Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, it is such a growing field! Businesses, nonprofits and government organizations are increasingly reliant on the effective use of data, and anyone who can present it in a way that is understandable to stakeholders, customers, etc. is in very high demand. Add in the business foundation- you are gold.
This is what statistics, applied math, physics, and CS majors have been doing forever. Unfortunately business analytics and sometimes data analytics is just a very watered down version of this more foundational majors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, it is such a growing field! Businesses, nonprofits and government organizations are increasingly reliant on the effective use of data, and anyone who can present it in a way that is understandable to stakeholders, customers, etc. is in very high demand. Add in the business foundation- you are gold.
This is what statistics, applied math, physics, and CS majors have been doing forever. Unfortunately business analytics and sometimes data analytics is just a very watered down version of this more foundational majors.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, it is such a growing field! Businesses, nonprofits and government organizations are increasingly reliant on the effective use of data, and anyone who can present it in a way that is understandable to stakeholders, customers, etc. is in very high demand. Add in the business foundation- you are gold.
Anonymous wrote:A lot of kids that major in this end up becoming glorified software installers or consultants who do very basic IT consulting. They learn some of the easier programming techniques like Python, how to run some basic regressions using datasets, etc. At the end of the day there isn't a huge demand in the business world for 50,000 B.S. grads to come out and run regressions on random datasets. The placement rate in business analytics is probably slightly lower than finance, definitely lower than accounting where 100% of students pretty much place at Big 4 (if you're at a top 100 university), but slightly better than soft fields like marketing or general management. It's not a bad options but it's not great either.
Anonymous wrote:Is a bachelors in business analytics worth it? DD is considering this route and we’re willing to help out with a masters degree if need be