- Joined
- Jul 3, 2021
Do you have a source for this? Both Petroleum and EECS have been known to be the highest paying bachelor’s degrees for a while now. Is my info out of date?Hypothetical Chad Cocksworth III didn't get to be third of his name by being middle management, bro. Do you really want to live your life in a "low-risk organization"? Why?
Pensions are for fags who can't figure out how to execute a mega backdoor Roth IRA. I'm only half joking, but obviously, international banks offer really solid 401k matching programs too.
So don't work at a hedge fund then; work in VC, or at a REIT, or in private equity. Like tech startups, when a hedge fund fails you just move on to the next one, with a fuckton more stuff on your CV. You think when Lehman failed everyone else saw their name on people's resumes and were like "nah, you worked for that bank that failed..."? No, of course not, they said "great, you have 25 years experience in capital markets, welcome aboard".
Meme-tier nonsense about the world of high finance aside, I really do recommend people skip the engineering degree or biology degree or whatever and get a business, economics or commerce degree instead. It has the same amount of math with much higher salaries at the end of it. It has higher education that is actually worth something (god knows your mom is impressed by your PhD in Neurochemistry, but the market won't be). If you really think about it, science is mostly charity or taxpayer funded, with a tiny slice of STEM graduates being required for Industry (and most of them are engineers). That revenue base can only support so many scientists and even if you become a nurse or something, that's where your career path ends. The business world can support infinite numbers of smart graduates, because there's always more companies and there's always more money to be made out there. Your ability to discover proteins and shit is only economically useful at a very small number of places. Your ability to put together a competent go-to-market strategy for someone's new product is valuable virtually everywhere. Throw some tech skills or some rudimentary coding knowledge in there and you can work for any number of SaaS or B2B software companies, because they need always need people to help bridge the gap between the Strategy & Product guys and the subhumanly autistic computer engineers.
You sound like someone who doesn’t actually know anything about the industry. If you were ever actually in a STEM field, I’m guessing you were a low-level grunt and never broke out into a role where you’re actually making critical decisions. Many executives at those certain large-cap tech companies that are killing their earnings quarter after quarter have tech backgrounds, you know that, right?