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Before I embarked on my career right after graduation sometime back in 2007, I set forth a 5-years plan.
First of all, I did not expect myself to be an auditor. I became an auditor by a decision I made in 2003, during the last few months of my army life. I was first accepted into NUS Business School to study Business Administration. Naturally, regardless of what degree was, NUS was a good branding by itself and I thought that alone took care of everything.
JC asked me to visit some road-show by NTU Business School in Suntec. I was inspired by the Dean who reminded us that having a specialized degree is better than a general degree and Accountancy was a specialized degree, as compared to a Business degree. She said, "An Accountancy student can do what Business students do, but not vice versa." And I agreed with her.
I have no idea what I wanted to do. I knew that I have interest in Finance. Bonds, equities, derivatives and commodities. Business degree would be good. At that point in time, I did not know what Accountancy was. I had a very vague idea of what it is. Accountants.
However, I soon convinced myself that an Accountancy Degree would be in my best interest. I was right and I was wrong. During 2004, I submitted my application for NTU Accountancy course and was accepted. I did not have a full picture of what Accountancy course entails and the career paths it will bring me. Audit? Assurance? Accounting? Where are my bonds, equities, derivatives and commodities? During the last year of my study, I had to make a choice. What will my career be? I signed up for the Big 4. It was THE thing to do as an accountancy student.
Auditing is something that I did not regret doing. It widened my horizon and gave me opportunities that my common peers may not have accessed to. To travel, to gain industry knowledge and to strengthen my technical knowledge on accounting and the financial reporting standards. However, I soon loathe it. Auditing does not give me the work-life balance that I crave for. More importantly, whatever I am doing have little bearing on my interests in Finance. I am only doing part of it, the financial reporting part. Auditing involved moderate risks that bring little returns.
Nonetheless, I have made a 5-years plan: (i) To stay until Manager, (ii) To be proficient in the financial reporting standards, (iii) To be involved in different industries and (iv) To be involved in IPO process.
Now a preliminary check:
(i) To stay until Manager - May not realized it as I think I cannot handle the job and the stress well.
(ii) To be proficient in the financial reporting standards - I have the tools to update myself with the FRS. I have the basic knowledge of the FRS.
(iii) To be involved in different industries - Done. Manufacturing (Textiles, tiles, confectionary products), Retail, Hospitals, Constructions.
(iv) To be involved in IPO process - I am involved in several IPO projects. Even though, I was involved in different stages but I did have an understanding of the IPO process.
I think it a good time to move on.
I have started on the CFA again. And I am trying to plan out a proper route to do my ACA, and at the same time to stay in EY (due to the training contract). And I also plan to take the CAIA.
I will need to devise my second 5-years plan soon. Until then.
The ICT was too short in my opinion. What I missed most was the camaraderie among the team. After all, this is our 10th year of friendship. The army exercises were standard and this time round, the BME was not too tough. However, it is the after-exercise activity that we look forward to most. BEER. TALKING CORK. Generally having fun.
This ICT is a break from our usual routines. Finally a place and time for us to remove our professional masks and just be ourselves. It is as if we were transported back to a decade ago when we first met at 41 SAR.
In addition, I have received a renewed energy from this ICT. Something that was painfully missing for the past 4 years, but I will put this down in words in another blog posting.
Why do you come to church. Religiously if I may add.
To profess your love? To keep tab of the latest updates on the second coming? Or just a habit, just as someone who needs coffee and that newspaper every-morning. It is not easy to love someone wholeheartedly. To give your time, your space and yourself to him or her. I can't dare think of mortals who can do that for each other, what is more this someone whom you never have met, have face-time with and to think of it, "faith" is that underlying basis of whom this person exist.
I don't think there is fundamental difference between robots and humans. They respond to a certain set of codes and stimulus. Predictability.
Why then are humans created if after-all, the raison d'etre for the whole religious ideas and to-dos are but to assuage a certain set of stimulus. Free will is but an illusion. Humans generally cannot free will their way into not eating. Humans cannot free will their way into not breathing.
The chains of religious ceremonies, the going through the motion and I think something about tithing and the prosperity gospels.
I don't create zombies.