| Best friend is a data scientist with a masters. She's had LOTS of job offers in the 200k range. Nearly every company needs stats. |
| There are lots of jobs for people with good stats skills in DC. I get contacted about jobs all the time. |
+1 data science is way hotter than stats right now |
He says yes. I'm a nurse so can't really vouch for him. He's all about studying. He puts in 12-hour days – nine hours before dinner plus three after we eat. I do believe all this studying is damaging to his creativity. I think he's narrow minded and has poor social skills. I hope this doesn't limit him in the job search. This is mostly what I'm worried about. He always has poor writing skills. English is not his native language. |
And there it is! Statistics is a subfield of mathematics. He doesn't sound like a good fit for the program anyway. |
What is the difference? |
Practically, very little. It's more about how you market yourself. Data science is all about being applied vs. theory, finding insights, presenting insights. Day-to-day you do more programming, finding the right datasets, and more presentations. It's a lot less academic, where you are expected to make recommendations regardless of how bad the data is - your job is to make do within the data and time constraints you're given. |
I think your intuition is right. Real life is not like academia. You have to get out there, practice selling yourself, and get to know the right people! It's not like someone will hand you a job based on how hard you studied. The poor writing skills / English are not ideal, but social skills are really really important. It's a change in mindset. (I'm saying this as nicely as possible as someone who came from academia.) |
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He should have his pick of jobs. If he's interested in anything tangentially related to finance, he could easily work at the Fed or with Capital One. CapOne has their "innovation laboratory" located in the Ballston area, it's all Big Data analysis and creating new products. My buddy got a great offer there, however he turned it down to remain in NYC.
But yeah, he should be golden. |
May I ask where she's getting these offers? I have a masters in statistics, and I program, and I may be looking for a job at some point. |
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Fannie/Freddie employ a lot of people with stats background. You don't need to be a a US citizen.
Also, a few people mentioned SAS. It appears to be a very marketable skill. If your DH doesn't already know it, I would highly recommend learning it. |
| I would think there are a lot of opportunities. I am in the field of health policy, and there are tons of "think tank" like places in DC as well as associations, nonprofits and corporations who want data. I currently work for a for profit company that has a research arm that pumps out white papers, infographics, issue briefs etc. and having someone who can crunch numbers and present data is hugely helpful. |
| I'm confused-if you are married, can't he become a citizen? |
He has a green card through marriage. We have to wait 2.5 years until we can apply for a US citizenship. |
education, data analyst, non profits. |