Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have a higher probability of getting better professional "connections" on the golf course than attending an elite institution, if you are a good golfer with a college degree from a state school. I am sure a lot of "decision makers" in the DMV are members at Congressional, Riverbend, Chevy Chase, Westwood. If you hang out there long enough, you will get an opportunity. You only need ONE person to give you an opportunity out of 100.
Don't you have to be a member to "hang out" there? If you are a member, then does it really matter if you attend a state school?
Are you suggesting that you caddy so that the Judge puts you on his tournament team instead of Spaulding?
Not really. If you're a good golfer, you will get invited to play there as a member's guest. You work your way up from there. You can also get a job there and on your time off, you can practice on the driving range, if you are good and accurate with the driver and irons, people will find you. Do you know what people do when they play golf? They talk and drink socially, and that's where you make your impression because you directly have conversations with decision makers. As I've said before, you only need one person out of 100 to give you an opportunity to set you up for success. To me, that is a much higher probability than attending an elite college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:News Flash: Where you go to school does not matter, who you know matters.
DD plays soccer at UNC and gets several internships opportunities including one from Citadel. Her BFF is also on the team and the father is an EVP there.
Agreed, but within reason. UNC is still a top 30 school (and a top top place for women’s soccer). A Citadel EVP is not sending their kid to UNC Wilmington or probably any school outside of the top 100 (maybe top 50?).
You still have to go someplace where you are going to meet someone.
also you don't rely on getting lucky and meeting someone
If this was true, bars and nightclubs would be out of business.
Tinder is more effective
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:News Flash: Where you go to school does not matter, who you know matters.
DD plays soccer at UNC and gets several internships opportunities including one from Citadel. Her BFF is also on the team and the father is an EVP there.
Agreed, but within reason. UNC is still a top 30 school (and a top top place for women’s soccer). A Citadel EVP is not sending their kid to UNC Wilmington or probably any school outside of the top 100 (maybe top 50?).
You still have to go someplace where you are going to meet someone.
also you don't rely on getting lucky and meeting someone
If this was true, bars and nightclubs would be out of business.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If a kid who really wants to be those things but didn't get the grades AT AGE 16 that they needed to get to one of the colleges you are saying 'matters', they absolutely can turn it around at whatever college they go to and make it happen.
I banking starting out at a second of third tier college requires a lot of nepotism or luck.
Anonymous wrote:I can’t think of a single person, old or young, who got their job from an on campus recruiter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:a campus recruiter is like a multi level marketing person, they are looking for people to do crap work and hope they stay but few ever stay at their first job very long
Eh well that's everyone's first job experience regardless of whether they are recruited on campus or not.
exactly my point, if everyone's first job is like that, it doesn't matter where you go to school.
Eh?
Anonymous wrote:All anyone has to do is a simple search on LinkedIn to see how ridiculous OP's statement is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If a kid who really wants to be those things but didn't get the grades AT AGE 16 that they needed to get to one of the colleges you are saying 'matters', they absolutely can turn it around at whatever college they go to and make it happen.
I banking starting out at a second of third tier college requires a lot of nepotism or luck.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you go to grad school (law, medicine, PhD), your undergrad probably doesn't matter. At least, I don't care to argue with all of the "I went to a dinky no-name school and then Hopkins med school and I turned out fine!" posters here.
But for everyone else, the name of the game is on-campus recruiting.
Many of us are too old to really understand the importance of OCR; in my day it was fairly optional unless you are going into certain fields like i-banking or consulting.
But now it is much more important; jobs that are offered through OCR simply aren't offered to the general public or even to students outside of a small number of chosen schools.
Tech firm A may recruit at both School X and School Y, but the School X positions may be core engineering positions while the School Y ones are support positions at a regional office.
OCR is important in tech, finance, management consulting and other fields. See this (highly critical) HBR article for how it works: https://hbr.org/2015/10/firms-are-wasting-mil...-only-a-few-campuses
Yes, where you go to school absolutely does matter if you're not going to be a doctor, lawyer or professor - the vast majority of kids; including the vast majority of those who intend to be doctors, lawyers or professors (those fields have a nasty cut).
Oh My Goodness.
I'm being called out!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:a campus recruiter is like a multi level marketing person, they are looking for people to do crap work and hope they stay but few ever stay at their first job very long
Eh well that's everyone's first job experience regardless of whether they are recruited on campus or not.
Anonymous wrote:If you go to grad school (law, medicine, PhD), your undergrad probably doesn't matter. At least, I don't care to argue with all of the "I went to a dinky no-name school and then Hopkins med school and I turned out fine!" posters here.
But for everyone else, the name of the game is on-campus recruiting.
Many of us are too old to really understand the importance of OCR; in my day it was fairly optional unless you are going into certain fields like i-banking or consulting.
But now it is much more important; jobs that are offered through OCR simply aren't offered to the general public or even to students outside of a small number of chosen schools.
Tech firm A may recruit at both School X and School Y, but the School X positions may be core engineering positions while the School Y ones are support positions at a regional office.
OCR is important in tech, finance, management consulting and other fields. See this (highly critical) HBR article for how it works: https://hbr.org/2015/10/firms-are-wasting-mil...-only-a-few-campuses
Yes, where you go to school absolutely does matter if you're not going to be a doctor, lawyer or professor - the vast majority of kids; including the vast majority of those who intend to be doctors, lawyers or professors (those fields have a nasty cut).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have a higher probability of getting better professional "connections" on the golf course than attending an elite institution, if you are a good golfer with a college degree from a state school. I am sure a lot of "decision makers" in the DMV are members at Congressional, Riverbend, Chevy Chase, Westwood. If you hang out there long enough, you will get an opportunity. You only need ONE person to give you an opportunity out of 100.
Don't you have to be a member to "hang out" there? If you are a member, then does it really matter if you attend a state school?
Are you suggesting that you caddy so that the Judge puts you on his tournament team instead of Spaulding?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:News Flash: Where you go to school does not matter, who you know matters.
DD plays soccer at UNC and gets several internships opportunities including one from Citadel. Her BFF is also on the team and the father is an EVP there.
Agreed, but within reason. UNC is still a top 30 school (and a top top place for women’s soccer). A Citadel EVP is not sending their kid to UNC Wilmington or probably any school outside of the top 100 (maybe top 50?).
You still have to go someplace where you are going to meet someone.
also you don't rely on getting lucky and meeting someone