My eldest daughter studies a branch of physics at uni. She says it can be stressful, especially when given a problem to solve which takes about 6-8 hours to do.
The money in business degrees is in Business Analytics and Analyst (not administration, that's a horrible degree choice). A business analyst you're looking at a starting salary of 25 - 27K, which can easily go up to 75K as a senior business analyst but generally ranges in the 30 - 45K mark. Compare this to Administration where you're really capping yourself in the 30K in most cases.
@@skavanagh2778 well that’s a dam lie, I’m living proof and I earn under 30k. Didn’t need a degree for it either. A few I know makes £30k +, a small amount make £40k.
Degrees are not what determines how much you get paid, the industry you go to determines how much you get paid. Degree is unimportant in the corporate world.
Great content I just subscribed, besides I just turned 43, and I have decided to invest in the financial market, I have over $200k invested, I need tips on how grow that's to $1.5million in two years and retire at 45
I genuinely think that the best way to make that much in the markets would be to get an investment manager that can guide you on that or copy their trades to Avoid making any expensive mistakes.
I am actually guided by one, I found her through a Bloomberg publication sometime in August last year and she has guided me grow my portfolio account from $185k to now $430k
@@-ZED- No it's not STEM because it doesn't do anything to advance human society. It's a business major. The field is nothing more than following rules and is very boring and the other jobs are trash office jobs. Bio is bad because it lacks jobs. If you want to study animals you are better off looking at animals on the side as a geologist than as a biologist because geologists actually find jobs.
It’s actually mad that as a construction labourer I get £39k before tax, with absolutely no experience or skills, yet I’d have to spend 3+ years in uni and 5+ years of work experience as a graduate to even come close to that, really puts me off uni
same! I'm majoring in Business Administration and in the last year I will specialize in Banking and Finance to go into Investment Banking or Management Consulting.
worth mentioning that those starting points are only for bulge brackets/elite boutiques. You have to pretty much attend a target university to get into those.
Hey Dylan, really loved this content. However I'm looking forward to doing the Film Degree. Particularly in Film Production. I would love to see you make videos about this sector? How much a Film graduate’s earn yearly? Or How’s the Job market in UK. 🙏🏽 If I being honest there are not much reliable videos I found on You Tube about this. Specially when it comes to UK.
and the statement about buying a house in 10 years is also stupid, realistically if you’re earning 30k a year you could mortgage a house in a few years after saving up.
I’ve accepted physics too. It’s going to be difficult however there are a wide range of careers which you can go to with really good pay so no need to stress on that front.
Dasher7 I’m on gap year I picked physics because I kinda like it and didn’t know what else to pick either that or economics at uni so I ended up picking physics I deffo don’t love it lol I just thought it gave me a broad range of career prospects as I didnt know what to do with my life maybe a bit stupid idk
GamingWithHB /Galaxy Life yeh I know I don’t really know if I can be bothered with the difficulty of it, I know I can do it but god I’ll probably begin t hate my life
I did a master's in physics, and everyone I know (that isn't doing a phd) has landed a job > £30000. If you're worried about money take as many programming courses as you can. Trust me the money maker is your ability to code, forget everything else EDIT: If your programming is *really* good, you can make upwards of £150k starting salary off of a physics master's
Business pays more than computer science it depends on the specialization. Marketing, Finance, HRM, Logistics all pays more than comp sci even engineering. Physics Maths is almost useless without PHD. Business should be on A.
So I did studied physics and everyone I know who didn't do a PhD has ended up with a solid job > £30000, if they got a 2:1 or above. These people have jobs as patent attorneys, actuaries, data scientists, programmers, quantity surveyors. While finance roles indeed pay the highest, finance firms are increasingly favouriting CS graduates for their AI skills, and STEM students as a whole are seen very favourably.
@@jordan4890 Lol finance firms hires Economics, Finance or Business graduates mostly. Business students doesn't only know about finance but also they good in soft skills which STEM majors lack of. This is what hiring managers at Wall Street says.
@@nycto16 the ideal finance employee is pretty much a computer scientist or statistician with some economics exposure. I'd argue they prefer the stronger maths background, then picking up the finance knowledge along the way, as that is obviously easier to learn that maths or programming is. Soft skills sure, but it's not like there isn't a reasonable proportion of STEM students who aren't socially retarded ;) EDIT: again, would like to highlight AI here
@@jordan4890 AI? LOL finance degrees nowadays teaching Fintech stuff and also some unis has started this program so there's no need of irrelevant cs degree for finance jobs lol. Finance is best!
@@nycto16 This isn't a battle of CS vs finance 😂 Whether you like it or not, AI specialists are increasingly in demand by the finance sector, as of course we are in a global AI race. Companies know this, and very few are educated enough to fill that gap, certainly not economics/finance students. But the problem is, mathematicians/CS students don't have the needed finance background so it's a trade-off. This trade-off is increasingly in favour of CS students.
UK pays so so bad!!!!
My eldest daughter studies a branch of physics at uni. She says it can be stressful, especially when given a problem to solve which takes about 6-8 hours to do.
Your daughters awesome, tell her to persevere. She is very intelligent to be studying physics of any kind. Well done. 👏🏼
9:58 10% of economics graduates have a dad who’s a CEO
Am I the only one who thinks that this guy looks a lot like benedict cumberbatch
Bahahahah I’ll take that 🤣
More like "Eddie Redmayne + Benedict Cumberbatch"
The money in business degrees is in Business Analytics and Analyst (not administration, that's a horrible degree choice). A business analyst you're looking at a starting salary of 25 - 27K, which can easily go up to 75K as a senior business analyst but generally ranges in the 30 - 45K mark.
Compare this to Administration where you're really capping yourself in the 30K in most cases.
a quick Google search shows that the starting saley for business administration is 47k a year in the lowest 10 th percentile? what are your sources?
@@skavanagh2778
well that’s a dam lie, I’m living proof and I earn under 30k. Didn’t need a degree for it either. A few I know makes £30k +, a small amount make £40k.
Degrees are not what determines how much you get paid, the industry you go to determines how much you get paid. Degree is unimportant in the corporate world.
very true!
Disagree because sometimes the field you choose to go have specific requirements ie you can’t be a software engineer without studying CA etc
No accounting ? No law?
Veterinary Medicine was my dream degree but sigh could never do it. I heard there actually aren’t too many Vets because of the difficulty.
Ohh really! I didn’t even know it is areally hard profession
@@lifewithdylan Apparently, to be a Vet you go to be on par with a human doctor almost but paid much less.
It’s not that well paid, not for expensive cities like London anyway. It’s ok.
Maybe it has to do with over saturation why Computer Science and Business Administration is not high salaried as much?
Very very valid point bro!
Hi, may I ask what you mean by over saturation?
@@AB-mb8uy To many people competing or trying to get in the same job field has the potential to drive salaries down.
@@MDobri-sy1ce ooo OK thank you 😊
I came here to dislike cus they all get it wrong, but u got it right on the spot and the employment factors. Sub and liked
Great content I just subscribed, besides I just turned 43, and I have decided to invest in the financial market, I have over $200k invested, I need tips on how grow that's to $1.5million in two years and retire at 45
Making such gains from the market are actually possible, you just need to be dedicated and do a lot of research.
I genuinely think that the best way to make that much in the markets would be to get an investment manager that can guide you on that or copy their trades to Avoid making any expensive mistakes.
The idea sounds brilliant! But is it worth it?? Have you used an investment manager before?
I am actually guided by one, I found her through a Bloomberg publication sometime in August last year and she has guided me grow my portfolio account from $185k to now $430k
Quite impressive gains, does this wealth manager of yours work with just anybody? Mind sharing some info?
The number one degree in the whole country is apparently Business at Oxford.
8:52 bro just invented a new word 💀
What about accounting and finance heard it's very good ?
For sure bro
Complete garbage. Any STEM degree is better except bio.
@@Doritos-ik5eu I mean doesn't it come under maths so it's stem right ?
@@Doritos-ik5eu explain why, what even natural science?
@@-ZED- No it's not STEM because it doesn't do anything to advance human society. It's a business major. The field is nothing more than following rules and is very boring and the other jobs are trash office jobs.
Bio is bad because it lacks jobs. If you want to study animals you are better off looking at animals on the side as a geologist than as a biologist because geologists actually find jobs.
It’s actually mad that as a construction labourer I get £39k before tax, with absolutely no experience or skills, yet I’d have to spend 3+ years in uni and 5+ years of work experience as a graduate to even come close to that, really puts me off uni
Data science?
Did any If these surprise you?! Daily Vlogs coming in 2022!🥂🍀
Investment banking average starting salary is £50k-60k with a 25k-40k bonus that is what I’m going to do once I finish a levels and uni
It’s also an incredibly taxing job with little work life balance.
same! I'm majoring in Business Administration and in the last year I will specialize in Banking and Finance to go into Investment Banking or Management Consulting.
@@nycto16 is that at a target uni?
@@blazeentertainmen100 no, I'm doing undergrad from a normal uni but will do MBA from target uni.
worth mentioning that those starting points are only for bulge brackets/elite boutiques. You have to pretty much attend a target university to get into those.
Hey Dylan,
really loved this content. However I'm looking forward to doing the Film Degree. Particularly in Film Production. I would love to see you make videos about this sector? How much a Film graduate’s earn yearly? Or How’s the Job market in UK. 🙏🏽 If I being honest there are not much reliable videos I found on You Tube about this. Specially when it comes to UK.
Hey Dylan,
Can u say on the pay of international relations and diplomacy, international relations and public policy
Earning £30k for 10 years does not give you £300k. I suppose you are a student who has never paid tax.
and the statement about buying a house in 10 years is also stupid, realistically if you’re earning 30k a year you could mortgage a house in a few years after saving up.
Do you need to be really good at maths to have a high paying job in business. I am good at maths but not the best
Where would law fit on this list?
Great vid dyl
What about project management?
computer science is the highest paid degree in the US
Medicine
These low salaries make me want to work for minimum wage at £21k a year
PTSD😂😂
Where's law
That 10% of people is people in investment banking or other jobs within an investment bank
unlikely, most other jobs in high finance pay better than investment banking
@@blazeentertainmen100 not at graduate level in the UK
This video made me reconsider why I’ve accepted an offer to study physics in September
because you love physics? 😅
I’ve accepted physics too. It’s going to be difficult however there are a wide range of careers which you can go to with really good pay so no need to stress on that front.
Dasher7 I’m on gap year I picked physics because I kinda like it and didn’t know what else to pick either that or economics at uni so I ended up picking physics I deffo don’t love it lol I just thought it gave me a broad range of career prospects as I didnt know what to do with my life maybe a bit stupid idk
GamingWithHB /Galaxy Life yeh I know I don’t really know if I can be bothered with the difficulty of it, I know I can do it but god I’ll probably begin t hate my life
I did a master's in physics, and everyone I know (that isn't doing a phd) has landed a job > £30000. If you're worried about money take as many programming courses as you can. Trust me the money maker is your ability to code, forget everything else
EDIT: If your programming is *really* good, you can make upwards of £150k starting salary off of a physics master's
wtf haha i highly disagree - isnt architecture one of the most sought after, mainstream degrees with thousands of aplications?
Physics is based.
Business pays more than computer science it depends on the specialization. Marketing, Finance, HRM, Logistics all pays more than comp sci even engineering. Physics Maths is almost useless without PHD. Business should be on A.
So I did studied physics and everyone I know who didn't do a PhD has ended up with a solid job > £30000, if they got a 2:1 or above. These people have jobs as patent attorneys, actuaries, data scientists, programmers, quantity surveyors.
While finance roles indeed pay the highest, finance firms are increasingly favouriting CS graduates for their AI skills, and STEM students as a whole are seen very favourably.
@@jordan4890 Lol finance firms hires Economics, Finance or Business graduates mostly. Business students doesn't only know about finance but also they good in soft skills which STEM majors lack of. This is what hiring managers at Wall Street says.
@@nycto16 the ideal finance employee is pretty much a computer scientist or statistician with some economics exposure. I'd argue they prefer the stronger maths background, then picking up the finance knowledge along the way, as that is obviously easier to learn that maths or programming is. Soft skills sure, but it's not like there isn't a reasonable proportion of STEM students who aren't socially retarded ;)
EDIT: again, would like to highlight AI here
@@jordan4890 AI? LOL finance degrees nowadays teaching Fintech stuff and also some unis has started this program so there's no need of irrelevant cs degree for finance jobs lol. Finance is best!
@@nycto16 This isn't a battle of CS vs finance 😂 Whether you like it or not, AI specialists are increasingly in demand by the finance sector, as of course we are in a global AI race. Companies know this, and very few are educated enough to fill that gap, certainly not economics/finance students. But the problem is, mathematicians/CS students don't have the needed finance background so it's a trade-off. This trade-off is increasingly in favour of CS students.
in the U.S, software engineers are paid way more. Like 70k starting salary and 100k+ after a few years of experience
Because of the demand, it’s ridiculous isn’t it?
@@ea1766 Yeah, but it's also a lot of work as well and many people don't link cs which keeps supply low and salaries high
US paid more in every industry - not just software eng
Economics so great but a teacher after 4 years makes that 🤭 and 100k plus after roughly 15 years
No they don’t no teacher is touching 100k a year
A biology degree?
depends on the university
where did you get the data?