Gibson486
Lifer
- Aug 9, 2000
- 18,378
- 2
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Originally posted by: JS80
Originally posted by: krunchykrome
Originally posted by: JS80
Originally posted by: Gibson486
Originally posted by: krunchykrome
Originally posted by: Gibson486
Originally posted by: Xcobra
Thanks guys! Appreciate the input. I have been told that KPMG is probably not a good choice and just wanted to get others' opinions. I did get an interview with them and were very impressed with my background. But turns out that they had no room for tax people. Now that I look back, I could've gone for the audit internship. Although the class I took last semester, I hated it. But I will still have to do it to get my hours for the CPA.
As for the 150 unit requirement, I am doing so. That's the reason I am taking 5 years to graduate. So what I did is double-concentration: accounting and financial management. Worked perfectly. So I am certain to get the 150 units. I am doing pretty well (could do better). Mainly As and Bs (aside from an F i got freshman year and a few Cs in my sophmore year) so I think I'm doing pretty decent.
How about studying for the CPA? I know once I pass it, many doors will open.
hahaha....my gf took the auditing class and she loved it....but she said the class was hard as hell.
The thing about a CPA is that lots of people do not want to do it. The responsibility you have is huge and in some cases companies will hold you completely liable for mistakes. I have no idea because I am an engineer, but my gf is an accountant and wa sgonna get her cpa. Her last internship was working with 4 CPAs doing CPA work. She did not enjoy it at all.
If you want a career in accounting, you must get your CPA. Otherwise, you're just a glorified bookkeeper. Before I started in public accounting, I interned in the private sector, in the tax dept. Although I enjoyed it and it wasn't public tax, I feel that there is more experience to be gained in audit. Audit will teach how how a company is run, from the bottom to the top.
She knows that, but she is not even sure if she wants to pursue accounting anymore. Personally, I do not blame her. She is outgoing and uplifting type and I really do not think accounting fits her well. She is the type of person who needs a job where you do not sit in an office all day crunching numbers (that's me, but my job does not require that). I want her to atleast try audting though, but she is kind of scared of it.
she actually talked to me about iy yesterday too. She has no idea what she can do with an accounting degree besides accounting. I just told her that the sky is the limit and she needs to really buck down and force her way into a field that she may like.
oh and corporate accounting is day and night to audit. you will literally know nothing going from audit to corporate accounting. I wouldn't stay longer than 2-4 years in public if you're planning on ending up in corporate accounting.
how will he know nothing from going from audit to corporate accounting? Audit lets him/her look and learn a company's operations from a birds-eye view. Corporate accounting is an application of what you've learned in school and what you've observed in the field in public accounting.
An auditor does not know how to enter Journal Entries, does not truly understand reversing entries, and does not fully understand the general ledger.
Cmon, ticking and tying and footing does not prepare you for corporate accounting. The advantage of having public background is you know what the auditors want when audit time rolls around.
if you start your career as an auditor, then, from what I understand, this is true. However, lots of aufitors came from the corporate side as well.
It's like a consultant. You can start off as a "bitch work" consultant at a firm, or you could start off elsewhere and actually come into a firm as a real consultant who actually has experienced the ins and outs of it all.
 
				
		 
			 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		
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