Corporate finance jobs, out of favor for so long during the dot.com boom, might have begun looking a lot more attractive following the bust. But, alas, the "creative accounting" of Enron's Andy Fastow, WorldCom's Scott Sullivan and Tyco's Mark Swartz sullied the waters and, worse yet, led to the Sarbanes-Oxley era in which CFOs have to put their careers–and even their potential freedom–on the line every time they sign a financial report. "Graduates didn't see the potential in corporate finance jobs to be that appealing anymore," says Allen Geller, managing director of Raines International. "Private equity is now the way to go."

As the world turned, corporations failed to correct the spin. A new Deloitte Consulting LLP survey shows that companies have made a hash out of recruitment. "It's gotten much worse in the past five years because of a talent shortage coming out undergraduate schools and the negative hit of the scandals," says Sam Silvers, who leads Deloitte Consulting's Financial Transformation group. "The herd mentality gets people moving in a different direction," he says. "And we're not taking the right steps to get them back."

Indeed, a Deloitte survey of 636 finance executives from 73 countries says branding is key to attracting talent, even if 33% of the respondents took their own organizations to task for missing opportunities. "There are many ways they can turn this around–from renaming accounting and forecasting number-crunchers titles to 'cooler' ones like, say, business analyst," says Silvers.

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Silvers adds that one of the best ways to build loyal employees is to enroll them in corporate-sponsored training programs for recent grads. Classmates form affinity groups and remain close as they advance through the corporate finance hierarchy.

Qantas Airlines recommends this strategy. "We started a graduate program in finance to recruit young people directly out of college," says Qantas CFO Peter Gregg. "One of those graduates is now head of internal audit for the whole company, and she has done that in just seven or eight years."

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