Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some of you are delusional if you believe a big stable job is squarely in the hands of op
No one thinks a big stable job is squarely in the hands of OP.
That's part of why people think OP is being so absurd. At best, her DH can pass around a resume, get him a foot in the door job. But that's the foot in the door job that the nephew needs. That's the kind of nepotism that is common. No one is taking a community college D-student and getting them a job at McKinsey. But people do, all the time, look out for family and friends, pass along resumes, do 15 minute networking chats, ask around their organizations, ask around their networks, set up a risk-free internship, etc. This is the kind of nepotism that is omnipresent. It's barely nepotism. It's just... how jobs and hiring works.
They don’t want a regular job. He can get a regular job. They want a six-figure miracle in March of his senior year.
Well, let's say DH pulled off the miracle by asking his boss to give his nephew who graduated from Duke a job. Nephew gets a six figure job and does enough that it doesn't embarrass DH. Would you be happy with that outcome?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some of you are delusional if you believe a big stable job is squarely in the hands of op
No one thinks a big stable job is squarely in the hands of OP.
That's part of why people think OP is being so absurd. At best, her DH can pass around a resume, get him a foot in the door job. But that's the foot in the door job that the nephew needs. That's the kind of nepotism that is common. No one is taking a community college D-student and getting them a job at McKinsey. But people do, all the time, look out for family and friends, pass along resumes, do 15 minute networking chats, ask around their organizations, ask around their networks, set up a risk-free internship, etc. This is the kind of nepotism that is omnipresent. It's barely nepotism. It's just... how jobs and hiring works.
They don’t want a regular job. He can get a regular job. They want a six-figure miracle in March of his senior year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some of you are delusional if you believe a big stable job is squarely in the hands of op
No one thinks a big stable job is squarely in the hands of OP.
That's part of why people think OP is being so absurd. At best, her DH can pass around a resume, get him a foot in the door job. But that's the foot in the door job that the nephew needs. That's the kind of nepotism that is common. No one is taking a community college D-student and getting them a job at McKinsey. But people do, all the time, look out for family and friends, pass along resumes, do 15 minute networking chats, ask around their organizations, ask around their networks, set up a risk-free internship, etc. This is the kind of nepotism that is omnipresent. It's barely nepotism. It's just... how jobs and hiring works.
They don’t want a regular job. He can get a regular job. They want a six-figure miracle in March of his senior year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some of you are delusional if you believe a big stable job is squarely in the hands of op
No one thinks a big stable job is squarely in the hands of OP.
That's part of why people think OP is being so absurd. At best, her DH can pass around a resume, get him a foot in the door job. But that's the foot in the door job that the nephew needs. That's the kind of nepotism that is common. No one is taking a community college D-student and getting them a job at McKinsey. But people do, all the time, look out for family and friends, pass along resumes, do 15 minute networking chats, ask around their organizations, ask around their networks, set up a risk-free internship, etc. This is the kind of nepotism that is omnipresent. It's barely nepotism. It's just... how jobs and hiring works.
They don’t want a regular job. He can get a regular job. They want a six-figure miracle in March of his senior year.
Anonymous wrote:Duke grad and an athlete? Hardly a slacker.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some of you are delusional if you believe a big stable job is squarely in the hands of op
No one thinks a big stable job is squarely in the hands of OP.
That's part of why people think OP is being so absurd. At best, her DH can pass around a resume, get him a foot in the door job. But that's the foot in the door job that the nephew needs. That's the kind of nepotism that is common. No one is taking a community college D-student and getting them a job at McKinsey. But people do, all the time, look out for family and friends, pass along resumes, do 15 minute networking chats, ask around their organizations, ask around their networks, set up a risk-free internship, etc. This is the kind of nepotism that is omnipresent. It's barely nepotism. It's just... how jobs and hiring works.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why can’t your husband decide? Have your nephew give your husband his resume and tell nephew he needs to make the ask to your husband directly. Your husband can decide what he’s willing to do based on that.
I wrote this before I read that new phew is at Duke. I guarantee there are people at your husband’s company who didn’t “earn” their way in and didn’t even go to a top school- they were just connected. It sounds like that’s the part that’s upsetting to you- that your nephew could find a way out of his middle class existence.
Anonymous wrote:Why can’t your husband decide? Have your nephew give your husband his resume and tell nephew he needs to make the ask to your husband directly. Your husband can decide what he’s willing to do based on that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agree it is how the world works. But I also might be hesitant to put my neck out if you think the nephew can't cut it or would somehow be embarrassing. Also depends what position your husband is in.
I'm at a private mid-sized firm and in a position to make hiring moves but would not hire most of my family members because I think they ultimately would not do a good job. The guy who owns our firm, however, has hired a few lackluster family members and family friends, who have either been let go or continue to be a bit of a drain, but I guess that doesn't really matter since it's his company.
This is what I mean. He didn’t stick his neck out for the families we know. My nephew on the other hand is not graduating with any honors, his summer jobs have nothing to do with finance, and he barely speaks to my husband. The time to ask was probably four years ago for an internship, not a couple of months before he graduates asking for a full time six figure job offer.
He demanded a six figure job? Or to pass his resume along for positions he may be qualified for?
Investment banking, sales and trading, private equity, venture capital, etc. go to the tip top students with perfect resumes and all pay six figures to start after bonus.
I went to an Ivy and the jobs all seemed to go to students with elite high school and tip top grades in random majors like Russian Lit and history — hardly relevant to finance. Is it more having a certain carriage and pedigree to assure clients that the “right” analysts are working there?
Nephew is graduating from Duke.
Did any of your Ivy League classmates wake up in Feb or March of their senior year and with no relevant experience and decide to become investment bankers? He does not have great grades and has no relevant experience. I don’t think he nor my sister and brother in law understand the field, they just know it can pay a lot of money. It is my understanding it pays a lot of money to brilliant students who worked exceptionally hard for four years crafting a business perfect resume.
My husband had all As and worked every summer. That was over 25 years ago. It’s even more competitive now.