Anonymous wrote:I'm in marketing. A degree in marketing is a waste; study an area of interest like English, art, psychology, anthropology and build knowledge/skills that can be used in marketing. Then get an entry level job in marketing. I can't remember the last time I hired someone with a marketing degree; the best candidates come from liberal arts fields where they have built strong foundations in writing, design, research, etc.
Anonymous wrote:How about undergrad in business with marketing concentration? That way you still get the finance, accounting, ops management credits in.
Anonymous wrote:Career marketer here who owns an agency, I unofficially forbid my own kids to major in marketing. In interviewing marketing majors they are often lacking the skills / software / tools that we actually use day to day, so I think there is a disconnect between what is being taught in the schools vs. what we as employers actually need.
We always need: analytics people (huge growth here), content creators - people to create cross-channel content (writing, graphics, video production, video editing), and people who can actually write code from scratch. Not necessarily CS, but coding skills in relevant languages are important in marketing.
Anonymous wrote:https://poetsandquantsforundergrads.com/news/best-undergraduate-business-schools-of-2024/6/
Combine this with overall ranking by USN&WR, etc. You can get some ideas.
Like you said, avoid marketing major.
Get into (data / business) analytics type majors under business schools.
You can add some marketing classes as electives.
Anonymous wrote:I'm in marketing. A degree in marketing is a waste; study an area of interest like English, art, psychology, anthropology and build knowledge/skills that can be used in marketing. Then get an entry level job in marketing. I can't remember the last time I hired someone with a marketing degree; the best candidates come from liberal arts fields where they have built strong foundations in writing, design, research, etc.