Anonymous wrote:What would you suggest as a Business major area of study if not Marketing? My dd plans to pursue marketing as a freshman in Fall 19 but her focus shifted from Finance and HR to Marketing, not sure why.
Anonymous wrote:What would you suggest as a Business major area of study if not Marketing? My dd plans to pursue marketing as a freshman in Fall 19 but her focus shifted from Finance and HR to Marketing, not sure
I would think HR would be more valuable than marketing. The HR people in my federal agency cash in . And they employ tons of them. I see openings for HR people constantly.
Anonymous wrote:What would you suggest as a Business major area of study if not Marketing? My dd plans to pursue marketing as a freshman in Fall 19 but her focus shifted from Finance and HR to Marketing, not sure why.
Anonymous wrote:My daughter is a senior marketing major at Michigan. She just accepted a position with Apple’s merchandising department. Recruiters have been contacting her for awhile now.
If you go to a good school, it’s a great major.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a marketing executive for the past 15 years, I can tell you that you do NOT need to get an undergraduate marketing degree to work in the marketing field. An MBA is one thing....however a BA in marketing does NOT give you any more of a leg up than a BA in english or any other field. Pursue what you love, get involved in school, demonstrate leadership, and focus on building your writing skills. During summers, get an internship. In my experience, those are the keys. I'm sorry to offend, but I believe that marketing BAs are not worth the money and that your DCs would be much better off pursuing another area of study.
Ok, but what kind of internship would an English major get? In my experience, it's not easy for liberal arts majors to get business internships in college. People always say "it doesn't matter what you major in, just get experience" but how are liberal arts majors supposed to get experience?