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Anyone hear of SEI consulting? Thoughts?
Guys there’s this boot camp that I came across that trains people to get jobs in Top consulting firms and has a fee plan wherein you pay once you get placed. I just wanted to know if someone here has any experience with this ?
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/e/2PACX-1vQuKa3k-rG3emxJcfbidCjC0Su85E_BKqW9cTeFZMY4xg4LnUVxOLrpcETqf7d-iEePlFh6lJ1knwwD/pubhtml
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Pro
3
Offer 3
.
Rising Star
Offer 3
Pro
3. Comp is good. Wlb is probably better than 1, and safer option than 2.
3
3
3
Assuming same WLB
Option 3 no doubt
If u don’t want 3 can u help a brother out.
If you don't care about the specific industry experience, might as well go with 3. But think about what skill you want to build in your next experience
Rising Star
What's the work life balance you're hoping for?
Then definitely not one
Do you prefer any one irrespective of money? Then factor in your current risk appetite . If you don’t feel strongly about staying in consulting, offer 3 seems to have the better expected return. If you can afford the risk, I’d go with the upside of the startup assuming you would make a bigger impact as well
2
3, can you negotiate on RSU?
I'm in the middle of negotiating. They probably won't budge too much more
I’m not sure what you’re looking for here – all the comp is (relatively) similar... What matters more is what you want to do and if it’s one of his jobs or if one of these jobs will put you on a path towards that.
Rising Star
3
2
J/k 3 and it's not even close.
Just a note...your RSUs liquidating with a return aren’t only dependent on IPO - did they tell you that? You can also get your $ if the company is acquired or, in some cases, if they raise additional rounds management or the new investors will occasionally offer to buy out employees with vested equity options. If the company sticks around long enough before IPOing you might be able to sell in the secondary market. That said, still very risky depending on what stage the startup is at and worth noting average startup tenure is definitely less than 4 years, you may not end up sticking around for full vesting so I’d discount that $150k by 80% at least. Also understand you have to pay to exercise the options usually which nets from total return.