There are lots of parallels between Lagos and London. First off, the 2 cities are each the monetary capitals of their nations and, as such, are a potpourri of various cultures. In current instances, one other similarity between the 2 cities has been the inhabitants. Nigerian immigrants are the second most-populous group in London, behind solely Indians. By June 2022, near 66,000 Nigerians had been issued pupil visas to the UK, representing a +686% improve from the 8,000 visas issued in 2019. Throughout the identical interval, work visas noticed a 303% increase.
For this version of Digital Nomads, TechCabal spoke to 2 former electrical engineering college students from the College of Lagos who discovered jobs in London instantly after graduating from college. They reveal how they each managed to get jobs at Goldman Sachs after their summer season internships the earlier yr, how a lot they earn, and their total expertise.
TC: What was the applying course of for the internship like?
Ezra*: The primary time I heard about Goldman Sachs was in 2017 when somebody in a category above me bought an internship. I used to be as a result of they took them to London. I’ve been making use of since 2018 however didn’t get in till final yr. I believe that I didn’t get in due to a data hole and my little technical depth.
Final yr, my preparation paid off as a result of I began transferring with teams of candidates for the internship. I spent a whole lot of time in 2020 studying algorithms and making use of to different worldwide corporations like Google, Fb, and Bloomberg. In my view, this all helped me to know the right way to put together for interviews. It took a whole lot of persistence and perseverance, nevertheless it paid off ultimately.
Temi*: By the point I realized the right way to code throughout the lockdown, I already knew every thing there was to know concerning the Goldman Sachs internship programme and had made up my thoughts to use. I knew three those who bought the internship in my division, so I knew that it was potential to get in.
The primary particular person I knew that bought the internship bought it in 2018, and everybody knew he was probably the most clever particular person in his class. The second particular person I knew was probably the most clever particular person in my class, so on the time, it felt like the chance was reserved for the neatest guys and was not inside my attain. The third particular person I knew that bought it was not probably the most clever man in my class. That was once I figured it was inside my attain.
The lockdown gave me the privilege of time, and I used that point to be taught Python, then determined that my finest path to the internship was via frontend improvement, so I learnt React and JavaScript. I additionally knew that I would want to be taught information construction and algorithm fundamentals, so I learn books day-after-day throughout the lockdown. In any case this, I constructed a portfolio and utilized and bought the internship.
What was your expertise like transitioning from being a pupil at Unilag to working in London?
Ezra: First off, I believe that the anticipation and the moments previous to leaving Lagos and dealing at Goldman outweigh the precise expertise. Folks make it seem to be you’re in heaven, however after some time, heaven feels fairly regular.
I really like working at Goldman as a result of it seems like I’m lastly residing my dream. I at all times felt so proud to take an image of the workplace day-after-day earlier than I swiped in. I had labored in direction of this for years, however at one level, I wished to return again to Lagos. There have been a whole lot of cultural variations, and I missed my pals more often than not.
Temi: For me, it’s been good. Fortunately for me, I share an condo with two of my pals from Unilag, and I’ve a whole lot of household right here in London, so I don’t really feel too homesick. There’s an enormous japa* wave that has introduced lots of people from Unilag to London, so I additionally get to satisfy a whole lot of acquainted faces.
It has additionally been good to have my very own cash. Earlier than I bought a job, I used to suppose that folks that purchased the most recent iPhones have been losing cash, however now that I can afford it, I pre-ordered the most recent mannequin.
I additionally like the truth that my crew is multicultural. This has given me extra context for what is occurring worldwide and made me extra of a world citizen. My crew members right here in London are primarily British, however we even have branches in New York and India, and I at all times look ahead to the each day conferences we’ve got.
TC: What has been your greatest problem?
Ezra: I had a whole lot of nervousness throughout the affirmation interval. My supervisor did his finest to calm my nerves by assuring me that I used to be among the finest interns that had labored at Goldman, however the stress was lots. It felt like at each level you have been being watched, and I didn’t know what the decision was. Fortunately for me, I had lots of people that had gone via this stage and have been prepared to assist out.
There have been a whole lot of Unilag individuals, and I don’t suppose you possibly can recognize that till you get to the London workplace. Proper now, Nigeria is synonymous with Unilag in London. More often than not, once I informed individuals I used to be from Nigeria, they mechanically assumed that I used to be from Unilag. I believe this may be attributed to how, again in college, the applying interval felt like a gaggle challenge. Everybody helped one another, and now in London, when you point out that you just’re from Unilag, everybody assumes you’re sensible!
TC: Inform me concerning the monetary side
Ezra: I believe it type of balances itself out. Initially, once I bought to London, I used to be shocked by how a lot I used to be spending on meals, however then I realised that I used to be incomes tens of millions of naira, so it didn’t damage too badly. The Nigerian in me nonetheless converts my bills to naira, and I’m shocked on a regular basis. The costs in London can initially catch you off guard. I bear in mind the primary time I purchased meals from the cafeteria, and it value £30. That was the final time I didn’t eat from dwelling.
I bought paid twice throughout my 10-week internship. They paid me after the primary six weeks and once more after the final 4 weeks. My first cost was virtually £6,000, and the second cost was £3,000. You additionally get £1,000 in tax reduction and a few bonuses, which makes the whole quantity over £9,000 after taxes. The corporate additionally pays in your flight and your transport fare from the airport.
I haven’t resumed full-time but, however my complete yearly compensation as an analyst is about £80,000 earlier than taxes, with a relocation allowance of £7,000.
Temi: After my internship, I had about £4,000 or £5,000 in my account. In London, I spent about £3,000 on lease alone and over £1,000 on meals; and I spent cash on purchasing for presents for my household and pals. As a full-time workers member, my month-to-month wage is about £3,330 post-tax.
My present lease is sort of £1,000, and I ship about £300 to my household in Lagos each month. I’m presently constructing my wardrobe, so I spend about £300 on garments. My month-to-month finances for meals, groceries, and transportation is £300–£400, however I at all times exceed the quantity. I additionally attempt to save £1,000 a month in direction of my mortgage.
TC: What are your plans for the long run?
Ezra: For now, I’m not inquisitive about searching for one other job at one other tech firm. I like working at Goldman Sachs due to the tradition and since I get to work within the finance sector. I hope I get to work right here for a very long time in order that I can enhance my expertise.
Temi: I plan to go away London as a result of the tax charges listed below are too excessive. The extra you earn, the extra your tax will increase. I’m simply ready until I get my citizenship, after which I’ll relocate. I’d transfer again to Nigeria or Canada. I’ve not but determined; I’m ready until I attain that bridge.
Names have been modified for confidentiality causes.
Japa: a Nigerian slang which means to relocate overseas
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