Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Email signature - no.
Business card - the degrees that are directly linked to what you do and might seem useful to people you are dealing with absolutely.
I can't get over my uncle listing his PhD EVERYWHERE. Even when my grandma died and we were all listed in the newspaper article thingy (don't know the english word sorry) he insisted on listing his PhD. He is VERY insecure, very show-off, very slimy so yeah...that's what I connect with people who list degrees in anything that is not connected directly to their work life.
Lol, my dad did this in my moms obituary too. Even in her death he found a way to make it about him...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work at a U.S. government agency renowned for having some of the smartest and best credentialed people in all of government.
Guess who puts the initials after their name in emails?
Here's a hint: it's not the JDs, PhDs, or MSs from Ivy League schools doing all the heavy lifting policy work, testifying in front of Congress, or traveling the world to present their research or negotiate on behalf of the U.S. government.
It's all the folks in HR and admins with a zillion acronyms.
Ha. Totally believe it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You list terminal degrees in your field:
M.F.A.
Ph.D.
M.B.A.
M.P.A.
Ed.D. (indicates not a research degree)
I wouldn't consider MS or MA or ME.d. to be terminal degrees. People list them behind their names all the time.
List professional degrees:
J.D.
M.D.
Do not list JD. This is not a thing that practicing lawyers do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cool IT Busines Guy, PHD IT, Ceritified Dive Instructor, PHD in Love
PhD at DeVry University in holistic massage
Anonymous wrote:Cool IT Busines Guy, PHD IT, Ceritified Dive Instructor, PHD in Love
Anonymous wrote:You list terminal degrees in your field:
M.F.A.
Ph.D.
M.B.A.
M.P.A.
Ed.D. (indicates not a research degree)
I wouldn't consider MS or MA or ME.d. to be terminal degrees. People list them behind their names all the time.
List professional degrees:
J.D.
M.D.
Anonymous wrote:whats really annoying is when the signature has 20 lines of CERTS and information. Usually it is from people that don't have a degree and try to make up for it.
Anonymous wrote:Late to the game for a response but the title of this message speaks volumes about the lack of understanding "letters after your name" isn't what those are called. They are credentials and in some industries they are important and others maybe not so much.
I work in government healthcare and it is important in my agency to know the difference between communicating with an MD, PhD, NP, CRNA, etc. The only people in my agency that would say t doesn't matter are the HR people that don't really have an understanding of healthcare and the ones that don't have degrees.
The person's title or maybe degree/license matters. 32 acronyms behind their name don't matter.