<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN">
<!-- saved from http://www.njtc.org/careers/careers.asp -->
												
<html><head><title>NJTC: The Community for Technology Companies</title>
<!-- BEGIN HEADER AREA -->

<!-- END HEADER AREA -->
</head>
<body bgcolor="#ffffff">
<table valign="top" align="center" bgcolor="#ffffff" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="800">
	<tbody><tr height="123">
  	<td colspan="2" align="right" background="/images/njtc/titlebanner_home.gif" height="123" valign="top" width="800">
      <a href="http://www.njtc.org/join/membership.asp"><img src="/images/njtc/joinus.gif" width="48" height="18" alt="" border="0"></a>
			<img src="/images/njtc/bar2.gif" width="10" height="18" alt="" border="0">
			<a href="http://www.njtc.org/community/about/about.asp"><img src="/images/njtc/aboutus.gif" alt="" border="0" height="18" width="60"></a>
			<img src="/images/njtc/bar.gif" alt="" border="0" height="18" width="10">
			<a href="http://www.njtc.org/community/contact/contact.asp"><img src="/images/njtc/contactus.gif" alt="" border="0" height="18" width="80"></a>
	 <!-- <img src="/dev/images/logo_join.gif" height="57" width="57" border="0" alt="logo_join.gif - 944 bytes" align="right"> --> </td></tr>

  <tr height="30">
  
   <td colspan="3" background="/images/njtc/searchbar4.gif" height="30" width="800">
     <table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" height="30" hspace="0" vspace="0" width="800">
      <tbody><tr>
        <td>
          <form name="login" method="post" action="http://www.njtc.org/login.asp" style="margin-bottom: 0pt;">
            <table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" height="30" hspace="0" vspace="0">
              <tbody><tr>
               <td align="right" height="30" width="350"><input name="login" size="9" type="text"></td>
               <td align="right" height="30" width="170"><input name="password" size="9" type="password"></td>
               <td height="30" width="64"><input name="login" src="/images/njtc/login2.gif" border="0" height="30" hspace="0" type="image" vspace="0" width="64"></td>
              </tr>
            </tbody></table>
          </form>
       </td>
       <td height="30">
          <form action="http://www.njtc.org/runsearch.asp" method="post" name="form1" style="margin-bottom: 0pt;">
          <input name="Scope" value="/" type="hidden">
          <input name="RecordsPerPage" value="10" type="hidden">
          <input name="Order" value="Rank" type="hidden">
            <table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" height="30" hspace="0" vspace="0">
              <tbody><tr>
                <td align="right" height="30" width="210"><input name="Query" size="17" maxlength="100" value="" type="text"></td>
                <td align="center" height="30" width="30"><input name="SUBMIT" value="search" src="/images/njtc//go.gif" border="0" height="30" hspace="0" type="image" vspace="0" width="25"></td>
              </tr>
            </tbody></table>
          </form>
        </td>
      </tr>
     </tbody></table>
   </td>
  </tr>
  

	<tr height="69">
  	<td colspan="2" bgcolor="#ffffff" height="69" width="800">
			   <a href="http://www.njtc.org/index.asp"><img src="/images/njtc/icon_home.gif" alt="NJTC Home" border="0" height="69" width="61"></a><a href="http://www.njtc.org/events/index.asp"><img src="/images/njtc/icon_programs.gif" alt="NJTC Programs" border="0" height="69" width="76"></a><a href="http://www.njtc.org/join/join.asp"><img src="/images/njtc/icon_join.gif" alt="Join NJTC" border="0" height="69" width="93"></a><a href="http://www.njtc.org/community/community.asp"><img src="/images/njtc/icon_community.gif" alt="NJTC Community" border="0" height="69" width="120"></a><a href="http://www.njtc.org/publicpolicy/publicpolicy.asp"><img src="/images/njtc/icon_publicpolicy.gif" alt="NJTC Public Policy" border="0" height="69" width="111"></a><a href="http://www.njtc.org/publications/publications.asp"><img src="/images/njtc/icon_publications.gif" alt="NJTC Publications" border="0" height="69" width="106"></a><a href="http://www.njtc.org/capital/capital.asp"><img src="/images/njtc/icon_capital.gif" alt="NJTC Capitol" border="0" height="69" width="74"></a><a href="http://www.jobcircle.com/njtc"><img src="/images/njtc/icon_careers.gif" alt="Careers at NJTC" border="0" height="69" width="74"></a><a href="http://www.njtc.org/edfndn/edfndn.asp"><img src="/images/njtc/icon_edfndn.gif" alt="NJTC Education Foundation" border="0" height="69" width="85"></a></td></tr>
  	
  

  <tr>
   <td colspan="2" bgcolor="#ffffff" width="800"></td></tr>

  <tr height="56">
   <td align="center" height="56" width="190"><img src="/images/njtc/icon_careers_notext.gif" alt="icon_careers_notext.gif - 3,014 bytes" border="0" height="58" width="62">
<br />
<br />
</td>
   <td height="56" width="610"><img src="/images/njtc/title_careers.gif" alt="title_careers.gif - 3,418 bytes" border="0" height="29" width="133"></td></tr>

  <tr>
   <td align="center" bgcolor="#ffffff" valign="top" width="190">
   <p align="left">
<font face="Arial" size="2"><b>

<img src="/images/njtc/arrow_bullet.gif" width="6" height="11" border="0"> <a href="http://www.jobcircle.com/njtc/index.html" style="color:black;text-decoration:none">Search Jobs</a><br>
<img src="/images/njtc/arrow_bullet.gif" width="6" height="11" border="0"> <a href="http://www.jobcircle.com/public/aff_view_companies?a=4" style="color:black;text-decoration:none">Employer Directory</a><br>
<img src="/images/njtc/arrow_bullet.gif" width="6" height="11" border="0"> <a href="http://www.jobcircle.com/career/articles/x/njtc/group_list.xml" style="color:black;text-decoration:none">Career Articles</a><br>
<img src="/images/njtc/arrow_bullet.gif" width="6" height="11" border="0"> <a href="http://www.jobcircle.com/njtc/employers.html" style="color:black;text-decoration:none">For NJTC Employers</a><br><br />
</p>

<a href="http://www.njtc.org/events/special/index.asp"><img src="/images/njtc/c2_bluetext.gif" alt="Photo 1" name="pic1" border="0"></a>
<a href="http://www.njtc.org/publications/publications.asp"><img src="/images/njtc/c2_greentext.gif" alt="Photo 2" name="pic2" border="0"></a><br />
<a href="http://www.njtc.org/join/membership.asp"><img src="/images/njtc/c2_yellowtext.gif" alt="Photo 3" name="pic3" border="0"></a>
<a href="http://www.njtc.org/capital/capital.asp"><img src="/images/njtc/c2_redtext.gif" alt="Photo 4" name="pic4" border="0"></a>

<!--<a href="http://www.njtc.org/events/special/index.asp"><img src="/images/njtc/logo_special.gif" valign="bottom" alt="NJTC Special Events" style="margin-bottom: 10px;" align="middle" border="0" height="51" width="53"></a> -->
   </b></font></p></td>
   <td bgcolor="#ffffff" height="276" width="610">
<!--    <font face="Arial" size="+1"><b>Coming Soon...</b></font><p>
<font face="Arial" size="+1">    <font size="2">The New Jersey
Technology Council is dedicated to assisting the New Jersey technology
community by providing comprehensive career resources. In partnership
with JobCircle.com, the NJTC presents the Career Center -- an
interactive, online job website that puts employers in touch with
valuable human capital.</font></font></p>
<p><font face="Arial" size="+1"><font size="2">Please check back after May 27th.</font>
   </font></p>
-->
<p><font face="Trebuchet MS" color="#003399" size=6>Article: MBAs and the Non-Traditional Career Search</font></p>
<p><font face="Trebuchet MS" color="#000000" size=2><br><font size="1"><a href="group_list.xml">Article Group List</a> / <a href="index_4.xml">Entrepreneurship</a> / MBAs and the Non-Traditional Career Search</font><br><br><b><font size = "+1">MBAs and the Non-Traditional Career Search</font></b><p>It's true what they say - some of the best things you take away from


business school are relationships.&nbsp; For social and business reasons,


your classmates, alumni and professors can be an invaluable resource


throughout life.&nbsp; The important thing is to nurture those relationships


- which is why Columbia Business School's Young Alumni Council ("YAC")


is so important to the school, alumni and student body.


<P>


There are numerous alumni organizations at Columbia Business School, but


the YAC is unique: founded just one year ago by an ambitious group of


recent alumni, professors and administrators, the group is devoted to


maintaining a dialogue between Columbia Business School and recent


graduates.


<P>


Bita Javadizadeh ('99), the chairperson and a founding member of the


organization, explained how the YAC got started.&nbsp; "The year I


graduated," says Bita, "our Class Gift Campaign raised just under half a


million dollars," the largest gift ever donated to any business school


from a single class upon graduation.&nbsp; "It was a great time," she


continued, "we were in a great economy, we were receiving an unrivaled


education, and the energy level at CBS was at an all-time high."


<P>


Knowing that people tend to fall out of the loop after graduation, a


group of alumni got together with professors and administrators,


"looking for a way to harness that enthusiasm," said Javadizadeh, "and


keep graduates actively involved with CBS." Thus was born the Young


Alumni Council.&nbsp; In addition to organizing an annual formal ball, the


YAC this year founded a panel series on campus to address issues of high


priority to the student body.&nbsp; The first two panels were a resounding


success: the first addressed "non-traditional" career paths, and the


second provided alumni's varied views on the "business school


experience." The YAC intends to organize several events annually to


supplement an already-robust score of career-oriented events held at the


school.


<P>


<b>The Non-Traditional Path</b><P>


About 250 students assembled in a Columbia Business School lecture hall


on January 24th to hear a panel of CBS alumni from the classes of


1996-2000 discuss "non-traditional" MBA career paths. (For MBAs, that


means everything but consulting and investment banking.) "Fifty to


Fifty-five percent of our graduates entered the financial industry last


year," remarked Vice Dean Safwan Masri, who was moderating the event,


"and twenty-two percent went into consulting.&nbsp; A growing portion of the


student body has been pursuing the 'nontraditional' path."


<P>


The recent graduates on the panel work in venture capital and private


equity, money management, entertainment, corporate development, and


Internet/New Media businesses.&nbsp;  


~


<b>Work your contacts</b><P>


"Talk to a lot of different people," insisted Jennifer Carragher ('98),


a Corporate Development Officer at Lab Morgan, J.P. Morgan Chase's


e-finance unit.&nbsp; "An unlikely connection at JP Morgan helped me get my


present job at Lab Morgan.&nbsp; You never know which relationships will pan


out." Anneke Rifkin ('00), also emphasized the importance of networking,


especially in the entertainment business.&nbsp; "It's a relationship driven


industry," she explained. "People want to feel like you're 'one of


them.'"


<P>


How do you get to know <i>'them'</i>?"  "Use alumni contacts, go to industry


conferences," she suggested, "and get an internship - either during the


semester or during the summer.&nbsp; You might also try getting in through


consulting."  Rifkin didn't have a job when she graduated last May, but


she continued researching her options, identified the companies she


wanted to work for and used her network to land a job soon thereafter.


"I had a business school contact who knew someone at a company called <b>kpe</b>, they put me in touch, and I got an interview." Now she's the New Business Development Director at that firm, which provides digital solutions and


broadband production services to the media and entertainment industry.


<P>


<b>Get an internship</b><P>


Few full-time business school students consider internships or part time


jobs during the semester, but all of the panelists encourage them -


whether they're paid or unpaid.&nbsp; Panelist Catherine Jacodine ('99)


worked in the fashion industry before enrolling at Columbia, but had an


interest in the Internet.&nbsp; During the school year, "I found out about a


company called Girlshop.com through a friend of a friend in VC.&nbsp; I


worked informally with [the company] for free, helping the founder set


up financial plans/projections, analyze sales data, etc."


<P>


After graduating, Jacodine joined dEliA*s Corporation, a leading teen


direct marketer, and has since been promoted to General Manager at


gURL.com, the largest teen community and content site on the Web.&nbsp; "The


web division of dEliA*s was relatively new at the time," she noted. The


internship definitely helped her get the job, "because I was familiar


with e-commerce."  Working at Girlshop.com also made her realize that


she "rather enjoyed working in a more unstructured, entrepreneurial


environment."


<P>


Panelist and event coordinator Adam Smith ('98) also took a part-time


internship during school after finding a listing in CBS' career


resource center. After working 10, then 20, then 30 hours a week during


his second semester at Matrix Global Investments - an operating company


of a reputable New York buyout firm, Castle Harlan - Adam was offered a


full-time position with the company as a junior partner. There was a


catch however: he had to start full time at the beginning of his fourth


semester.&nbsp; Adam saw it as an opportunity he could not pass up, and


finished his last five classes at night over the course of the next


year.


<P>


<b>For the entrepreneurial types</b><P>


Jeremy Kagan ('98) addressed the entrepreneurial types in the room.


While studying at Columbia, Kagan launched Internet media company


Volatile Media Inc., also known as ezcd.com.&nbsp; When things started to


take off at Volatile, he went to school part-time so that he could


devote more time to the business.&nbsp; Kagan's advice: "If you have a


business plan, write it or present it for class.&nbsp; You'll be forced onto


a schedule and get valuable criticism from people before you start


talking to investors.


<P>


After three years as CEO of Volatile Media, Kagan was preparing for


acquisition when his acquirer lost its funding.&nbsp; As a result, he's had


to shut down the firm, and is doing consulting work while he considers


his next step. He explains it all without an inkling of regret.


<P>


As for career life after CEO-dom, "I don't know exactly where I'll end


up just yet," he says.&nbsp; I would probably do well in an operating role,


or with a consulting firm."


<P>


~


<b>


If you like the job search process...</b><P>


Interested in working at a hedge fund?&nbsp; Kelly Hearn, a principal at Ziff


Brothers Investments in London, spent a year in JP Morgan's investment


management group before joining Ziff. When she decided to leave J.P.


Morgan, she realized how helpful her Columbia network was.&nbsp; "I contacted


some friends and teachers, and within a day I had interviews set up."


This is no small feat, considering how hard it is to get a job with a


fund. "Hedge funds are very press-averse," she explains, "you have to do


your homework just to find firms to apply to."  But "if you enjoy the


process of looking for a job at a hedge fund," Hearn remarks, "you'll


like doing the job."


<P>


Hearn recommends networking through business school contacts - "friends,


professors, advisors and alums" - but also suggests a slightly more


radical tactic.&nbsp; "Scan business journals and call people who are quoted


in the articles."  Hedge fund hopefuls should also "constantly scan


business journals and the local press for hedge fund news."  You'll then


be prepared to break the ice when you contact fund managers. She does


remind job seekers to "be creative, though.&nbsp; These people read the same


publications you do.&nbsp; They want to hear something new."


<P><b>


The "sexy" job of the year?</b><P>


A random sampling of students at the cocktail hour following the panel


discussion confirmed a rumor that's been going around for months -


Private Equity has officially deposed Venture Capital as the "sexiest


job of the year."  When I asked panel organizer and principal investor


Adam Smith what all the fuss was about, he explained: "You work in a


smaller, intense, entrepreneurial environment, usually with very smart,


passionate people.&nbsp; Private equity combines the key elements of high


finance - capital management, financial valuation, mergers and


acquisitions, and execution  - with critical strategic and operating


exposure.&nbsp; Compared to much of VC, private equity provides a greater


opportunity to get your hands dirty on the operating side working with


company management and, today, given the markets, it offers a compelling


risk / reward career path. Ultimately, a successful private equity


professional can become master of his or her own universe."  Although


rewarding in many ways, private equity is a long-term track: "They will


pay less than banking on a cash basis, but there can be significant


reward down the road, both intellectually and financially."<P>





Right, but why PE over VC?&nbsp; "Private equity firms have the ability to


find and acquire sound companies, and realize on these investments,


despite choppy equity market conditions.&nbsp; This is primarily due to the


fact that private equity involves 'later-stage' investments (e.g.,


leveraged buyouts) relative to venture capital, and the market's


appetite for their investments are less dependent on doing an IPO." That


is, private equity is less vulnerable to the 'window' provided by the


capital markets to provide profitable exits.&nbsp; "There appears to be a


growing number of venture capital firms which are having a tough time


finding and doing attractive deals, and sleeping well at night."  In


short, considering the state of the markets, PE is just less risky right


now (but no less difficult to land a job).


<P>


Smith, a Senior Associate at Caxton-Iseman Capital, and Chris Lawrence,


SVP of Operations at Venture Capital firm VenturiFX, had some advice for


those looking to break into both areas. Like Rifkin, Lawrence strongly


recommends attending industry events and networking hard.&nbsp; If you're in


or near New York, consider the New York Business Forums


(www.nybusinessforums.com).&nbsp; The New York Venture Group, New York


Capital Roundtable and the New York Infotech Forum each hold monthly


breakfast meetings with industry leaders speaking on current topics.


Besides the obvious value of attending these forums, Lawrence points out


that "you get to take home a directory of all the attendees."


<P>


"If you want to contact someone and request an interview," Smith


advises, "send a short, cogent email with a focused message," and attach


your resume.&nbsp; If the person does not respond within a few days, Lawrence


suggests that you follow up with a phone call.


<P>


At the cocktail hour following the panel, students and alumni milled


about, talking business and exchanging cards.&nbsp; (Get personal business


cards made up if you don't have them, or carry a PDA so you can beam


your information.)  There's no doubt that this new tradition will last.


Over wine and cheese, second-year student Roberta Griff discussed the


significance of the business school network: "After two years, you can


point out the classmates you'll be tripping over in the future. In fact,


I can think of two people here I could definitely start a business


with."


<p>


<b>For more career advice, check out the CBS Young Alumni Council's <a href="http://www.vault.com/nr/newsmain.jsp?nr_page=3&ch_id=255&article_id=3798421&listelement=1&cat_id=1085" target="_blank">Tips for the Non-Traditional Job Search</a>.<br>
<br>
<font face="verdana, arial, helvetica, san-serif" size="1">
<center>
<b>&#169; 1998-2004, JobCircle.com, Inc.</b><br>
<b>&#169; Content reprinted with permision by <a href = "http://www.vault.com">Vault.com</a>.</b><br>
<b>All Rights Reserved.</b>
<p>
<a href = "http://www.vault.com" target="_blank"><img src = "/images/vault_credit.gif" alt = "Vault:  The Truth is in the Vault" width = "120" height="36" border=0></a>
</center>
</font></p><br />
</td></tr>

  <tr height="59">
   <td colspan="3" height="59" width="800">
   <img src="/images/njtc/footer.gif" usemap="#footer_map" style="display: block;" border="0" height="59" width="800">
   <map name="footer_map"><area shape="rect" coords="9,16,65,29" href="http://www.njtc.org/community/contact/contact.asp"><area shape="rect" coords="82,16,179,29" href="http://www.njtc.org/community/about/privacypolicy.asp"><area shape="rect" coords="650,10,789,51" href="http://www.beseennow.com/"></map>

 </td></tr></tbody></table> </body></html>

<!-- parse_ssi_for_cgi: template: /work/prod/templates/cm_njtc_basic.html, industry:  -->

