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The rising stars of headhunting everyone on Wall Street should get to know

Hilary Wilson, 26, Amity Search Partners

The rising stars of headhunting everyone on Wall Street should get to know

Joshua Fitzgerald, 27, GQR

Joshua Fitzgerald, 27, GQR

Joshua Fitzgerald, 27, a vice president at New York-based GQR, focuses on placing tech talent at Wall Street's largest banks and trading firms.

The Brunel University graduate spent the majority of his upbringing in the UK and is a fervent soccer fan. Fitzgerald got his start at BAH Partners, a headhunting firm in Hong Kong, where he focused on technology. He joined GQR in 2015.

Fitzgerald started off working in systematic and electronic trading but has shifted to front-office technologies. He has placed more than 100 senior executives in the financial-services industry.

Alexandra Dean, 28, Goldsmith and Co.

Alexandra Dean, 28, Goldsmith and Co.

Alexandra Dean, 28, has worked in asset-management recruiting for New York-based Goldsmith and Co. since graduating from the University of Pennsylvania in 2010.

Dean joined as one of the first employees of the boutique search firm, and she primarily focuses on hiring investors, particularly direct investors in the public and private-equity worlds, as well as allocators — on behalf of endowments, family offices, and foundations. Dean has worked on searches for capital raisers, relationship managers, and C-level executives.

An investor who was placed by Dean touted her many connections within the elusive family-office space in particular, saying Dean’s vision was instrumental in landing this investor their current role.

Charlie Anderson, Heidrick and Struggles, 29

Charlie Anderson, Heidrick and Struggles, 29

Charlie Anderson didn’t jump straight into headhunting after graduating from Lehigh University in 2010. He’d studied business and marketing, and he was attracted to Wall Street, so he took a position in analytics focusing on equities at Bloomberg.

He was promoted to sales and, in 2013, after a couple of years as an account manager for Bloomberg core terminal clients in the tristate area, he jumped at the opportunity to take on a more strategic and consultative challenge, landing a job in executive search at Heidrick and Struggles as an associate. He was promoted to engagement manager at the beginning of 2016, and also served as the associate director for the firm’s financial-services practices in the Americas in 2016-17.

Anderson focuses on placing senior investment-banking professionals — think managing directors and group heads — in addition to filling some broader corporate strategy, development, and chief-officer roles, managing 10 to 20 searches at any time.

Amy O'Halloran, 31, Wall Street Options

Amy O

Amy O'Halloran, a recruiting director at Wall Street Options, joined the headhunting business in 2013 after working for Douglas Elliman as a real-estate broker for four years.

In a sense, her career didn't change that drastically. She just swapped million-dollar listings for million-dollar talent.

The 31-year-old spends much of her time filling C-Suite positions at bulge-bracket banks and private-equity firms. The Bucknell graduate works out of her office in New York but also places talent in Florida. She isn't afraid to get granular when researching leads and leveraging social media to connect with placements. It's paid off as she has placed more than 100 senior executives.

Dan Lennon, 32, McTammany Partners

Dan Lennon, 32, McTammany Partners

Dan Lennon, 32, of McTammany Partners, focuses on placing investors with fundamental strategies, predominantly at long-short equity hedge funds. He also advises investment startups on growing their businesses and has worked with top-tier funds, long-only funds, seeding platforms, family offices, and separately managed account platforms.

His recruits have experience ranging from two to 15 years, including analysts and portfolio managers.

Lennon, who is based in San Francisco and also works from New York, graduated in 2007 from Boston College, where he played football. He taught math and worked as a dean at a public school in the Bronx for four years with Teach for America before moving into recruiting.

Kate Meserve Shahrestani, 32, Athena Search Partners

Kate Meserve Shahrestani, 32, Athena Search Partners

Kate Meserve Shahrestani, 32, launched her boutique recruitment firm, Athena Search Partners, in 2015.

She recruits across financial services with a focus on hedge funds, and particularly investment professionals. Based in Dallas and New York, she works with clients across the US.

Shahrestani’s business is young but has already garnered several fans. One investor who worked with Shahrestani touted her advice: "What I found incredibly refreshing was that Kate genuinely cared about my career goals — it wasn't just about the next seat, but what style and structure made sense over the long run. To this day I seek Kate's opinion on my career questions."

Another said that Shahrestani stood out for her attention to detail: "She would get on the phone with me (sometimes hours at a time) before every round of an interview and help walk me through the types of questions they asked and what they looked for in an ideal candidate."

Shahrestani got her start on Wall Street in institutional equity sales at Credit Suisse. She later worked at SAC Capital, where she worked in talent recruitment, and was director of business development and marketing at UBS O’Connor. She graduated from Yale in 2007 with a degree in American history.

Megan Henze, 34, Ratio Advisors

Megan Henze, 34, Ratio Advisors

Megan Henze has been in the headhunting business since graduating in 2005 from Williams College, where she studied art history and played on the varsity squash team. She started out at SG Partners before leaving in 2009 for Amity Search Partners, one of the top recruiting firms for private equity and hedge funds. She spent two of her eight years there building out the firm’s San Francisco office and reached the rank of principal.

Last year, Henze and three other Amity veterans split off and founded new recruiting boutique Ratio Advisors, a team of seven that also focuses on placing top young Wall Street talent at a wide range of asset managers. Henze, a partner, focuses her efforts on pre-MBA and post-MBA candidates.

Jennifer Zagoren, 34, Dynamics Search Partners

Jennifer Zagoren, 34, Dynamics Search Partners

Jennifer Zagoren spends much of her time attracting new financial-services clients, and then making phone calls and grabbing coffee with Wall Street’s most promising fresh talent to help place them at those companies. Traditionally, that’s meant hiring for coveted spots at private-equity firms and hedge funds, but, consistent with industry trends, more and more young financiers are gravitating toward the tech industry, as well as family offices and endowments.

Finance and headhunting wasn’t the original plan, though. A lifelong opera singer, Zagoren studied singing and medicine as an undergrad at the University of Iowa. But she pursued neither after college, going on to complete a master’s in public administration at Drake University before joining Dynamics Search Partners in 2007. She’s now been with the firm for a decade.

Ben Beardslee, 35, The Hagan-Ricci Group

Ben Beardslee, 35, The Hagan-Ricci Group

Ben Beardslee, a senior recruiter at The Hagan-Ricci Group, joined the headhunting world soon after graduating Ithaca College in 2004.

The 35-year-old started at the firm in 2006 and has helped placed top talent at leading proprietary and high-frequency-trading firms across the world in the US, Hong Kong, Singapore, and London.

He has placed more than 10 people in C-Suite positions, including Kirsten Wegner, the CEO of trade group Modern Markets Initiative.

Wegner described Beardslee to Business Insider as a "super-nice guy. I was probably the first DC-policy wonk he worked with."

Beardslee's sweet spot is in filling senior portfolio-management and quantitative-research positions.

David McCormack, 39, DMC Partners

David McCormack, 39, DMC Partners

David McCormack, 39, founded New York-based firm DMC Partners in 2015 and fintech search firm Broadhaven Associates in 2017. He focuses on hiring for banks, broker dealers, and hedge funds, building teams and acquisitions for the buy and sell sides.

At hedge funds, McCormack focuses on C-level executives and portfolio managers for a range of strategies: long-short equity, quant, volatility, and event-driven strategies.

At banks and broker dealers, he does searches ranging from global heads to vice presidents within cash, derivatives and prime brokerage across research, sales and trading, including electronic trading.

McCormack, an Irish native, started his career as an institutional equity sales trader at Merrill Lynch in London.

Liz Simpson, Heidrick and Struggles, 39

Liz Simpson, Heidrick and Struggles, 39

Before Liz Simpson made a living headhunting executives for banks, she was a rising star in banking herself. Simpson jumped into investment banking after graduating from college in 2000, joining Salomon Smith Barney, which later dropped its name and adopted that of its parent company, Citigroup.

She worked in corporate finance within industry groups as well as in strategy and management positions, rising to the business manager role in the technology, media, and telecom group before leaving in May 2008, amid the early stages of the unfolding financial crisis.

For her second act, Simpson joined Heidrick and Struggles, focusing on recruiting chief financial officers and other senior financial-services professionals, hiring for everything from private-equity shops and hedge funds to real estate, fintech, and insurance companies.

Simpson was named a partner in 2015 year and is head of the financial-services practice in New York.


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