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Have the PAP government checked whether local graduates were given the opportunities in the first place?
Or do the HR (from CECA country) prefer to hire from their home country, home town, alma mater, home village?
Ms Michelle Tee has been the bank's application developer tech lead since July.PHOTO: CITI SINGAPORE
Prisca Ang
Nov 2, 2021
SINGAPORE - Computer engineering major Michelle Tee knew little about banking when she joined Citi Singapore fresh out of university in 2016 under a technology analyst programme.
But her leap of faith paid off as she picked up key concepts along the way and was eventually promoted several times to manage her own team at the age of 28 - after just five years of working there.
Ms Tee heard about the programme at a career fair while she was studying at the National University of Singapore.
"I learnt that the technology analysts go through a period of intensive training during the orientation before being assigned to their roles in Citi. This gave me the confidence that I would be able to adapt well to the job," she said.
She also familiarised herself with technologies used within the bank, and developed soft skills like networking and presentation, during the two-year programme.
The bank takes in about 150 young people for its full-time analyst and summer analyst programmes every year. Most of the analyst hires are Singaporeans from local universities, it said.
Ms Tee has been the bank's application developer tech lead since July. Her team automates the end-to-end foreign exchange trading flow, from when a client is interested in getting a price to when the trade is settled in their account.
"We regularly connect with our product team... We then proceed to analyse the work required before we even get around to building and rolling it out," she said.
Technology is interesting because it is like magic, said Ms Tee, who also hopes to develop her skills in cloud adoption and building micro-services.
"You can build anything from lines of code. Technology in banking is even more interesting because we are using technology to enable people in their daily lives."
Or do the HR (from CECA country) prefer to hire from their home country, home town, alma mater, home village?
At 28, computer engineer manages her own team in Singapore bank
Ms Michelle Tee has been the bank's application developer tech lead since July.PHOTO: CITI SINGAPORE
Prisca Ang
Nov 2, 2021
SINGAPORE - Computer engineering major Michelle Tee knew little about banking when she joined Citi Singapore fresh out of university in 2016 under a technology analyst programme.
But her leap of faith paid off as she picked up key concepts along the way and was eventually promoted several times to manage her own team at the age of 28 - after just five years of working there.
Ms Tee heard about the programme at a career fair while she was studying at the National University of Singapore.
"I learnt that the technology analysts go through a period of intensive training during the orientation before being assigned to their roles in Citi. This gave me the confidence that I would be able to adapt well to the job," she said.
She also familiarised herself with technologies used within the bank, and developed soft skills like networking and presentation, during the two-year programme.
The bank takes in about 150 young people for its full-time analyst and summer analyst programmes every year. Most of the analyst hires are Singaporeans from local universities, it said.
Ms Tee has been the bank's application developer tech lead since July. Her team automates the end-to-end foreign exchange trading flow, from when a client is interested in getting a price to when the trade is settled in their account.
"We regularly connect with our product team... We then proceed to analyse the work required before we even get around to building and rolling it out," she said.
Technology is interesting because it is like magic, said Ms Tee, who also hopes to develop her skills in cloud adoption and building micro-services.
"You can build anything from lines of code. Technology in banking is even more interesting because we are using technology to enable people in their daily lives."