Finance firms should roll out the red carpet for female interns

11 September 2023
| By Malavika |
image
image
expand image

If female school or university students volunteer for work experience in finance, organisations have a “duty” to offer it to them, according to a senior funds management executive.

Camilla Love founded F3 to educate young women (from year 10 to the end of university) about careers in finance (for example, through career days or via podcasts) and provide them with work experience and internships.

Love – who is also director at Perennial Investment Management – lamented that organisations continue to offer internships to those with prior work experience in finance.

“I recently had a female candidate who said she was in the last round for an internship but didn’t get it because she didn’t have any prior work experience in finance,” Love told Money Management ahead of the inaugural Women in Finance Summit 2023.

“But it’s an internship. This is meant to be her work experience in finance. It’s these dumb things that really could drive girls away from finance because they think no one will take them on because they don’t have work experience in finance. So, they might not bother anymore.”

She asserted that finance companies have a “duty” to offer internships and work experience to young girls who volunteer for it.

“Why don’t we try to encourage women rather than set them back at their first hurdle?” she asked.

“We must arm the next generation of female talent with the knowledge of what the financial services industry does. If we don’t break down those barriers, they’ll go to Apple or Google or other big brand names they’ve grown up with instead of the hundreds of wonderful, strong, globally renowned financial services businesses in Australia.”

Her comments preceded the first-ever Women in Finance Summit 2023, where she and a panel of speakers will discuss how to empower women in financial services and build a strong future, and how to create an inclusive industry that attracts and retains more women.

According to Love, F3 provides online work experience placements particularly for female university students alongside a mentor and a corporate partner.

During their six-week program, the students are asked to solve a business problem, at the end of which they are asked to provide a solution.

Love added that she offers placements to students regardless of their HSC ATAR, choice of university or degree, or their performance in university courses.

“If students have put their hand up and self-selected to do work experience in financial services, they should get it regardless of any of the above,” she said.

Love said she is determined to debunk misconceptions of what finance is, and the skills required to succeed in it (including whether candidates are required to have a strong acumen in mathematics).

“There’s a maths component to it but at the end of the day it’s a people business. We have to show that it’s a collegiate, supportive industry, in which people can find purpose,” Love underscored.

“I’ve got a girl who came to me in year 10 for work experience. She then did a business degree and came back for work experience while at university. That’s a whole cycle.”

Noting that retention of female employees is also challenging in finance, Love urged businesses to introduce flexible workplace policies for women, particularly as women take career breaks to have families or assume other caring responsibilities.

“Workplaces must create an inclusive and authentic culture that enables women to reskill and be supported to re-enter the industry that they’ve had a history with,” she said.

“I recently talked to a female CEO of a family business. Her chief investment officer is a female and she’s got a number of females in her investment team. I told her that was possible because she’s a successful leader. She’s created the pipeline of people to follow her.”

She concluded: “Having that leadership piece is critical.”

To hear more from Camilla Love about the tools and support systems available to women in finance and how to increase representation across generations, come along to the Women in Finance Summit 2023.

It will be held on Friday 10 November 2023 at The Star Sydney.

Click here to buy tickets and don’t miss out!

For more information, including agenda and speakers, click here.
 

Read more about:

AUTHOR

Submitted by Rex Carey Whitford on Mon, 2023-09-11 09:44

Sounds like sexist, gender bias encouragement to me.

Recommended for you

sub-bgsidebar subscription

Never miss the latest news and developments in wealth management industry

MARKET INSIGHTS

GG

So shareholders lose a dividend plus have seen the erosion of value. Qantas decides to clawback remuneration from Alan ...

2 months 1 week ago
Denise Baker

This is why I left my last position. There was no interest in giving the client quality time, it was all about bumping ...

2 months 1 week ago
gonski

So the Hayne Royal Commission has left us with this. What a sad day for the financial planning industry. Clearly most ...

2 months 2 weeks ago

A Sydney-based financial adviser has been banned from providing financial services in the interest of consumer protection after failing to act on conduct concerns. ...

3 weeks 6 days ago

Insignia Financial has made four appointments, including three who have joined from TAL, to lead strategy and innovation in its retirement solutions for the MLC brand....

1 day 3 hours ago

ASIC has cancelled the AFSL of a $250 million Sydney fund manager, one of two AFSL cancellations announced by the corporate regulator....

3 weeks 4 days ago