I was feeling really poor back when I was attempting CFA Level 2.
I had just been let go in my finance role and I wanted to switch careers into advertising, yet still continue pursuing the CFA charter as a safeguard just in case my career switch was a misguided detour.
My previous finance employer funded the whole of my CFA Level 1 exams, as long as I passed. But what kind of advertising company wants to finance a CFA charter for an advertising role?
Soon after, I received an advertising role offer for one of the largest advertising firm in the world, with an agreement that:
It was a thing of beauty.
How did I manage all this? Read on to find out more on how to convince your employer to sponsor your CFA exams too, so you can focus on passing your exam without breaking your bank.
The most obvious way to finance your CFA program is to get support from your firm.
Study the benefits section of your company terms and conditions carefully to see what options there are for tuition reimbursement – often there is some flexibility to what is a qualification that is ‘crucial’ to your role.
This will then depend on your relationship with your manager (or whomever that approves your reimbursement) – that will be the person you’ll have to convince.
Be sure to word your emails and what you say in the subsequent discussions carefully.
Remember: this is by far the step with the highest monetary impact, you have the chance to completely finance your qualification in one fell swoop so do it right!
The main points you should be covering are outlined below.
As long as you’re in a current role, there are benefits that a CFA charterholder employee can bring to the company. I don’t care how distant the industry may seem – as long as you spend some time thinking about it I guarantee there will be some good points.
We’ve included some generic points below to seed your brainstorm.
The CFA charter enables you to:
Again, I stress: you must put time and thought into selling the benefits of the CFA program to your firm hard. Be it making better investments for the firm, developing towards management, helping out on the day-to-day accounting, setting up financing structures – remember, the end goal is to convince!
The main issues that managers are concern with when discussing tuition reimbursement for the CFA charter are fairly predictable:
There are various scholarships available for CFA program candidates directly from the CFA Institute:
These scholarships can be undersubscribed so it’s definitely worth applying for them. You can read our guide to CFA Institute scholarships here.
If the discussion is still not going well, or if your manager still has concerns, there are a few extra cards to play.
Best of luck! I hope this helps your strategies to convince for employer to sponsor your CFA studies (or any exams really)! Does your company sponsor your CFA program? Share your experience and tips below!
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View Comments
Hi,
I work in a business process reengineering department in a bank. Kindly suggest what strategies to use to convince my head for a reimbursement.
Thanks in advance!
We have a guide for that: How to Get the CFA Charter for Free (By Convincing Your Firm to Pay For It)
Hi! What other card can I play if I work in IT area of my company? Thanks in advance! Kind Regards,
If your company is a financial institution, show them how knowledge from the CFA program will help you better complete your daily projects. "I'd be able to add feature X into project Y, and also build a more robust version of Z because of my CFA knowledge!"