Sales and trading offer a lucrative career path, with ample and structured opportunities for internal promotion opportunities. The career progression for S&T professionals is as follows (most junior listed first):
- Analysts
- Associate
- Vice president
- Director
- Managing Director
Unlike investment banking which is very hierarchical, sales and trading has a very flat organizational structure. In sales and trading, you sit within your asset class and role. I sat beside my managing directors (MDs) and they knew what I ate for lunch, what I was working on, and which friends I was chatting to.
MBA not required
While investment banking generally has two separate streams with analysts being pre-MBA students and associates being post-MBA. In sales and trading, an MBA is generally not required and progressing from analyst to associate and then onto VP is quite common.
Sales & trading career path, roles and responsibilities
The titles in Sales & Trading are the same as in investment banking: The sales and trading profession has always worked as an apprenticeship model. Senior salespeople and traders train up juniors and give them increasingly larger responsibility. The analyst to associate promotion (“a to a”) is generally straight forward. From Associate onward, top performers are promoted early while under-performers could hold onto their roles for a fairly long time.
Role | Sales | Trading |
Intern |
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Analyst |
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Associate |
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Vice President |
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Director, Executive Director (ED), Senior Vice President |
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Managing Director |
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Although the hierarchy was flat and I knew my MDs well, there was a natural pyramid ratio of how many MDs to Directors to VPs to Associates to Analysts.
In my experience
I got hired right before the Great Financial Crisis, so in the years before me, hiring was strong. There were lots of people senior to me. Immediately after the Great Financial Crisis, hiring was more muted. There were layoffs across the industry and managers were more cautious about bringing on new analysts.
About 5 years after the Lehman Bankruptcy, most trading floors had a lot of MDs, Directors and VPs as the Analysts and Associates like me hired before the crisis have gotten promoted, and very few analysts and associates from more muted hiring. Promotions were hard beyond VP and all banks were positioned the same way. They had VPs wanting to be Directors, but not enough Director spots, Directors wanting to be MDs but not enough MD spots. A lot of my experience was structural based on hiring patterns when I was hired. A new hire today would be in a much better position to progress quickly.
Exit Opportunities in Sales and Trading
Unlike in investment banking, there isn’t the same focus on exit opportunities in sales and trading. In investment banking, there is a very different skill set between what a good analysts does (builds great excel financial models) to what a great MD does (builds great relationships and wins M&A mandates). A great Investment Banking MD doesn’t need to open up excel, while those financial modelling skills are in demand at Private Equity firms.
Investment banking is a relationship business at the MD level, and because the relationships you need are at the most senior levels, you need time for those relationships to develop. Perhaps some of these relationships are built during business school, and maybe your b-school friend moves up the corporate development program at a fortune 500 company and becomes the CEO.
Sales & Trading relationships are at an execution level. You can be a junior salesperson and cover people much older than you are. I’ve done it. One of my good friends graduated college early and by the time he started as a salesperson, he was 20. He was covering clients twice his age and wasn’t allowed to order alcohol for himself for client entertainment. The client coverage skills he developed as an 20 year old analyst were the same skills he needed as a 30 year old Director.