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Hey all,
Currently I am entering my senior year of college in September, on track to graduate in June 2014. My undergrad program is the Bachler of Arts in Business Administration: Management Concentration. However, after many discussions with collegues, parents, and even my partner, I have been told that I should really consider switching my major to the Finance Concentration. I am not too deep in the management major to where I would have wasted time taking management classes, I have only done about 4 that are specific to the concentration, and I really enjoyed those classes, especially project management. If i switched, I COULD still graduate on time in June, though my course load would be heavy, or I could stretch it out and graduate in fall 2014 (so just a few more months). These recent discussions have got me thinking; finance is something I do enjoy, or at least certain aspects of it: ESPECIALLY CREDIT!!!
What do you all think!? Have any of you had experience looking at resumes of college grads? Is Finance really better than a Management degree? Should I continue my management major and then go to school for another year to complete a finance second degree? Some people I have talked to say that companies do not really care if you have two degrees, just what you're good at doing. Any advice is appreciated, thank you!
I found this if it helps any:
Majors don't really matter. It is what you do in school (and outside school) that counts. When it comes to job search, internships, GPA, and school activities matter a lot more than what you chose to study.
You might want to do a search for what's in demand and will be in demand in the next 4-8 years and base yourself on that. I did that some years ago and it paid off.
I did a BSc EE then and MSc Aerospace Eng. I worked both in the Aerospace Defense industry (Flight Evaluator) and in the Electronics research.
Practically all jobs nowadays are on the job training. As long as you have a degree you can learn (unless the job is very specific to a field i.e. medical, nursing, accounting, law etc)
@broseph23 wrote:Hey all,
Currently I am entering my senior year of college in September, on track to graduate in June 2014. My undergrad program is the Bachler of Arts in Business Administration: Management Concentration. However, after many discussions with collegues, parents, and even my partner, I have been told that I should really consider switching my major to the Finance Concentration. I am not too deep in the management major to where I would have wasted time taking management classes, I have only done about 4 that are specific to the concentration, and I really enjoyed those classes, especially project management. If i switched, I COULD still graduate on time in June, though my course load would be heavy, or I could stretch it out and graduate in fall 2014 (so just a few more months). These recent discussions have got me thinking; finance is something I do enjoy, or at least certain aspects of it: ESPECIALLY CREDIT!!!
What do you all think!? Have any of you had experience looking at resumes of college grads? Is Finance really better than a Management degree? Should I continue my management major and then go to school for another year to complete a finance second degree? Some people I have talked to say that companies do not really care if you have two degrees, just what you're good at doing. Any advice is appreciated, thank you!
a degree really only gets your foot in the door, your knowledge and skill level moves you up. I would do whatever ur comfortable with, but if it were me, I would finish the management major and then complete a Finance degree only if you want to possibly enter the field. I have a masters in hrm myself with a minor in poly science and gov. im considering a finance degree as well.
@HiLine wrote:Majors don't really matter. It is what you do in school (and outside school) that counts. When it comes to job search, internships, GPA, and school activities matter a lot more than what you chose to study.
+1
You also have to take into consideration if you will be able to get those required classes in your senior year and how having a heavy load could possibly effect your GPA.