Hi I saw your video about hack psychology degree and I want to know more because I want to study psychology after finishing school so do you have a social media page are a group chat i can ask questions
You talked about marketing degree ect.. have you worked a job which paid you 100k+ a year with that degree? Is it recognized or employees don’t care which degree you have?
Yes, then left it to start my own marketing agency. The employers I encountered were super impressed with the 9 months degree. I just let them know I tested out of all my classes. I turned down some 6 figure offers as well.
Hello and good day sir. I´m 49, with just a GED. In the U.S. I mostly worked in factories, then transitioned to sales. I´ve been teaching English in S. America for years with a TEFL certificate. I´m a very good English teacher actually, but the pay isn´t keeping up with inflation. I have good-great communication skills as I also do public speaking on a volunteer basis. I have a good feel for things related to psychology, sales, marketing, HR, and management. I´m considering trying your approach if I can make the money make sense, but my question is, which is going to be the safest bet for a remote job at 50? Let´s be honest, companies aren´t looking for 50 year-olds breaking into a new field.
I think there are ways of entering new fields without actually labelling yourself as a newcomer. I'd personally look at the fields that relate to your expertise, but level up. Add the degree, then in interviews use all of your past experience to your advantage and have confidence in what you've done throughout your career. I'd find a path that doesn't make me look like I'm a newbie. That's just my personal thoughts, but there are always stories of people who make drastic career changes and succeed as well.
I don't know of any self paced UX Design majors that have the door open for International Students. But.. there are a number of tech majors that could work. I just did a brand new training specifically for International Students. I hope this helps.. www.diplomasecrets.com/international-watch-page
I wish you added the colleges to enroll for such fast-track bachelor's.
Here's a video where I lay out some of my favorite schools for acceleration: ua-cam.com/video/NXlXMpccFuE/v-deo.html
Hi I saw your video about hack psychology degree and I want to know more because I want to study psychology after finishing school so do you have a social media page are a group chat i can ask questions
Shoot me an email, I'm happy to help.. (ryan@9monthgrad.com)
You talked about marketing degree ect.. have you worked a job which paid you 100k+ a year with that degree? Is it recognized or employees don’t care which degree you have?
Yes, then left it to start my own marketing agency. The employers I encountered were super impressed with the 9 months degree. I just let them know I tested out of all my classes. I turned down some 6 figure offers as well.
Hello and good day sir. I´m 49, with just a GED. In the U.S. I mostly worked in factories, then transitioned to sales. I´ve been teaching English in S. America for years with a TEFL certificate. I´m a very good English teacher actually, but the pay isn´t keeping up with inflation. I have good-great communication skills as I also do public speaking on a volunteer basis. I have a good feel for things related to psychology, sales, marketing, HR, and management. I´m considering trying your approach if I can make the money make sense, but my question is, which is going to be the safest bet for a remote job at 50? Let´s be honest, companies aren´t looking for 50 year-olds breaking into a new field.
I think there are ways of entering new fields without actually labelling yourself as a newcomer. I'd personally look at the fields that relate to your expertise, but level up. Add the degree, then in interviews use all of your past experience to your advantage and have confidence in what you've done throughout your career. I'd find a path that doesn't make me look like I'm a newbie. That's just my personal thoughts, but there are always stories of people who make drastic career changes and succeed as well.
For me I just need a degree to teach English in South East Asia. So I just need a degree to tick the box.
Shoot me an email (ryan@9monthgrad.com)... I can help you save a ton of time.
Hi, what if I already have my associates degree? what would the process be then?
Same process, just transfer in the classes from your Associate's Degree as you enroll.. It's a nice head start!
I'm really interested on the UX Design degree. is it possible to do it not being American?
I don't know of any self paced UX Design majors that have the door open for International Students. But.. there are a number of tech majors that could work. I just did a brand new training specifically for International Students. I hope this helps..
www.diplomasecrets.com/international-watch-page