Anonymous wrote:Business majors may get ok jobs out of school but have foregone the opportunity to develop the analytical thinking skills that other, more critically focused, courses foster--which leads to worse career options down the road. Non-business majors (in English, Philosophy, Anthropology--just about anything) are favored for higher level business jobs for just this reason.
Anonymous wrote:Business majors may get ok jobs out of school but have foregone the opportunity to develop the analytical thinking skills that other, more critically focused, courses foster--which leads to worse career options down the road. Non-business majors (in English, Philosophy, Anthropology--just about anything) are favored for higher level business jobs for just this reason.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's a dead end major for mediocre students.
Mediocre students, maybe. But in the real world post-college, those mediocre students with life and people skills usually out earn and outperform the Econ/engineering/philosophy summa and magma nerds, who end up working for the mediocre students. Look it up.
It's your assertion. What are your sources for it?
+1
The world of HF/VC/PE does not include undergrad business majors from mid-tier colleges.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many good schools don’t even have undergrad business degrees.
THis is how you know it's good school, even.
It’s 2025. Wake up.
I think it's interesting seeing middle aged people really stuck in their own college experience and opinions, despite having college kids now. The landscape today is different in every way, in terms of college choices and options, college costs, major choices...Kids are worried about employment, col, skills, in ways our generation did not have to be. This is true for all but very wealthy people or those who already are planning on grad school. Others want to be practical, and have to be.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many good schools don’t even have undergrad business degrees.
THis is how you know it's good school, even.
It’s 2025. Wake up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many good schools don’t even have undergrad business degrees.
THis is how you know it's good school, even.
It’s 2025. Wake up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many good schools don’t even have undergrad business degrees.
THis is how you know it's good school, even.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many good schools don’t even have undergrad business degrees.
THis is how you know it's good school, even.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many good schools don’t even have undergrad business degrees.
This. Think about that.
Anonymous wrote:I get a lot of recruiters sending me emails with "Education: BA required (preferably in business) or equivalent experience".
I work in the tech space as a BSA and PM, making six figures. I've done pretty well for myself with just a business undergrad degree from no name state u.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's a dead end major for mediocre students.
Mediocre students, maybe. But in the real world post-college, those mediocre students with life and people skills usually out earn and outperform the Econ/engineering/philosophy summa and magma nerds, who end up working for the mediocre students. Look it up.
It's your assertion. What are your sources for it?
Anonymous wrote:Many good schools don’t even have undergrad business degrees.