Anonymous wrote:I was a math major, and one recruiter put it to me this way:
I can teach you the business that [the business major] knows, but I can't teach him the math that you know.
Anonymous wrote:Why would smart and ambitious student major in business? What even is that? It seems like a vocational degree or something you'd get an MBA for. Why not study economics? Math and concentrate on Finance. Communications. Math and Statistics. Psychology.
Only two Ivy schools offer this as a course of study for undergrads. Stanford does not, which I think says a lot. When I look at the courses these major take it just seems like a bunch of generic stuff and some fluff like marketing, other than one or two econ courses. Do companies really feel these graduates are prepared to contribute to their bottom line?
Anonymous wrote:Why would smart and ambitious student major in business? What even is that? It seems like a vocational degree or something you'd get an MBA for. Why not study economics? Math and concentrate on Finance. Communications. Math and Statistics. Psychology.
Only two Ivy schools offer this as a course of study for undergrads. Stanford does not, which I think says a lot. When I look at the courses these major take it just seems like a bunch of generic stuff and some fluff like marketing, other than one or two econ courses. Do companies really feel these graduates are prepared to contribute to their bottom line?
Anonymous wrote:I agree that general business, business admin, or management are worthless majors, but the vast majority of “business majors” are actually finance, accounting, supply chain, marketing, HR, info systems, etc majors.
It’s like engineering. Of course you can’t just major in “engineering.” You choose a specialty like civil or mechanical.
Anonymous wrote:I agree that general business, business admin, or management are worthless majors, but the vast majority of “business majors” are actually finance, accounting, supply chain, marketing, HR, info systems, etc majors.
It’s like engineering. Of course you can’t just major in “engineering.” You choose a specialty like civil or mechanical.
Anonymous wrote:Why would smart and ambitious student major in business? What even is that? It seems like a vocational degree or something you'd get an MBA for. Why not study economics? Math and concentrate on Finance. Communications. Math and Statistics. Psychology.
Only two Ivy schools offer this as a course of study for undergrads. Stanford does not, which I think says a lot. When I look at the courses these major take it just seems like a bunch of generic stuff and some fluff like marketing, other than one or two econ courses. Do companies really feel these graduates are prepared to contribute to their bottom line?