, however its the experience i am wondering about. A lot of these jobs ask for SAP and VBA - both of which i dont have experience - but woudl be good if someone can give me some pointers into how i can get my foot in the door.

Thanks all! :)

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/291459-careers/
Share on other sites

I have been thinking of changing career for a while now - going from an accountant role to more of an analyst role. Just wondering if anyone here is working in the financial/business analyst field - and what path they took to getting there (i.e experience etc). As I have an IT and accounting background, and now doing my CPA - it should be ok in the education department, however its the experience i am wondering about. A lot of these jobs ask for SAP and VBA - both of which i dont have experience - but woudl be good if someone can give me some pointers into how i can get my foot in the door.

Thanks all! ;)

hey mate, im looking at getting into the IT industry and all my mates who already work in there say that an analyst job or junior project manager job is fairly easy to get once u have a bit of experience. so far they recommend i do some time on the service desk to learn the ropes and usually after a year or two u can move up. one of my mates was on helpdesk for a year n a bit and it now a junior project manager. i guess it also depends on how keen u make urself out to be to ur managers. if ur not far outta uni then u may still be able to do the grad program? ive been outta uni for a year but im not too interested in finding work yet, im happy im my office admin role.

run thru the jobs on seek and u will find a lot of those city based jobs want experienced people. there are the occasional ones who will give u a chance. another factor that got some of my mates jobs is bullshitting. if ur good at lying outta ur ass then u will get a job.

best of luck to ya mate

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/291459-careers/#findComment-4878616
Share on other sites

Business Analysts from all my experience never have a clue, fresh outta uni, no real world logic to use... so they are not all that useful.

I end up basically spoon feeding the information across.

So it should be an easy role to land if you can carry yourself well in an interview IMO as most roles if you are analysing the business largely depend on you knowing it to be able to do anything so there is in house training/info provided. As long as you understand the key concepts of how to pick things apart, present the information etc etc.

Also largely depends on the company more than anything else. Larger it is, more chance you have of being able to land some sort of job and then move around/about because of it.

eg: where i am, its only 1500 people, so no chance you will go from Service Desk to a Jnr PM in 18 months, you'd be looking at 4-5 years as there is little chance of progression in that particular tree.

But that is not to say it can happen in the building next door with a different company.

I've actually turned back many people simply because of too much experience, and yes you can have too much as being too knowledge filled can lead to you being bored in some roles depending on the nature of them etc etc.

So it goes both ways.

No idea on finance though, i can only talk from an IT/Business analyst side which is all i've been involved in.

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/291459-careers/#findComment-4878636
Share on other sites

We are looking for people at the moment too... nothing in the business role, pure service desk with the look to move them out into our other fields (Networking, SAP, Database, Data warehouse, Web Applications, Automation, Scheduling etc...) start off is contract work, 12 months, but those good enough would probably progress in less then that. Pays pretty reasonable too... probably around 55-60k mark through either IBM or sub contracting through Man Power. Does involve rotating roster though as we service the global service desk and have to cover Europe, Latin America and Asia and every country and region in between.

I work for Philip Morris Intl. as a Technical Analyst, Service Desk Team Leader.

Would have to have at least a few years background in IT in a help or service desk, newbies with quals in SAP, DB etc would be prefered as thats what we are looking to move people into permanently. We are an ITIL based company so ITIL training would also be a plus

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/291459-careers/#findComment-4891032
Share on other sites

55-60 for service desk ain't bad at all, especially with room to move.

my place should pay attention and take note lol.

lol @ ITIL - the whole idea of it does make me laugh. some good merits but some of the things needed for certification of a business are ridiculous.

I did my course and passed, but by god its not easy

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/291459-careers/#findComment-4891053
Share on other sites

yeah its pretty good... especially with all the OT available, when i was contracting i would pull in on average 70k a year. Plus you get a week off every month (after working a weekend shift of 24 hours) plus 4 weeks anual and 10 days sick.

having worked for the company for over 5 years and not doing the actual course until this year i found it reasonably easy... except the fact that i basically had to forget how our company works because its "best practice"... not how our company runs.

the foundations to me are common sense and i found it amazing that someone actually makes millions and millions of dollars for something that isnt even a standard and is basically just "this is how you could do it if you wanted it run how we think would be ideal".

yeah the pays not bad considering how easy the work is... when i say service desk i use the term losely. We have already moved 3 members out into the business as perms into good roles, one in sap, one in service management and another in quality. The VP basically told us he wants 15 people to move out of the department and into the business over the next 2 years. Might even be supplying the business in our other locations in Buenos Aries and Lausanne... see how it goes.

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/291459-careers/#findComment-4899023
Share on other sites

having worked for the company for over 5 years and not doing the actual course until this year i found it reasonably easy... except the fact that i basically had to forget how our company works because its "best practice"... not how our company runs.

LOL Same for me :P

That was the hardest part, had to forget the last 8years... wasn't easy

the foundations to me are common sense and i found it amazing that someone actually makes millions and millions of dollars for something that isnt even a standard and is basically just "this is how you could do it if you wanted it run how we think would be ideal".

Ye, that is something i couldnt work out either because the 3 day course for the first cert thing was UBER expensive for what it was.

Someone somewhere is a nice big fat cat :P

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/291459-careers/#findComment-4899117
Share on other sites

  • 2 months later...
Figured I would bump this over starting a new thread,

Where have people done an ITIL V3 course in Melb?

thx,

Ryan

ITIL is good foundations and some people miss the fundamentals, partciulary managers etc

i started at dialup tech support

the only way to start in IT as at the bottom usually

What role are you in?

I decided to do a trainee-ship to try and get better foundations and avoid the Service Desk, I'm starting in an Level 2 support role on a traineeship program(half way through). Figured time to start doing some extra certs.

Any recommended places to do the ITIL cert are welcomed.

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/291459-careers/#findComment-5035174
Share on other sites

i started at dialup tech support

the only way to start in IT as at the bottom usually

strange never thought I would hear you recommend starting in dial-up support!!!

but I agree with Paul here, I work for a well known IT company as well, and we hire from the telco helpdesk regularly..

IT skills are easy to teach, people skills much less...

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/291459-careers/#findComment-5038454
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Latest Posts

    • You won't need to do that if your happy to learn to tune it yourself. You 100% do not need to do that. It is not part of the learning process. It's not like driving on track and 'finding the limit by stepping over the limit'. You should not ever accidently blow up an engine and you should have setup the ECU's engine protection to save you from yourself while you are learning anyway. Plenty of us have tuned their own cars, myself included. We still come here for advice/guidance/new ideas etc.  What have you been doing so far to learn how to tune?
    • Put the ECU's MAP line in your mouth. Blow as hard as you can. You should be able to see about 10 kPa, maybe 15 kPa positive pressure. Suck on it. You should be able to generate a decent vacuum to about the same level also. Note that this is only ~2 psi either way. If the MAP is reading -5 psi all the time, ignition on, engine running or not, driving around or not, then it is severely f**ked. Also, you SHOULD NOT BE DRIVING IT WITHOUT A LOAD REFERENCE. You will break the engine. Badly.
    • Could be correct. Meter might be that far out. Compare against a known 5 ohm 1% resistor.
    • @Murray_Calavera  If I were an expert I wouldn't be in here looking for assistance.  I am extremely computer literate, have above average understanding on how things should be working and how they should tie together.  If I need to go to a professional tuner so be it, but I'd much rather learn and do things myself even if it means looking for some guidance along the way and blowing up a few engines. @GTSBoy  I was hoping it would be as simple as a large vacuum leak somewhere but I'm unable to find anything, all lines seem to be well capped or going where they need to be, and when removed there is vacuum felt on the tube.  It would be odd for the Haltech built in MAP to be faulty, the GTT tune I imported had it enabled from the start, I incorrectly assumed it was reading a signal from the stock MAP, but that doesn't exist.  After running a vacuum hose to the ECU the signal doesn't change more than 0.2 in either direction.   I'll probably upload a video of my settings tomorrow, as it stands I'm able to daily drive, but getting stuttering when giving it gas from idle, so pulling away from lights is a slow process of revving it up and feathering the clutch until its moving, then it will accelerate fine.  It sounds like I need to get to the bottom of the manifold pressure issue, but the ignition timing section is most intimidating to me and will probably let a pro do that part.  Tomorrow I'll try a different vacuum line to T off of, with any luck I selected one that was already bypassed during the DBW swap.  (edit: I went out and did it right now, the line I had chosen did appear to have no vacuum on it, it used to go to the front of the intake, I've now completely blocked that one off at the bracket that holds several vacuum lines by the firewall.  I T'd into the vacuum line that goes from that bracket to the vacuum pump at the front of the car, but no change in the MAP readings).  Using the new vacuum line that has obvious vacuum on the hose, im still only getting readings between -6.0 and -5.2.  I'm wondering why the ECU was detecting -5.3 when nothing was connected to the MAP nipple and ECU MAP selected as the source. @feartherb26  I do have +T in the works but wanted to wait until Spring to start with that swap since this is my good winter AWD vehicle.  When removing the butterfly, did it leave a bunch of holes in the manifold that you needed to plug?  I thought about removing it but assumed it would be a mess.   I notice no difference when capping the vacuum line to it or letting it do its thing.  This whole thing has convinced me to just get a forward facing manifold when the time comes though.
    • Update: tested my spark plugs that are supposed to be 5ohms with a 10% deviation and one gave me a 0 ohms reading and the rest were 3.9ohm<, so one bad and the others on their way out.
×
×
  • Create New...