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Joined
3/22/09
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3
Points
11
I'll try to be as quick and clear as possible. I work for a reputable fortune 500 company at wall street as a programmer/analyst. I have currently 2.5 years of experience, including a promotion and very good recommendations. I have a Bs in CS from a top 10 school in the US, however my GPA has some issues.

It has some issues in a sense, it's divided into 3 sections, I have attended 2 community colleges and my final university. Of course, my final university did not transfer my GPA from previous colleges and I ended up getting a 3.15 GPA for all my senior level course work, which is again not horrible, it obviously does not look good next to those 3.8s and 3.9s people have from not so competitive schools. If I were to combine all my GPAs together, I get somewhere around 3.55 as a final GPA.

My strong point is my math skills. I have a 4.0 GPA in math in all college courses I have taken. In fact, the last time I have received a B in my transcript in math was in 8th grade, and that was the only year (due to gf issues). I have taken all the Calc (1/2/3), diff eq, linear algebra, prob, and real analysis. My CS GPA is 3.0 which is considered pretty descent for my school.

At this point, I am debating whether or not I should take the GRE this summer and apply for Fall 2010. My aim is obviously top schools, UCB, Princeton, Baruch, NYU, Columbia, Cornell, CMU, etc. However, being very much realism oriented person I am, I know I will have problems proving myself to adcom due to a) My not so good GPA, b) Not so much financial math oriented and short work experience.

My work experience at work DOES require lots of finance knowledge, I do know about the business. I work very interesting projects of which I was lucky enough to do C++, C#, and Java, all in the same job role (right now C++), however, it's a tech job and it's nothing like being an analyst or financial modeler (but then I wonder why someone would give up that job to get an MFE degree).

I am buying books (very advanced level) and reading and learning about financial engineering, quants, options pricing, etc as much as possible and may in fact spend some time on an open source project. I love C++ and I believe I can build a very nice GUI around a quantlib like library which I believe will help me learn and get me to closer to be where I want to be.

Another problem with me is my sucky skills in GRE verbal. I am very very bad at it, at the moment, I have not really sat down and studied, but i don't believe I can exceed 500 in verbal unless I really study 2-3 hours/day for 3 months straight.

So my concerns are : a) Not so great GPA, b) Not so long work experience, c) Low GRE verbal.

Please explain your thoughts about my profile, the concerns above, and on top of that tell me if it makes sense for me to take this to the next step and study finance like i am doing now and build an opensource project (or anything that sort) to improve my chances. I am willing to wait 1 more year and spend lots of time on a side project to learn about this, the only thing is, will it help? Will I be wasting my time? And after all, I don't want to learn 90% of the stuff I am supposed to learn at school and waste my money, there is no point of going overboard.

Thanks.
 
I don't see anywhere in your post -- I assume you are applying to an MFE?

I think your work experience sounds fine. Just don't be shy in talking about it in your personal statement and have those writing letters of rec emphasize your financial knowledge.

I don't think GRE verbal counts heavily in admission to these programs, but don't bomb it so people worry whether you are literate.

No special wisdom on GPAs; explain why it isn't so great but why you are still a super person. People like openness, but don't beat it to death. It's in the past and there's nothing you can do to change it.
 
Looking at the bottom of your post, can you be more specific on your goals after MFE program? You seem to want to continue in a technical role; will this degree really help you there? People usually aim to be closer to the money, not to get more money staying at the same distance. :)
 
Sorry for not explaining couple things. Yes, I am going for MFE and my goal after completing the degree is working somewhere in wall street as an analyst possibly in risk management. I really like programming, so I wouldn't mind staying as pure coder, on the other hand, I'm good at communicating and understand business well, so I may also stay in the business side and be involved less in the actual coding part of things. I have actually thought about going for MBA in finance, since succeeding in GMAT for me is much easier (I scored over 750 in practice tests) and business schools don't really care about your GPA that much, but then I got discouraged by how they are so overrated, how much money they cost, and how there are tens of thousands of MBA graduates every year. I'd rather be different and do something special.
 
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