Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work in finance in a large corporation. We continue to have trouble filling analyst and manager level positions vs. past years. The prestige of the degree on the resumes matters much less now that applicants are scarce. At the same time I am saving every spare dollar for my kid’s’ education. Im starting to think with projected population declines, any state school degree is just fine. Thoughts?
How much are you paying? What do people think is a decent starting salary for an analyst?
When I recruited analysts at Smith UMD 6 years ago it was $80-$90k. Probably liw $100s now.
I think they just don't want to pay that and would rather claim there are no people to hire when they can offshore for much less.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work in finance in a large corporation. We continue to have trouble filling analyst and manager level positions vs. past years. The prestige of the degree on the resumes matters much less now that applicants are scarce. At the same time I am saving every spare dollar for my kid’s’ education. Im starting to think with projected population declines, any state school degree is just fine. Thoughts?
How much are you paying? What do people think is a decent starting salary for an analyst?
When I recruited analysts at Smith UMD 6 years ago it was $80-$90k. Probably liw $100s now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work in finance in a large corporation. We continue to have trouble filling analyst and manager level positions vs. past years. The prestige of the degree on the resumes matters much less now that applicants are scarce. At the same time I am saving every spare dollar for my kid’s’ education. Im starting to think with projected population declines, any state school degree is just fine. Thoughts?
So to sum up your post, you are compromising on the candidates because you can’t get the ones you want. And then you draw a conclusion that top schools are less valuable. But if you could get them to apply seems you would hire them.
Makes sense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work in finance in a large corporation. We continue to have trouble filling analyst and manager level positions vs. past years. The prestige of the degree on the resumes matters much less now that applicants are scarce. At the same time I am saving every spare dollar for my kid’s’ education. Im starting to think with projected population declines, any state school degree is just fine. Thoughts?
How much are you paying? What do people think is a decent starting salary for an analyst?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work in finance in a large corporation. We continue to have trouble filling analyst and manager level positions vs. past years. The prestige of the degree on the resumes matters much less now that applicants are scarce. At the same time I am saving every spare dollar for my kid’s’ education. Im starting to think with projected population declines, any state school degree is just fine. Thoughts?
So to sum up your post, you are compromising on the candidates because you can’t get the ones you want. And then you draw a conclusion that top schools are less valuable. But if you could get them to apply seems you would hire them.
Makes sense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work in finance in a large corporation. We continue to have trouble filling analyst and manager level positions vs. past years. The prestige of the degree on the resumes matters much less now that applicants are scarce. At the same time I am saving every spare dollar for my kid’s’ education. Im starting to think with projected population declines, any state school degree is just fine. Thoughts?
So to sum up your post, you are compromising on the candidates because you can’t get the ones you want. And then you draw a conclusion that top schools are less valuable. But if you could get them to apply seems you would hire them.
Makes sense.