Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Big10 undergrad b schools will have solid programs.
Have her try to double major in finance so she can get a role at a top reit or alternative asset manager like Blackstone.
Great idea - she is way more business minded than me! 😄
But you said she doesn’t like math? Just FYI, real estate is a numbers field…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cornell hotel school.
Is hotel management major deal with real estate?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Big10 undergrad b schools will have solid programs.
Have her try to double major in finance so she can get a role at a top reit or alternative asset manager like Blackstone.
Great idea - she is way more business minded than me! 😄
Anonymous wrote:Cornell hotel school.
Anonymous wrote:https://www.clearadmit.com/2021/10/kellogg-to-expand-real-estate-curriculum-to-undergrads/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a female in CRE. It’s not as sexist as it used to be. I’d recommend a degree in finance if you are looking into CRE because it is numbers driven. Penn State has a good RE undergrad degree where people I’ve worded with have gone. CRE is interdisciplinary and people get into it from general business, banking, architecture, management, marketing and other areas including liberal arts.
Agree, from a female CRE attorney with 30 years of practice in the field.
Anonymous wrote:Big10 undergrad b schools will have solid programs.
Have her try to double major in finance so she can get a role at a top reit or alternative asset manager like Blackstone.
Anonymous wrote:I’m a female in CRE. It’s not as sexist as it used to be. I’d recommend a degree in finance if you are looking into CRE because it is numbers driven. Penn State has a good RE undergrad degree where people I’ve worded with have gone. CRE is interdisciplinary and people get into it from general business, banking, architecture, management, marketing and other areas including liberal arts.