
Profile
Rob Torti ’07
Turnaround Consultant, AlixPartners LLC
Tell us about your career path.
Like every other former investment banker, I wanted to be in private equity. I pursued that but I learned it was a solitary job and that my real passion was for management, and that was something I was good at. After school, I took the summer off and traveled and then came back and looked for jobs at turnaround firms. I wish I could say that it was the result of having foresight, but realistically I liked the job description. The job entails a lot of finance, business analysis and strategy as well as some law; there is a huge management aspect where you get parachuted into a company and take a senior management role.
Looking back at your Columbia Business School experience, what was your aha! moment?
While I was in school my ideas changed dramatically. I took Turnaround Management with Gregory Rourke during the first semester of second year and that opened that whole world to me that I didn’t know that existed. I also took Professor Ralph Biggadike’s Top Management Process class. I really enjoyed the complexity of management, and I realized I had a passion for working with a lot of different people and solving complex problems.
In your industry, what trends are you watching and where is there opportunity?
I probably have a more doom-and-gloom view of the economy in the next two years than most. Having been an investment banker myself, I know that some of these companies just cannot survive. Given the distresses out there, I am looking at the end of 2010 for the economic recovery — and it won’t be a quick bounce back. If you see your company headed for a bad spell and think that bankruptcy will be a real possibility, rather than put everyone in bind at the eleventh hour, you need to get professional help. The bankruptcy process is not something to be feared; you have to embrace it. Don’t wait for a white dove to save you. There won’t be a huge turnaround.
What advice do you have for current or prospective MBA students?
Think of your career as a tree: move along the trunk and don’t jump to a branch too early. When you work for a distressed company, you are given more work and you learn so much more. If the company has a good management team and you are there to help them through the process and see the nuts and bolts at a unique time in their business, you will be successful. This climate allows you to learn at a magnified rate.
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