Horses for courses
Jurie
Wessels has met all sorts of actuaries. Most of them are of sound mind and have
reasonable eating habits.
It could
happen any time of any day or night. It typically happens just as you wipe the
milk from your cereal off your upper lip. Just then, for a moment you freeze as
the realisation strikes you: your life, as you live it now, lacks meaning.
Of course
one is happy and still in love with one’s spouse or significant other or
significant others (there is no accounting for some people’s luck and/or recklessness).
The lack
of meaning is a professional crisis. In the commute to work the first morning of
the crisis, you turn the radio off because nowadays all the songs on the chart
sound the same and are too noisy. And then you think: oh my god, is that me?
Before you know it, you spend an evening paging through an old high school
yearbook and sighing a lot. This might be preceded by a little more single malt
than is strictly advisable on health grounds. And being an analytical type, one
asks oneself the profound question at work: is this what I really want to do
for the rest of my life? And being an adventurous type, one realises that one
should have become a football manager, male strip-dancer, female bullfighter or
at least a professional cross-dresser. In many cases, the best prescription is
to buy that electric guitar or Austin Healy Frogeye Sprite that you desired as a
teenager. In many other cases, the crisis is best dealt with through a change
of career. This, of course, is quite a dramatic decision for somebody who feels
that he or she has sacrificed the best years of youth to become an actuary. It
is quite a considerable investment to walk away from. The thing is, you’ll
never walk away from that background. There are thousands of employers who
would love your skills set and thousands of business opportunities you can
exploit. The good news is that there is an increasing receptiveness in the
business world for the skills and attributes actuaries bring to a business. In
other words, your training has not been inappropriate for a world outside life
insurance and pensions.
There is
a certain lack of certainty in the profession that actuaries can with ease hold
down a whole range of managerial positions in business. There appears to be a
belief among actuaries that they are too detail minded for the wider business
world.
Business
leaders typically come from a background of accounting or engineering. Both
those professions pride themselves on training people for jobs that require attention
to detail and exactness. Yet engineers do not fear that their detail-mindedness
will inhibit them when they are promoted into business responsibilities way
beyond the calculation of average stress tolerances. The engineer knows that
once he’s boss, he need not understand the detail of everything, everybody
below him does that. In fact, it is often preferable not to have that ability.
The manager is thereby forced to delegate and to concentrate on the more
strategic business issues he was in the first place employed to do.
What most
employers look for in a senior manager is general business experience and much
common sense (reliability and honesty, are also good but not always a
prerequisite). And if the appointed specialists below the manager are disappointing
in the way they look after the finer points, the manager can de-appoint them.
Like this: ‘You are fired.’ Quite easy, really, once you get the hang of it. It
would be wrong to try and list a number of particular positions for which
actuaries would be suitable. It would once again be too restricting. It would
be another list of things actuaries can do, with the implication that actuaries
are not quite suitable for positions outside that list.
Of
course, some actuaries are wholly unsuitable for some positions and others for
other positions. But for most senior positions in business it is a question of appropriateness
of personality, not appropriateness of qualification. And in my time I have met
all sorts of people who are actuaries. Most of them are of sound mind and have
reasonable eating habits. It is simply a matter of finding a position that resolves
your particular despair, in that moment of career crisis. And there is a whole
industry of people out there who have nothing else to do, but to find you the
lead guitar position in a punk band that knows exactly the same three chords you do.
Paul Walsh