I agree with most of the above but at least it’s a half step above the soul deadening pursuits of corporate law and IB. Law by far the worst and definitely attracts a certain type |
This made me laugh because this is such an obscure Field. There are literally hundreds of different types of consulting. There are people that consult poop/sewage plants, the NRA, prison security, etc. |
Curious as to what type of person you think is attracted to a career in law. |
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Nope, that’s only if you want to do audit or tax. |
Data science, not data analytics. |
Yeah. It reminds me of that commercial with little kids dressed as adults saying things like “when I grow up I want to get to middle management”. I forget what it was for now. |
100% I was like wtf??? If you are consulting the President on foreign affairs, you are going to need to know that field. If you are consulting a company about its software system, you are going to know that system inside and out. If you are consulting about a security system or saving company electricity or budget, well…. So first question: consulting WHAT? |
Come on. |
^ there is usually something in front of the word “consultant”, e.g., my spouse is a software consultant. |
Business consultant?
Finance? IT? HR? What type? |
? You don’t just “do consulting“. You do tax consulting, legal consulting, organizational design consulting, systems design consulting, etc. and typically you don’t do that until you’ve had many years of experience. Who goes to college wanting to be a consultant? |
+1. There is no general consultant. Consultants specialize in a particular industry, typically. You can't have a passion for "consulting." Encourage your child to find a topic that is of interest to them and then pursue that interest from different angles. Your kid is interested in finance? Have her take accounting, math, economics, and monetary policy. Round it would with some fun classes in the history of economic systems, or comparative econ, and political science. |
+1 OP, your kid needs to narrow it down. There is no general "consulting" job. |
And you really can’t be a an effective consultant until you’ve had experience first, how can a 21-year-old consult a business on their practices when they have no business experience themselves? |