I know right people expect like 100k out of college when they are studying psychology or some goofy social or liberal arts degree. but the only ones scratching that are maybe STEM, harder business things like MIS, finance, accounting, supply chain perhaps man
@@miguelplays2921you’d be surprised man. I have an English degree (also MTM, look it up) when I had my BA only I was still making close to $100k at a big name aerospace company. I’m over that salary now for sure. But you have to think outside of the box sometimes to get the salary range you want.
this is interesting. I used to think of being an entrepreneur as something you are, not really something you choose for a career. It is a term which is much more commonplace now. They used to not teach it. You had it or you didn't, and most people fit into business molds for careers and entrepreneurs were outliers, using creativity to make it in a world that was not designed for them. That has been my life experience anyway, as being born this way, as one. People other than me, applied the term to me after learning my track record over time. I did not set out to be an entrepreneur to have that title. I kept innovating and trying things I thought would work, and it later got applied.
@@vitae-studios I guess it might depend on their plans. I mean if they have something hybrid in mind, like using a structured degree in the field as a credential when seeking investment capital, they might be able to rationalize it that way. Also, if they planned to do a large enterprise worth many millions, it might be worth it, since the classes would be useful on their own, such as finance, accounting, marketing, info systems, human resources, etc. so they wouldn't be losing very much by declaring it their major. But for bootstrap entrepreneurs, I agree with you enormously! If you took the $400 to $500k, and invested it at a higher than average return, (say a distressed owner's multi-unit building) you could reach the 1% income tier if not immediately, then pretty soon I'd say, and keep growing upward from there.
I love the ambition of 60-90 guy...humble and accepts reality. I hope he gets pleasantly surprised.
The ones who know, I wish them all the best...the rest...will make my coffee.
I know right people expect like 100k out of college when they are studying psychology or some goofy social or liberal arts degree. but the only ones scratching that are maybe STEM, harder business things like MIS, finance, accounting, supply chain perhaps man
@@miguelplays2921Don't forget law and Medicine
@@miguelplays2921you’d be surprised man. I have an English degree (also MTM, look it up) when I had my BA only I was still making close to $100k at a big name aerospace company. I’m over that salary now for sure. But you have to think outside of the box sometimes to get the salary range you want.
The 300k$ guy broke billboard 😂❤
Okayyy, FULL-RIDE!!🎉👏🏾👏🏾
These kids are lost.
Or… they foresight and big dreams!
Liberal
Dreams
I’m sure you have all the answers oh wise sage.
this is interesting. I used to think of being an entrepreneur as something you are, not really something you choose for a career. It is a term which is much more commonplace now. They used to not teach it. You had it or you didn't, and most people fit into business molds for careers and entrepreneurs were outliers, using creativity to make it in a world that was not designed for them. That has been my life experience anyway, as being born this way, as one. People other than me, applied the term to me after learning my track record over time. I did not set out to be an entrepreneur to have that title. I kept innovating and trying things I thought would work, and it later got applied.
Spending $100k a year on tuition to learn about entrepreneurship is insane. Imagine how they could use that money in their business plans
@@vitae-studios I guess it might depend on their plans. I mean if they have something hybrid in mind, like using a structured degree in the field as a credential when seeking investment capital, they might be able to rationalize it that way. Also, if they planned to do a large enterprise worth many millions, it might be worth it, since the classes would be useful on their own, such as finance, accounting, marketing, info systems, human resources, etc. so they wouldn't be losing very much by declaring it their major.
But for bootstrap entrepreneurs, I agree with you enormously! If you took the $400 to $500k, and invested it at a higher than average return, (say a distressed owner's multi-unit building) you could reach the 1% income tier if not immediately, then pretty soon I'd say, and keep growing upward from there.
@@vitae-studiosthe connections might be worth it if you’re around a lot of like minded people who also have disposable income
I pay zero € tuition in austria, but starting salary is maybe 50k€ if I am lucky
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 delusional
no way this is real
Oh, this is rich.
Go to bentley