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Why I work for America’s Most Convenient Bank

TD Commerce Bank I have been seeking my dare-to-be great situation since I decided to leave a two-hundred (200) employee community bank last year in search of the Manhattan financial dream. It was promising; I had lined up four (4) interviews with international banks of varying size. The positions ranged from corporate finance, specialty financial vehicles, and shipping finance. But I failed to land a position after poor follow through demonstrated inexperience on my behalf. In hindsight it was for the best, because I was in a financial position which would make transitioning to a New York City resident difficult. I set out again to find a new position, expanding my search to Chicago, Atlanta, and any other city that would have me. I called in all of my connections including family, past companies that I had interviewed with, and my credit training instructor. I lined myself up with a barrage of interviews many of which were similar to my last position.

Headstrong not to make a horizontal move, I trudged on looking for the right opportunity. It came from Lisa Hall, a Human Resources recruiter for Commerce Bank who spoke with me for twenty-five (25) minutes on the phone, immediately following an unsuccessful interview. I went through a rigorous yet expedient interview process including a one (1) hour face-to-face interview with Lisa Hall, a three (3) hour interview with my soon-to-be manager Jim Nixon, and a quick meeting with his boss Roger Bomgardner. Even with Bank of America in New York City and Merrill Lynch in Chicago knocking on my door, I chose Commerce Bank because they made their decision to hire me within two (2) weeks of first contact.

Over the past year I have learned the importance of detail-oriented underwriting, seeing potential deals in the eyes of a risk manager, a salesman, and a customer, and how hard you must work when you are in a larger pond of employees. On Monday, my company Commerce Bank was acquired by TD Banknorth, a subsidiary of TD Bank Financial Group. For me and my colleagues, this is a tumultuous time because we must expediently adapt to new policies from a multinational corporation that avoided sub-prime mortgage exposure and enjoys helping the environment. With unemployment at 5.1% and growing, I am up for the challenge and feel fortunate to be working for a company in a position to weather this economic uncertainty.


Posted on April 6th, 2008 | By: David Litsky | Filed under Banking, General Business, Philadelphia


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