I work for a network of hospitals and physicians. We basically take care of all of their "finance" needs. Within my organization, the group I work in focuses on doing collective negotiating with insurance companies. The financial arrangement behind these deals can be quite complicated, so there is a lot of modeling that needs to be done during the negotiations cycle. There are also incentives built into the contracts that involve clinical performance goals, so some of our work involves looking at historical clinical data and making projections. For instance, if Insurance Company X offers discounted rates provided we can lower our high cost radiology treatments by a certain percentage, my group needs to analyze radiology data to see what a realistic goal might be.
Once the contracts are done, then they need to be implemented, and there are other functions that need to be tended to, such as projecting each hospital's exposure under the agreements, and providing them with these financial projections so they can properly account for these exposures in their financials.
A typical day involves maybe three meetings, usually don't have to go off-site, although I do have a couple of those meetings a week. The rest of the time is spent doing analytical work around the things I mentioned above. Generally work 40-50 hours a week, although every few months I'll have a busy week that's closer to 60.
The heirarchy goes like this: analyst, senior analyst, manager, director, VP, CFO. I imagine this is pretty similar to most corporate or "industry" finance organizations.
I think someone coming out of b-school could start out as a senior analyst or manager making 90-120K depending on their previous experience. I think a director level position is probably more like 140-200K, which could probably be attained maybe four or five years after graduating b-school. I think managers and directors work around 50-60 hours.
Not super-lucrative like most industries people are interested in on these boards, but the hours are pretty good. Something I'm thinking about if I decide MC isn't my thing.