About this deal
She is extremely shallow, hates/competes with other women, and is constantly criticizing her looks and does not believe that she is competent enough to be in business school when clearly, they accepted her. I think it is because Elle dressed to perfection and walked really fast and that is how I see Layla. As the rivalry between the two alpha males intensifies, and Shaw’s seductive moves reach a whole new level of heat, Cassidy has to make a choice. He has a personal dilemma (or dilemna as I was originally taught)in that he left his girlfriend behind in Canada and he is very attracted to Kimmie. I should read it again because it deals with these people in business school and all their experiences.
Monkey Business (267 books) - Goodreads Monkey Business (267 books) - Goodreads
With a combined experience of business, retail development and sales expertise our team are well equipped to handle your sale from start to finish without any Monkey Business.
DLJ was going to attempt to sell GWA's equity to their best institutional accounts based on my assertions that the deal was a good one. This is a fun read and provides a lot of insight about what it feels like to be in the IB rat race, but offers little useful information on the business, and completely omits the benefits of working in banking.
Monkey Business - Wall Street Reading List
A careful reading of the section will tell you where the hell all the money from the offering is going. Sarah also co-edited two bestselling charity collections (Girls' Night In and Girls' Night Out), and has contributed to various anthologies (American Girls About Town, Sixteen: Stories About That Sweet and Bitter Birthday, 21 Proms, First Kiss (Then Tell), Fireworks, and Vacations from Hell). They speak of countless people who have moved up the ranks at DLJ who just had all the money in the world, but so little personal happiness and lives that were an utter mess who they never wanted to be like. What many of the bankers don't grasp, though, is the tenuous nature of available information sources continues to proliferate, and access to that information becomes less proprietary, the bankers' ability to extract excess fees from the information will inevitably dissipate.
Written by John Rolfe and Peter Troob, it provides an inside look into the fast-paced, intellectually challenging and at times glamorous, but also often frustrating, world of Wall Street's firms. het is geen serieus boek, geen roman, misschien een chicklit of eerder een erg lang stationrommanetje,.