Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DCUM hates business degrees.
I got a business degree and it served me well. I've used what I learned in my finance classes and accounting classes for decades. These classes helped me in my real world jobs and also in my personal investing.
I was in econ classes with the econ majors. Honestly I thought the econ classes were kind of theoretical b.s.
PP with Econ major daughter - she agrees 100%. I cannot fathom how anyone could argue that financial management classes, accounting, marketing, strategy, sales etc. are not valuable in any business or line of work. I would also argue that interpersonal skills are becoming rarer and rarer as the years pass. Business students get a lot of practice in developing relationships, also key in life and work.
We have CS / engineering majors coming out of our eyeballs who simply cannot have an effective in-person conversation, advocate for themselves, or make a simple phone call. Soft skills are highly undervalued on this board.
engineering majors at my kid’s uni do a large number of projects with presentations - it reminds me of my mba days
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DCUM hates business degrees.
I got a business degree and it served me well. I've used what I learned in my finance classes and accounting classes for decades. These classes helped me in my real world jobs and also in my personal investing.
I was in econ classes with the econ majors. Honestly I thought the econ classes were kind of theoretical b.s.
PP with Econ major daughter - she agrees 100%. I cannot fathom how anyone could argue that financial management classes, accounting, marketing, strategy, sales etc. are not valuable in any business or line of work. I would also argue that interpersonal skills are becoming rarer and rarer as the years pass. Business students get a lot of practice in developing relationships, also key in life and work.
We have CS / engineering majors coming out of our eyeballs who simply cannot have an effective in-person conversation, advocate for themselves, or make a simple phone call. Soft skills are highly undervalued on this board.
engineering majors at my kid’s uni do a large number of projects with presentations - it reminds me of my mba days
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DCUM hates business degrees.
I got a business degree and it served me well. I've used what I learned in my finance classes and accounting classes for decades. These classes helped me in my real world jobs and also in my personal investing.
I was in econ classes with the econ majors. Honestly I thought the econ classes were kind of theoretical b.s.
PP with Econ major daughter - she agrees 100%. I cannot fathom how anyone could argue that financial management classes, accounting, marketing, strategy, sales etc. are not valuable in any business or line of work. I would also argue that interpersonal skills are becoming rarer and rarer as the years pass. Business students get a lot of practice in developing relationships, also key in life and work.
We have CS / engineering majors coming out of our eyeballs who simply cannot have an effective in-person conversation, advocate for themselves, or make a simple phone call. Soft skills are highly undervalued on this board.