Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nurse anesthesiologist. Way less debt then a regular anesthesiologist and can start working much sooner. Very in demand and a high job satisfaction rate.
I was going to suggest this. I'm thinking of a career change this way.
Have quite a few friends who went this route. It is competitive and you need a BSN plus critical care experience first. I'm sure there are exceptions, but none that I've seen personally.
Anonymous wrote:Nurse anesthesiologist. Way less debt then a regular anesthesiologist and can start working much sooner. Very in demand and a high job satisfaction rate.
Anonymous wrote:PharmD. He can work in a pharmacy or for a pharmaceutical company (Research Scientist, Medical Science Liaison).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Accounting is indeed very stable, and easy to get a job out of school, but I wouldn’t call it non-competitive, especially if you’re talking the big leagues. Making partner at a Big 4 is as difficult, if not more so, than in Big Law.
Agree it is very competitive to get a partnership in accounting but even those who top out in middle management have very stable six figure incomes for as long as they want them.
Anonymous wrote:Isn't this pretty much why people become doctors (or at least certain kinds of doctors anyway) or dentists
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is an oversupply of CS majors.
Oversupply of CS who wants to do ML @ fintech or big tech, but shortage of them in boring accounting software development.
Anonymous wrote:If he’s genuinely interested in medicine join he military and have them pay for med school. “Retire” after 20 years with a pension and go into private practice.
Anonymous wrote:There is an oversupply of CS majors.
Anonymous wrote:Can anyone expand on the pathway to becoming a quant? Major in CS, do you also need financial/economics/math minor? Are there exams? Grad degree? Series of exams?
How do you see this profession being impacted by AI? Thank you!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nurse anesthesiologist. Way less debt then a regular anesthesiologist and can start working much sooner. Very in demand and a high job satisfaction rate.
I was going to suggest this. I'm thinking of a career change this way.
Anonymous wrote:Accounting is indeed very stable, and easy to get a job out of school, but I wouldn’t call it non-competitive, especially if you’re talking the big leagues. Making partner at a Big 4 is as difficult, if not more so, than in Big Law.