The man on the horse sees a city, let's imagine he is living in
medieval times. With a horse he will have to undergo a lot of torture before he
arrives at the destination. He will get tired, the horse may develop an
attitude or he might confuse his way to the green city assuming it is full of
milk and honey. In either way, if he is determined, he will reach his
destination safe and sound.
I am through with the first huddle. Some months back, the real
person of this blog character undertook a course in the highly coveted CFA Institute.
He even resigned from his job believing it would hamper his chances of passing
the exams one off without having to go through the protracted process again.
Now the results are out. The dreaded results that made him panic just by the mention
of the name results. The heart was constantly beating and he knows of people
who have not yet opened their emails to receive their results. He was among the
list of 43% of candidates who passed the
June 2016 Level I CFA exam.
Let him now take the first persona to intimate
about the joy of passing what is called the Mt. Everest of Finance. He had to
sneak from work to go check his results because he had no smart phone or
computer on his desk. His manager has both, but he could not request her to open
his email and check whether he had passed or not. So he sneaked from the office
for ten minutes and went to a cyber cafe to access the results. And luckily,
the first email he saw had the word ‘CONGRATULATIONS’, which caught his eye. He
then relaxed and mumbled a silent prayer.
Here is his version of the story.
There are three instances of anxiety in a fresh CFA
level I student if the candidates I interacted with are anything to go by. The
first is that of not completing the syllabus in time, the second is that of tackling the exam
and the third is the fear of results. There are many others including the lead
up time to doing the exam or the time it takes to receive results which is
usually exact given the previous record of the past events.
I must say I was never anxious or did ever
panic when I was to go to for the exam. As opposed to people who do 300 hours
of study, I probably doubled or tripled the minimum time required for the exam.
That shows how focused I was in my determination not to fail or how daft I was
in not acquiring concepts fast enough to be able to replicate the same on an exam. Luckily, that taught me something very vital, that all
you need sometimes is to eat, live and think about one thing and then you will
be good to go. I cannot say that I wholly dedicated my time to studies.
However, there are certain times I felt like giving up since it was also
perilous. You either study or fail to put in enough time to peruse. There is no short cut. As such, during down
moments, I would take to blogs or YouTube for the much needed emotional support and
determination to conquer the elephant in the house. It is also this process
that taught me how to be an early riser. Though I had been an early bird, I
lost the sheen sometimes along the way but henceforth, I have been waking up
early even when I am not supposed to be doing so. That is the extent the CFA
exams takes you.
Many times, I wished I could finish doing all the questions I was given but could not. I would procrastinate with them even
though I did about seventy percent of those questions. Some were too easy and while some were just a headache. Fortunately, there was a certain program that used to provide me with those questions even
though it was outdated. I used it because I was not chummed enough to buy the
current version. Even so I prepared painstakingly. The program I used was called QBank
and it had over 3000 questions and mock exams you could be able to do on your
own. This is because the syllabus is supposed to be covered based on a personal
initiative and self evaluation is the only way to gauge your level of concept acquisition. If you rely on tutors, unless you are sharp, you may only cover up
to 20% of what is required of you in each unit. The content is quite wide and
that is why on a bare minimum, you need to do 300 hours.
Allow me to narrate a little bit about the exam day. I met my
close buddy, Julius who we were studying with and we went for breakfast in a certain restaurant in town because he lived in town. You need to eat before tackling such an exam. He was the guy we used to do revision
together, made fun of the ladies in the institution we were in and generally
did lots of guy stuff together. On our way after the chow, I met a high school
buddy who was nicknamed Major and used the name all the way to campus. We were also together in the drama club and
in campus though he went on to study law as I juggled economics and statistics.
I introduced him to my pal and wanted to know if he was among the few chaps who
were the new millionaires in town given that their firm had recently given out
bonus in excess of $100,000 to each employee in the firm. He laughed off at the
notion and become cagey about it which implied we needed to discuss on other
matters of national importance no, hustler vs proletariat issues.
The usual process of security that has become a norm in Nairobi
was carried out on all of us on arrival. We talked about a certain tutor of ours who had
shifted base from their firm and he said he used to be a good friend of his.
Then the thing of queuing made us lose sight of each other until we were at the exam
room where we sat few metres from each other.
When I entered the exam room, some soft music was serenading the
air. I don’t remember what music it was but it was relaxing. The venue was KICC
at the heart of Nairobi City. It was situated in the Tsavo ballroom to be precise. Hitherto,
I had never set foot in KICC. It was my first time. I loved the carpet. The
ambience was intellectual and relaxed. I was slowly telling myself, “Don’t panic.”
A certain chap had told me that the reason why people fail in exams is because
they panic.
I went and sat on the wrong seat, but before I could settle, the
owner was on my heels telling me it was assigned to him. I realized that my
seat was not in the front but at the back. I was to seat next to a certain
Indian guy, in his thirties and very friendly. We talked in English. It’s
unnatural for me to talk in English, but if it were a fellow African, I would
not have minced my words n starting out in Swahili. But this was an
international exam, so you never knew if it was a Rwandan, Tanzanian, Ugandan,
Ethiopian or one of the neighboring countries chap seated next to you.
I take time to feel free with strangers, but this guy, let me call
him Shah was quite amiable. We talked about so much stuff ranging from where we
worked, his view of mock exams and other dude stuff even though he told me he
was married and had a master’s degree with another professional paper title
under his belt of academic achievements. I was jobless, but said I was working for myself. I was operating this blog and that is work, right?
The exam started and one funny thing about this exam is that you
are not supposed to talk about it once it is over. Rationally, it is not easy
to recall even twenty percent of the questions that were set. That is the
conclusion that we reached once we finished doing the first paper with Shah
while discussing about it. Let me confess that what you are required not to do
is what you end up doing. Even though we discussed few questions and how to
approach them, there is no way we would have delved into everything that was
set.
I also noticed a certain chic we were in campus with seated two
desks from me. I was like, ‘Today, I will be courageous enough to face my fears
and talk to her.’ She was working for one of the big four audit firms which was
my dream place to work in but after completing campus but my campus results and
time rendered me irrelevant for the job. So I am now a banker, working as a
salesman whose job is not guaranteed unless the numbers magic in terms of
bringing in sales results work in my favour. If they do not, I will continue
finishing my professional paper and writing stuff on my blog. But man never gives up. I will only
give up when I find an employer who will offer me the platform I require to
progress the skills I earnestly need to propagate. But in the meantime, selling
is nice. Though figures do not come that easy.
I never managed to talk to her. Even in the four years we were
together in campus, I rarely recall a day we had a chat. She was elusive, and
still after the exam she still was. But now, I am sure I will have the courage.
Just to ask her how the exam was and probably if she can be my client. Those
are wishes, which beggars would ride.
After the exam, we were hosted for dinner in a certain restaurant.
We had planned to go for a night out but the buggers I was with were not ale
sippers. As a result, I headed to the digs because partying on a solo basis is
a no for me. Plus I was exhausted after the exam.
About two months later, the results are out. Unluckily for me, my
employer does not recognize professional papers unless your performance is good in the field
when you are a rookie who has less than two months in the job. I am still
waiting to show my prowess in this new field which is not as mundane as being
an office nerd sticking to routine even though it's full of ups and downs. It
also helps me with finding new stories and inspiration about my shoes, the inside
of the collar of my shirt and the many things I usually pen about when I have
no clients and instead of feeling beaten up, I get to do what I also love.
The problem with my job is that is takes anxiety away, you are
worried about making the right phone call, ensuring the client gives you an
appointment and if he or she does, you end up closing the sale which may also
result in the person being your friend and over time, start reading your blog
and give you worthy referrals who will give you an appointment and in the long
run help you have those numbers and hence you can be living happily ever after
when matters monetary are mentioned.
I remember my friend Eugene calling me feeling anxious about
the exam results. He did certain quizzes two days before the exam and when he could
only manage a mere 20%, he felt devastated. But I told him those were the
hardest questions he could have ever done because they were set by examiners
who knew that soft spot of candidates given that they normally overlook certain topics while revising. He
called me like two times, feeling jittery and how he could not sleep the night
before the release of the results. He kept on monitoring his email and as a
result, I also started feeling the pressure from within. Never mind that I was
70% sure I was not going to fail and 25% sure I was going to fail. There is the
margin error of 5% which increased or reduced the two chances.
When he finally got his results and he had passed, I got the
morale to also go and check mine. I sneaked from the office, went to a cyber café
and opened the dreaded email. My job allows for sneaking from the office from time to time. If he had told me he had failed, I would not have
gone to check the results. I would have waited till the evening to check them. However, I was cock sure that he was my S.I unit given that we usually performed in the
exams with few marks between us.
I remember waiting to for close to five minutes but exercised patience
because I did not know how to log into the computer I was using in the cyber café.
Eugene was the first person I called and went back to the office feeling very
confident even though I still indifferent because I don’t know what the
reaction of my colleagues would be if I told them I had passed. There are few who know about this exam plus I had not told them I had taken this exam. Yet
am still two levels from completing them. That I passed the first level means
if I dedicate myself to what I currently am doing, then the sky's the limit.
Hasta La Vista, Baby.
[Picture Source: My Own].