Not all tech jobs are S tier. Also it's becoming oversaturated and super competitive, which will drive down wages for lower level workers. Also eventually some of those jobs will be replaced with programs. Truly a double edged sword.
People have been beating the “it’s over saturated and competitive” drum for years yet tech is one the fastest growing industries in the world. High pay and great benefits. Play the meta until it changes.
@@MrSilentrage123 It's oversaturated in the sense that everyone who isn't a literal potato is trying to get into tech or has at least considered it. The thing is this allows desirable employers to just raise the bar stupidly high to get the cream of the crop provided they have the resources to do so and will pay a premium to get the talent that puts them ahead of the rest. The rest of the people who can't make that cut still will have a chance to find employment due to the insatiable nature of the software development/tech industry, but the work will be grueling for what will still be decent pay but not the riches that they might expect. So I would say that just randomly trying to get a tech job is not an S-tier plan (Probably closer to B-tier), but if you are actually capable of doing well/talented and know where to look they're pretty much S-Tier.
They have to hire someone to maintain that program, tech jobs are specifically special because no matter what gets automated the people who’s jobs would have been replaced just get hired to create and maintain.
I'm an offshore electrician and make on average 250-300k a year in Australia. I work around 4 months of the year in total offshore with the rest of the time off.
@@speedstr Ford Ranger, nothing fancy. Live in a average priced house, no extravagant purchases really. I do go out now and again to very fancy restaurants but that's only once every 6 months 400$ for 2 of us. I have most of my money invested in stocks and plan to retire at 50 years old max. I also have 3 small businesses on the side which between me and my partner we manage them ourselves.
Very Impressive mate. Do you need a lot of extra qualifiactions over a standard electrician? to attain a CSCS Gold card here in the UK takes around 2 years and wondering what extra steps are required...
I’m an ICU RN. Great money, but don’t, I repeat, DON’T do it for the money. It is emotionally and physically demanding, requiring compassionate and empathetic people to do it.
@Anonymous There are definitely other avenues for nursing. Home Health is one that pays well. Care coordinator’s and Informatics are other ways to use a nursing degree without patient care.
I'm considering becoming a nurse. I did a lot of transportations as an EMT so I got to see a lot of different paths I could go. I definitely don't want to work in a nursing home. I am interested in working in a hospital possibly in the ER since it is the most familiar or ICU. Obviously those are both very different environments. I feel like in the ER it's a lot faster paced and your getting a ton of patients going in and out. ICU feels more organized, slower paced, and I usually see the patients in there are on multiple medications and on a vent.
@@briantaylor2636 Home Health _CAN_ pay well, but a lot of private companies under pay their nurses, so beware! Not to mention fraught with lots of paperwork. I'd recommend looking into Travel Nursing.
I'm a union construction worker making just shy of 100k a year. That doesn't count any dividend income or side jobs where I earn cash. No student debt, I even managed to pay off my house at 34. My body is on the line though I'll admit to that.
He's trying to branch off because yeah any career advice is becoming literally just study tech or nursing forever and ever, I am sure it's getting boring for him too but it gets great clicks
Tech is the best bet if you want to make money fast. Over the next 10 salaries will continue to hike upward. you're guaranteed to make over six-figures by your 2nd year in the field at big companies. Cybersecurity and software engineers are paid handsomely - product managers and data scientist too. Not to mention remote work is becoming the norm so you can work from anywhere.
@@dillo1594 true. A lot of the people I look up to most in life or have learned from and respected the most are past teachers of mine. College is probably alright, but high school and middle school are mostly thankless. There are plenty of asshole kids who just like to give them a hard time for no reason. Never understood and never will understand people like that.
Can you please elaborate, why being a teacher is bad? I think the salary is pretty good for per hour rate considering they only work 171-181 days out of 365.
From what I’ve heard from my professors, teaching college/university, teaching online, teaching public high schoolers in honors/AP/IB/prep/etc, and teaching private high school are the best ways to be a teacher. One of them also recommended that if you wanted to teach English, history, social studies etc, you could also just get your masters in library science and use the teaching degree in another way, which is pretty cool
Best option is getting experience. Getting a job and getting to know the field is the best way to decide. Part of my personal story. Want to know more? Quick summary you did ask for - Studied engineering. Worked a summer internship. Not for me. Dropped out. Studied psychology. Wasn't approved for Masters... Couldn't become a Clinical Psychologist in my country. Useless degree in my case,this could be different if I didn't work full time as well. Started working in a law firm as a clerk, worked my way up over 2 years... Decided to study law. Currently studying LLB and still working full-time as paralegal in conveyancing. Stil getting to know the field, but experience gave me a much clearer picture. Main mistake I made was assuming the first person I met or a person in my family with a Carreer is where I would end up. Not at all, we are all individuals and create ourselves. Maybe this means something to you, maybe not. Mean something to me and just writing made me reflect over my own life. Thanks if you read this far. Goodluck, may God guide your steps and bless you.
My Wife is a nurse and I'm a Project Manager, and I gotta say, both are great careers with good pay and benefits. They are both fulfilling as well. Nursing (espeically bedside) is incredibly hard physically, emotionally, and mentally (my wife is so strong) so I'm glad I'm a PM (a very time oriented and stressful job but nothing like an ICU Nurse).
@@metalblizzard6024 Hey , can you explain your job little bit please? (Project Manajer) I am on my way to choose a career path and would like to know about your job too. Thank you.
@@xksgaming2469 effectively, when projects are created by my company they place a PM on them. These projects require management in the areas of resources, risk, team, and time. My job is to effectively fulfil the project incrementally and relay results to our customer. There's a lot more to it but that's the general idea.
Trade jobs are super easy to start your own business with if you have the experience in the field you want to start. The business model is super straight forward. It's literally just doing what you would be getting hired to do. Set your prices as you see fit. If the costumer thinks it too much then you adjust your prices if you need. They're desperately needed and that has a huge opportunity to set prices higher because there's no other choice for a cheaper service. A little scummy, sure but it's the truth. The labor shortage is in trade jobs, not tech...
Hell yea man! Just a 20 year old who finished my school portion for an electrician apprenticeship. Looking for positions to get the job experience part. Hopefully, it is still under the radar and there is job growth in the future.
@@watermelonhead6525 Yeah I'm about to start a school program for plumbing but i think electricians will be great for the future, you can fix the wiring on the robots that do the plumbing jobs lol
@@Gage6263 Lol great question, I do trucking and transportation will definitely be first but plumbing should be human dominated for awhile like 10 years or so, but if you really want to future proof your career and do trades, probably electrician or millwright/mechanic would be best i suppose compared to plumbing, HVAC or welding, but even welding will go first plumbing and hvac should be safe for awhile, but where I live it takes 5 years to get your independent certification so it could take awhile to switch if you needed to. I wouldn't worry too much though its not as bad as transportation or welding, it should take awhile for robots to start plumbing commonly
Best answer to all of you out there: #1: get any job and save $5000-$10 000 = 3-5 months in the states. #2: Buy and resell anything online, Amazon, Shopify, Facebook market place, UA-cam Chanel. Try and push hard for 3-10 years. You will make money 300%. #3: invest 70% of all that money made. #4: follow your passion career or hobby. #5: be happy with any results after.
I'm a chef and I make £42k a year. For most people, it's f tier all the way but if you have a passion for food and a thick skin it is definite A tier, S tier if you train in pastry cause we get paid too much
depends on what you look for, security guard and clerks are both super relaxing jobs and for some people this is S tier material. Or maybe you worked construction your entire life, your body is breaking down and to you that shitty clerk job sounds like heaven.
Nice vid!, Been a software engineer for over 10 years now, it's a great career choice but during these times it seems like everyone wants to be one these days. Some would come from a comp sci degree, and majority would come from bootcamps which is mainly compromised of spending thousands of dollars to learn to make full stack todo / clone apps. Yes very harsh but it's the truth...
Yes it will become a worthless skill set when oversupply occurs. That’s why the old fashioned careers are the most recession resistant Eg lawyer, doctors, medical workers, energy related worker s
@@laupeter4594 I concur, but at the same time it also varies in my opinion; if someone did want to get into tech, it should either be some sort of cyber security, cloud / AI engineering, or even a systems integration engineer, those options alone are very viable, But I'm specifically referring to those who've learned website making and hoping to get a 6-figure job at google or something, and came straight out of a bootcamp where it gets seriously oversupplyed
Tech jobs are great. But also not great for long term for some people. Technology is advancing so fast you can easily find yourself outdated if you cant keep up. Its a career based on constant self improvement and learning that can be difficult for some people. I know its high paying but those salary are justified because you have to constantly learn and improve. Unlike IE. dentist doesn't have to learn a single thing more after med school. He could go his whole career without having to go through the stress of learning to be up to date. In tech, if you do this you'll be unemployable within a few years or a decade at most. In summary, this isn't the career for you if you hate learning( Hated school ).
This. Not to mention there is almost zero physical activity. If you are like me and you spend all your free time playing OSRS and watching youtube spending your entire workday sitting on your ass would be the perfect way to become a fatass. IT is overrated and most people interested in it are neckbeards or nerds. You are better off doing something else like a trade or as you said dentist it is not like teeth will evolve and you will have to learn new skills.
Yep, I was lucky to reject Soft Dev (Cybersecurity) jobs (Government) and stick to system engineering which is not evolving as fast as programming per se. But I wouldn't just say technology. It's Software development... Remember, Engineer X is using a technology provided by software developers, they don't have to learn much on the newer versions. An example would be a system for manufacturing services or something that's more commonly found out there would be IDEs like Unreal Engine. The developers whom are working on developing Unreal have a fast paced job, while the people who use Unreal to program/create are face paced, but not as face paced as the developers.
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I think it's worth pointing out that jobs being in demand=/=paying well. A hospital may have an average amount of doctors but be in absolutely dire need of patient transporters, and still no matter the need for transports the docs will make 6-10x more minimum. Just because someone in a field tells you, "oh we're SO desperate for xyz" does not mean the employers in that field are out there writing blank checks.
TLDR: tech field >>>>>> trade field > medical field >or= financial/accounting field > sales fields > others > means “greater than” >or= means “greater or equal to”
Today I was literally wondering, hmm I wonder what the most common careers are, and later I go to youtube and boom I see you posted this. Very curious and excited to watch this, thanks Shane!
Truck driving is where its at cleared 98K last year as a hazmat driver hes right about not being home that much when you first start off but after about 18months the sky is the limit another thing about it is that you get what you put in Dont be lazy
Another career to consider is paramedicine. Paramedic are in such high demand right now across the US, typically shorter education than an RN and annual salaries are showing upward trends to be comparable with RNs, not to mention if you are into the fire side of things, being a firefighter/paramedic has huge upside with amazing benefits almost everywhere and great upward mobility within most fire departments. Down sides being dealing with ungrateful patients, long hours, typical paramedic shifts are 12 hours long and fire/medic shifts can be anywhere from 10-48 hours long depending on where your are and what your call volume looks like with the average being around 24 hours on shift. BLS is showing a growth rate of around 7%, the median salary is also averaging EMTs which is drastically dragging it down. For comparison an EMT is to a paramedic what a CNA is to a RN, entry level to career level. Side note BLS get your shit together and actually separate those out for people.
I don't think the salaries I saw, is relating to the cost of living like housing. $47,000 a year is not good if the area you live in is charging $3,000 a month in rent
Something to take into account is the amount of overtime certain industries demand, which is where the difference in pay that BLS doesn't account for. You will make a lot more than stated on BLS, but the amount of overtime will kill your work/life balance. This is one of the many things that every responsible person needs to evaluate before choosing a career. Industry saturation is a huge part to consider as well. I've seen too many people just look at pay and think they're set. The reality is that everyone is also going for the same thing, which makes entering the industry that much more competitive. If you're not at the top of your class from a prestigious school, then the likelihood of you landing a great job that pays well is just that much more stacked against you. The emergence of AI is going to put an unprecedented strain on computer based careers. So what looks lucrative and in demand right now may change dramatically in the years to come. Trade jobs are always going to be in demand, and the cost of training is usually very cheap compared to a degree, and most times, employers are willing to train you on their dime. As demand for trades increases (as it almost always does) the aging workforce will create an even higher demand for a depleting workforce which will bring higher wages in the years to come.
@@jeanbob1481 unfortunately, we do need money to survive and thrive. It’s not about materialism, it’s about being able to live your life with enough money to be able to support yourself and enjoy the things that make life worth living
I never consider "Saturation" as an obstacle, its just a remainder for me to work differently and more harder. Don't cry over saturation, because people till this date couldn't define it, just fxcking do it
I'm a nurse who has worked worked with many traveler nurses over the last 8 years. Traveler nurses do make good money but what isn't talked about is that they could be responsible for their own healthcare and retirement. These $5,000 to $10,000 a week traveler contracts were around during the early stages of Covid-19 but as more nurses entered the travel nursing space there's more supply thus traveler contracts returning to what they were pre-pandemic, even when the variants were running rampant. Also, as soon as Covid-19 hospitalizations declined, we cut the Traveler contracts immediately and they can't do anything about it because they're contracted employees and not under any type of union protection.
No, you didn't cut them immediately. They completed their contracted term of employment, which is legally binding, then if your hospital didn't renew their travel contracts they simply, ya know, travelled to another hospital and got a different contract. The nursing shortage isn't resolving anytime soon. Travel wages will go down, but remain high for years to come.
@@Anonymous-ld7je Mr Wayne told you that they cut their contract immediately and you contradicting him. It seems kind of silly to do best position to tell you how it actually went down. Maybe they have conditional contracts where they can stop the contract as they see fit? Never thought about that? All contracts are built the same of course the hospital is going to design a contract to benefit them.
i would much rather have my office job than ever work in retail ever again. i'm remote and the pay is much better! surprised to see it ranked under the nightmare job of cashier.
No administrative/legal professional careers? I recently graduated from a paralegal program and I have a huge range of options for places to work. Everything from private law firms, corporate legal teams, and administrative government agencies are viable options. The pay is really good (about $50,000 per year) considering it only requires minimal education, and a 17% increase in demand over the next decade makes this career at least "C" or even "B" tier in my mind.
Bioinformatics has huge future scope, dude. I don't need to tell you this. Whether it's drug discovery, diagnosis or even human enhancement (with CRISPR and the like), it's all bioinformatics. But that's my understanding do your own research.
Can you make one analyzing the inherent career value it has to society...? This would be a great blueprint for a much needed implementation of meritocracy.
You should bring back your top 100 worst degrees video that for some reason you removed over a year ago. I still remember one of the top 5 of the worst degrees in the 100 was puppetry, that video.
One small correction is that cooks who work in higher end restaurants actually don't make more. Essentially they are paying for the opportunity to work at a nicer place, learn and improve their resume.
i think his parameters werent base on salary alone, but more so on the future growth of the title. LPN/Lvns can make very good money but the duties and requirements of advancement is neccasary base on them taking care of peoples lives. While they make good money from the start they cap out later. On the ROI, I believe schooling takes on average 12-14 months, but the cost of some programs cost way too much for what its worth. Better to get the prereqs out of the way and go straight into an RN program. Also profit schools target the majority into these programs, while what they learn in anatomy and physiology isnt accreddited if they're planning to become an RN. Regardless of the cons, I believe there are many pros as well depending on life circumstances. Its good career if you just need to get started in a well paying job and have a lot of time on your hands to advance on the side.
Thanks Shane. I just finished my linguistics bachelors program and am going into my double major for CS, so I've been looking into jobs that would get me through college for the next 3 years without interfering with my school schedule. You've given me some good ideas
I make $82,000 a year with a strong union, full benefits and two months off in the summer. If you know how to do being a teacher right it isn't a C tier at all.
Teaching is honestly just so not worth it, the disrespect is unreal. You are treated like between an all out enemy of your children or someone to be distrusted "will that guy either diddle my kids or try to turn them trans? today" Most students pick up on these vibes and to them you are just an obstacle to get the next grade to please their parents with an endgame of college Nobody appreciates knowledge, they just know they need to know things so they can get the job that buys them things they can use to get what they want in life Being a teacher can be pretty awesome like you said if you are all privleged and shit, if you know how to play the game. You're job is hilariously top 0.0001% though of course you think its S tier.
Teacher is really downplayed in our society. Imho, a high-school teacher is probably one of the hardest job in the world because you have to manage and teach 50+ people at the same time. And those people are in their puberty and widest, the hardest age group to manage imho. I would rate a high-school teacher position at high as a manager in a corporation. We def need to pay teachers more.
Hey! Love the vids they are so helpful but I was wondering if you could possibly do a vid on careers for vets? When I finish my 4 years in the Air Force, I’ll have an associates CCAF in aviation (technician for drones), different certs, and possibly soon a bachelors as well! Any advice or potential careers 🤷🏾I feel lost
Lol my parents are an accountant and nurse. I have a bachelor's degree looking into either one of them, healthcare administration, law school, medical school, or being a pilot. Yeah. My mind had been split. I remember back in the spring of 2018 when I fell off a little and got under the females (instead of not with any and then on top of one) and psychologically out of it due to many things including my issues with my parents and my brother (and their individual issues).
@@ShaneHummus It isn't meant for the average person but the job satisfaction is often unparalleled and so are the salaries, I was confused as I thought you were ranking them financially. Yes, we do work our asses off but it isn't that tough to make 300-400k.
@@ShaneHummus hey shane , i plan on majoring in logistics engineering /management , ( it's actually the same thing ) what are your thoughts on this degree ?
@@shrirammahabal8900 Physicians actually have relatively low levels of job satisfaction, 70% of physicians wouldn't recommend the career to friends or family so I'm not sure where you get unparalleled job satisfaction from.
Hi Shane, Can you do a video on how good is a career as a management analyst. This is a career you never touched on your MIS major video and I think you should cover it
Yes, because this part included a lot of jobs where you dont need a college degree, a part 2 with more jobs after college (bachelors / masters degrees) would be awesome! This part was still really quite interesting though, thanks Shane!
@@97mesut ha yes indeed, the longer the education the higher the pay it seems, although it varies and they weren't all created equal. Wonder why that is🤔🤣
Hey Shane! Thank you so much for your videos, they just keep getting better and better! Could you please talk about Dietitians and Nutritionists? They weren’t mentioned in this video and it worried me :”) You rarely talk about them and I wish you would :””)
People never talk about independent health / medicare insurance agent/ (sure you can sell life but I don’t much) it’s extremely lucrative and you own your business…but it does have a high barrier to entry! You have to be pretty smart and very good with the computer - everything online. Lots of schooling too- and It takes a couple years to build your book. But in 2/3 years you can be over 100k easy…! It’s very rewarding and you can do it remote and set your own schedule which is awesome Don’t work for someone else as they take 50% or your commissions where as if you work for an FMO they don’t..what you earn is all yours
I thought about this... How do you enter this field? I took a Medicare and a Medical billing course with your comment in mind. But I'm not sure how to get into this.
I love how a lot of people are saying SWE isn't S Tier because it's becoming competitive as if even shit SWE jobs in a lot of cases aren't better than a majority of the other jobs on this list lol. Study for interviews and make huge amounts of money or be punished with....a fairly comfortable job making well above the average US salary but not like an ungodly amount more. Oh the horror lol
And even so, it's not an oversaturated field, contrary to what the charlatans would have you believe. There's always demand for good developers - just not always demand for either bad and/or entry-level ones. In fact, there's at least 100,000 - 1 million tech positions open in the US now, according to the Department of Labor.
Could be a random request but considering you are in healthcare, can you do a video on how the nurse Randonda Vaughts situation will impact the quality of going into healthcare as a career
Got a degree in culinary arts and hotel/restaurant management years ago and what a waste of time. I am currently working on a degree in data science, if i am going work my butt off then i want to get paid for it.
Lawyer is a bad career for someone who wants to be rich, has a useless degree and doesn’t know what to do, and is pressured by society(parents, family, etc.) overall it is a good career if you know why you are getting yourself into and have a passion.
@@idkwhy77 depends on the school you go to, how the economy performs, and what regional market you want to practice in. General tip: get into a tier 1 or at least top 75 school. Schools outside of these often have sub-50% employment outcomes. Also, be sure to consult law school transparency before going to a law school.
Another thing to note is that it’s not just physical labor jobs that cause damage to the body. Sitting in a chair for 8+ hours each day while staring at a computer screen is also not healthy.
You should do a technology(Computer) related job with no programming because so many are looking for it. I don't think people know the difference between a systems manager and a programmer and so on.
@@THATGUY-yf5rp Why I'm changing my major from comp sci to information systems. Programming is interesting but I don't enjoy it enough to do it all the time.
Just a criticism but I kinda thought the jobs of the future would have some idea on the future of the career for example data clerk , car mechanic cashier and accountants.
This is false. Remember it's all about location too. You can get paid 100k in NYC and you are defiantly poor. But the same job offers 70k in a location 2hrs from NYC and you're officially way richer than that person winning 100k in NYC. My job for example usually pays around 65k-90k in suburban locations, but the exact same job on cities have a salary of 120k+. It's ambiguous.
Average salary is just not the right way. There are fields like Digital Marketing where many people are earning peanuts and many are literally earning in millions.
As a licensed CNA I promise you it is not a B; more like an F. You’re on your feet all day. You deal with the most nasty/gross and labor intensive parts of nursing. You get zero amount of the respect nurses get. And you get less payed than a McDonald’s employee. It’s a necessary job, but is way underpaid and underappreciated. Which is why I ended up leaving the field to pursue other things.
Alot of these jobs that require no HS diploma suck which is to be expected but i work at amazon 20.50/hr with 2 years of experience only tier 1 employee and it's super easy (But repetitive) i see alot of 14 and 13/hr here and it makes me wanna cry but then again im from California so i guess it evens itself out xD the building is suppose to be a part time work one so working past 8 hours a day counts as overtime as well as special events where overtime is doubled instead of the usual 1.5x pay BUT im too lazy to work those, its not uncommon to hear people bring home 1200 USD a week during those events. but hey it's just an entry level job atleast! BUT growth potential within the company is rare, don't expect to move up even if you work like no tomorrow, leadership tends to chose "Favorites"
Im 35 yr old Police Liuetenant for fed i make $105k not including shift premium and Overtime. I get every other weekend off. Up to the rank of Captain I don't need a degree.
Not all tech jobs are S tier. Also it's becoming oversaturated and super competitive, which will drive down wages for lower level workers. Also eventually some of those jobs will be replaced with programs. Truly a double edged sword.
People have been beating the “it’s over saturated and competitive” drum for years yet tech is one the fastest growing industries in the world. High pay and great benefits. Play the meta until it changes.
@@MrSilentrage123 It's oversaturated in the sense that everyone who isn't a literal potato is trying to get into tech or has at least considered it. The thing is this allows desirable employers to just raise the bar stupidly high to get the cream of the crop provided they have the resources to do so and will pay a premium to get the talent that puts them ahead of the rest.
The rest of the people who can't make that cut still will have a chance to find employment due to the insatiable nature of the software development/tech industry, but the work will be grueling for what will still be decent pay but not the riches that they might expect.
So I would say that just randomly trying to get a tech job is not an S-tier plan (Probably closer to B-tier), but if you are actually capable of doing well/talented and know where to look they're pretty much S-Tier.
@@ExplorersXRotmg
I'm definitely not talented in coding/programming so I had to let it go...
@@frog6054 Talent isn't everything
They have to hire someone to maintain that program, tech jobs are specifically special because no matter what gets automated the people who’s jobs would have been replaced just get hired to create and maintain.
I'm an offshore electrician and make on average 250-300k a year in Australia. I work around 4 months of the year in total offshore with the rest of the time off.
holy shit! why not do another offshore for another 4 months? Make more than half a million
@@RandomRabbit007 the roster (time offshore) is 3 weeks on, 4 off, 3 on 5 off. Anything else is overtime at time and a half/double time
what car do you drive?
@@speedstr Ford Ranger, nothing fancy. Live in a average priced house, no extravagant purchases really.
I do go out now and again to very fancy restaurants but that's only once every 6 months 400$ for 2 of us.
I have most of my money invested in stocks and plan to retire at 50 years old max. I also have 3 small businesses on the side which between me and my partner we manage them ourselves.
Very Impressive mate. Do you need a lot of extra qualifiactions over a standard electrician? to attain a CSCS Gold card here in the UK takes around 2 years and wondering what extra steps are required...
I’m an ICU RN. Great money, but don’t, I repeat, DON’T do it for the money. It is emotionally and physically demanding, requiring compassionate and empathetic people to do it.
@Anonymous
There are definitely other avenues for nursing. Home Health is one that pays well. Care coordinator’s and Informatics are other ways to use a nursing degree without patient care.
I'm considering becoming a nurse. I did a lot of transportations as an EMT so I got to see a lot of different paths I could go. I definitely don't want to work in a nursing home. I am interested in working in a hospital possibly in the ER since it is the most familiar or ICU. Obviously those are both very different environments. I feel like in the ER it's a lot faster paced and your getting a ton of patients going in and out. ICU feels more organized, slower paced, and I usually see the patients in there are on multiple medications and on a vent.
@@briantaylor2636 Home Health _CAN_ pay well, but a lot of private companies under pay their nurses, so beware! Not to mention fraught with lots of paperwork. I'd recommend looking into Travel Nursing.
@Anonymous lots. Tons. You can do hospice, home health, manager, case worker. It's limitless
My partner is an ICU Nurse, and I give him SO MUCH CREDIT. I'm amazed by all that you do, yet keep such a strong head on your shoulder.
I'm a union construction worker making just shy of 100k a year. That doesn't count any dividend income or side jobs where I earn cash. No student debt, I even managed to pay off my house at 34. My body is on the line though I'll admit to that.
Literally every job I've had has been F tier.
Sorry to hear that, but honestly this cracked me up
So basically,
Anything that's tech-heavy goes straight to S Tier. Love the vid Shane!
And nursing
@@KD-vg2yn And that too, I agree.
He's trying to branch off because yeah any career advice is becoming literally just study tech or nursing forever and ever, I am sure it's getting boring for him too but it gets great clicks
most people should not do either lol. the nursing attrition rate is insane. I think it was like 33% of people leave the field after 2 years.
Tech is the best bet if you want to make money fast. Over the next 10 salaries will continue to hike upward. you're guaranteed to make over six-figures by your 2nd year in the field at big companies. Cybersecurity and software engineers are paid handsomely - product managers and data scientist too. Not to mention remote work is becoming the norm so you can work from anywhere.
as long as it's an honest living, they are all heroes to me.
FACTS 🤍
So cut out sales?
As a teacher, C is a generous tier. Would have put it in D or F myself
Yea honestly being a teacher means nothing. But being a good one is priceless. But in terms of making money tbh it usually sucks
@@dillo1594 true. A lot of the people I look up to most in life or have learned from and respected the most are past teachers of mine. College is probably alright, but high school and middle school are mostly thankless. There are plenty of asshole kids who just like to give them a hard time for no reason. Never understood and never will understand people like that.
Can you please elaborate, why being a teacher is bad?
I think the salary is pretty good for per hour rate considering they only work 171-181 days out of 365.
From what I’ve heard from my professors, teaching college/university, teaching online, teaching public high schoolers in honors/AP/IB/prep/etc, and teaching private high school are the best ways to be a teacher. One of them also recommended that if you wanted to teach English, history, social studies etc, you could also just get your masters in library science and use the teaching degree in another way, which is pretty cool
Thank you for making these! I'm struggling to choose a career path and your videos really help!
Best option is getting experience. Getting a job and getting to know the field is the best way to decide. Part of my personal story.
Want to know more?
Quick summary you did ask for -
Studied engineering. Worked a summer internship. Not for me. Dropped out.
Studied psychology. Wasn't approved for Masters... Couldn't become a Clinical Psychologist in my country. Useless degree in my case,this could be different if I didn't work full time as well.
Started working in a law firm as a clerk, worked my way up over 2 years... Decided to study law. Currently studying LLB and still working full-time as paralegal in conveyancing. Stil getting to know the field, but experience gave me a much clearer picture.
Main mistake I made was assuming the first person I met or a person in my family with a Carreer is where I would end up. Not at all, we are all individuals and create ourselves.
Maybe this means something to you, maybe not. Mean something to me and just writing made me reflect over my own life. Thanks if you read this far.
Goodluck, may God guide your steps and bless you.
My Wife is a nurse and I'm a Project Manager, and I gotta say, both are great careers with good pay and benefits. They are both fulfilling as well. Nursing (espeically bedside) is incredibly hard physically, emotionally, and mentally (my wife is so strong) so I'm glad I'm a PM (a very time oriented and stressful job but nothing like an ICU Nurse).
@@metalblizzard6024 Hey , can you explain your job little bit please? (Project Manajer) I am on my way to choose a career path and would like to know about your job too. Thank you.
@@xksgaming2469 effectively, when projects are created by my company they place a PM on them. These projects require management in the areas of resources, risk, team, and time. My job is to effectively fulfil the project incrementally and relay results to our customer. There's a lot more to it but that's the general idea.
Two things I learned from this video:
1. Tech heavy jobs are mostly S-tier
2. Super Mario rich af
Trade jobs are super easy to start your own business with if you have the experience in the field you want to start. The business model is super straight forward. It's literally just doing what you would be getting hired to do. Set your prices as you see fit. If the costumer thinks it too much then you adjust your prices if you need. They're desperately needed and that has a huge opportunity to set prices higher because there's no other choice for a cheaper service. A little scummy, sure but it's the truth. The labor shortage is in trade jobs, not tech...
Hell yea man! Just a 20 year old who finished my school portion for an electrician apprenticeship. Looking for positions to get the job experience part. Hopefully, it is still under the radar and there is job growth in the future.
@@watermelonhead6525 Yeah I'm about to start a school program for plumbing but i think electricians will be great for the future, you can fix the wiring on the robots that do the plumbing jobs lol
@@jacklasalle9575plumbing job market won’t be threatened by automation
@@jacklasalle9575plumbers are going to be replaced by robots? I’m about to go to school for plumbing. Should I choose something else?
@@Gage6263 Lol great question, I do trucking and transportation will definitely be first but plumbing should be human dominated for awhile like 10 years or so, but if you really want to future proof your career and do trades, probably electrician or millwright/mechanic would be best i suppose compared to plumbing, HVAC or welding, but even welding will go first plumbing and hvac should be safe for awhile, but where I live it takes 5 years to get your independent certification so it could take awhile to switch if you needed to. I wouldn't worry too much though its not as bad as transportation or welding, it should take awhile for robots to start plumbing commonly
Best answer to all of you out there:
#1: get any job and save $5000-$10 000 = 3-5 months in the states.
#2: Buy and resell anything online, Amazon, Shopify, Facebook market place, UA-cam Chanel. Try and push hard for 3-10 years. You will make money 300%.
#3: invest 70% of all that money made.
#4: follow your passion career or hobby.
#5: be happy with any results after.
This is actually really good advice.
sell online as in dropshipping?
I'm a chef and I make £42k a year. For most people, it's f tier all the way but if you have a passion for food and a thick skin it is definite A tier, S tier if you train in pastry cause we get paid too much
depends on what you look for, security guard and clerks are both super relaxing jobs and for some people this is S tier material.
Or maybe you worked construction your entire life, your body is breaking down and to you that shitty clerk job sounds like heaven.
Nice vid!, Been a software engineer for over 10 years now, it's a great career choice but during these times it seems like everyone wants to be one these days. Some would come from a comp sci degree, and majority would come from bootcamps which is mainly compromised of spending thousands of dollars to learn to make full stack todo / clone apps. Yes very harsh but it's the truth...
Yes it will become a worthless skill set when oversupply occurs. That’s why the old fashioned careers are the most recession resistant
Eg lawyer, doctors, medical workers, energy related worker s
@@laupeter4594 I concur, but at the same time it also varies in my opinion; if someone did want to get into tech, it should either be some sort of cyber security, cloud / AI engineering, or even a systems integration engineer, those options alone are very viable,
But I'm specifically referring to those who've learned website making and hoping to get a 6-figure job at google or something, and came straight out of a bootcamp where it gets seriously oversupplyed
@@laupeter4594 not laywers. medical workers and trades are the ones that are resistant
What do you think about data science?
@@laupeter4594 it wont be worthless cause good cs engineers are always a rare case similar to good doctors good lawyers etc
Waiting for that one awesome commentator who will timestamp everything to easily go back for reference 🙏🏻
Tech jobs are great. But also not great for long term for some people. Technology is advancing so fast you can easily find yourself outdated if you cant keep up. Its a career based on constant self improvement and learning that can be difficult for some people. I know its high paying but those salary are justified because you have to constantly learn and improve. Unlike IE. dentist doesn't have to learn a single thing more after med school. He could go his whole career without having to go through the stress of learning to be up to date. In tech, if you do this you'll be unemployable within a few years or a decade at most. In summary, this isn't the career for you if you hate learning( Hated school ).
This. Not to mention there is almost zero physical activity.
If you are like me and you spend all your free time playing OSRS and watching youtube spending your entire workday sitting on your ass would be the perfect way to become a fatass.
IT is overrated and most people interested in it are neckbeards or nerds.
You are better off doing something else like a trade or as you said dentist it is not like teeth will evolve and you will have to learn new skills.
Yep, I was lucky to reject Soft Dev (Cybersecurity) jobs (Government) and stick to system engineering which is not evolving as fast as programming per se. But I wouldn't just say technology. It's Software development... Remember, Engineer X is using a technology provided by software developers, they don't have to learn much on the newer versions.
An example would be a system for manufacturing services or something that's more commonly found out there would be IDEs like Unreal Engine. The developers whom are working on developing Unreal have a fast paced job, while the people who use Unreal to program/create are face paced, but not as face paced as the developers.
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I think it's worth pointing out that jobs being in demand=/=paying well. A hospital may have an average amount of doctors but be in absolutely dire need of patient transporters, and still no matter the need for transports the docs will make 6-10x more minimum. Just because someone in a field tells you, "oh we're SO desperate for xyz" does not mean the employers in that field are out there writing blank checks.
S+ Career: UA-camr (When you're producing content you love and that people love to see)
TLDR: tech field >>>>>> trade field > medical field >or= financial/accounting field > sales fields > others
> means “greater than”
>or= means “greater or equal to”
Thx
Your comment seems like you work in tech field?
Today I was literally wondering, hmm I wonder what the most common careers are, and later I go to youtube and boom I see you posted this. Very curious and excited to watch this, thanks Shane!
Truck driving is where its at cleared 98K last year as a hazmat driver hes right about not being home that much when you first start off but after about 18months the sky is the limit another thing about it is that you get what you put in Dont be lazy
Bigfacts, can be great for the right person
Another career to consider is paramedicine. Paramedic are in such high demand right now across the US, typically shorter education than an RN and annual salaries are showing upward trends to be comparable with RNs, not to mention if you are into the fire side of things, being a firefighter/paramedic has huge upside with amazing benefits almost everywhere and great upward mobility within most fire departments. Down sides being dealing with ungrateful patients, long hours, typical paramedic shifts are 12 hours long and fire/medic shifts can be anywhere from 10-48 hours long depending on where your are and what your call volume looks like with the average being around 24 hours on shift. BLS is showing a growth rate of around 7%, the median salary is also averaging EMTs which is drastically dragging it down. For comparison an EMT is to a paramedic what a CNA is to a RN, entry level to career level.
Side note BLS get your shit together and actually separate those out for people.
I don't think the salaries I saw, is relating to the cost of living like housing. $47,000 a year is not good if the area you live in is charging $3,000 a month in rent
In the beginning, you don’t get what you want, but you get what you need.
@@joseparra-ruiz821 speak for yourself mate, I’m not getting fleeced lol
As a truck driver (owner op)… you may gross 6 figures, but after fuel, maintenance… you might make 90k
Real Estate is insanely competitive
Something to take into account is the amount of overtime certain industries demand, which is where the difference in pay that BLS doesn't account for. You will make a lot more than stated on BLS, but the amount of overtime will kill your work/life balance. This is one of the many things that every responsible person needs to evaluate before choosing a career.
Industry saturation is a huge part to consider as well. I've seen too many people just look at pay and think they're set. The reality is that everyone is also going for the same thing, which makes entering the industry that much more competitive.
If you're not at the top of your class from a prestigious school, then the likelihood of you landing a great job that pays well is just that much more stacked against you.
The emergence of AI is going to put an unprecedented strain on computer based careers. So what looks lucrative and in demand right now may change dramatically in the years to come.
Trade jobs are always going to be in demand, and the cost of training is usually very cheap compared to a degree, and most times, employers are willing to train you on their dime.
As demand for trades increases (as it almost always does) the aging workforce will create an even higher demand for a depleting workforce which will bring higher wages in the years to come.
Who else continues watching his videos just see that tech is your only option if you want a good life.
I'm too dumb to be in tech industry, goddammit.
Well that’s not true at all lol
@@regularwannabe1085
Is there any other options? I'm so lost....
or you can just pick a c or d tier job and enjoy a less materialistic life?
@@jeanbob1481 unfortunately, we do need money to survive and thrive. It’s not about materialism, it’s about being able to live your life with enough money to be able to support yourself and enjoy the things that make life worth living
I just became a Business Operations Specialist on Monday. We'll see if it lives up to its A rank. 🙂
congratulations
So, how was it?
@sheridale75 how did it turn out
How's business operating going @sheridale75??
@@codyeastwood6217 It's a pretty good job for those with an interest in business, but I'm finding that my heart belongs in science.
I never consider "Saturation" as an obstacle, its just a remainder for me to work differently and more harder. Don't cry over saturation, because people till this date couldn't define it, just fxcking do it
Gonna study accounting! Thanks, Shane!!!
I'm a nurse who has worked worked with many traveler nurses over the last 8 years.
Traveler nurses do make good money but what isn't talked about is that they could be responsible for their own healthcare and retirement.
These $5,000 to $10,000 a week traveler contracts were around during the early stages of Covid-19 but as more nurses entered the travel nursing space there's more supply thus traveler contracts returning to what they were pre-pandemic, even when the variants were running rampant.
Also, as soon as Covid-19 hospitalizations declined, we cut the Traveler contracts immediately and they can't do anything about it because they're contracted employees and not under any type of union protection.
No, you didn't cut them immediately. They completed their contracted term of employment, which is legally binding, then if your hospital didn't renew their travel contracts they simply, ya know, travelled to another hospital and got a different contract. The nursing shortage isn't resolving anytime soon. Travel wages will go down, but remain high for years to come.
@@Anonymous-ld7je what were travel RN wages pre-Covid and what do you think they'll be now?
@@Anonymous-ld7je Mr Wayne told you that they cut their contract immediately and you contradicting him. It seems kind of silly to do best position to tell you how it actually went down. Maybe they have conditional contracts where they can stop the contract as they see fit? Never thought about that? All contracts are built the same of course the hospital is going to design a contract to benefit them.
I appreciate you taking the time to make these videos Shane!
i would much rather have my office job than ever work in retail ever again. i'm remote and the pay is much better! surprised to see it ranked under the nightmare job of cashier.
Shane hummus video every day to update my goals it helped me too much thanks man !!!
I'm an RN, and I couldn't be prouder to be one.
45k USD a year sounds real nice as a vehicle technician (mechanic). Where I am in the uk the average is around 33k USD
No administrative/legal professional careers? I recently graduated from a paralegal program and I have a huge range of options for places to work. Everything from private law firms, corporate legal teams, and administrative government agencies are viable options. The pay is really good (about $50,000 per year) considering it only requires minimal education, and a 17% increase in demand over the next decade makes this career at least "C" or even "B" tier in my mind.
man u worked really hard on this one , appreciate it
Hey Shane, great video as usual! Any chance you could make a video on bioinformatics / statistical biology please?
For undergrad? No point, go as general as possible for undergrad. Either bio or math.
@@swbrl2843 No, for MSc / PhD. I'm already in my 3rd year of genetics undergrad.
Bioinformatics has huge future scope, dude. I don't need to tell you this. Whether it's drug discovery, diagnosis or even human enhancement (with CRISPR and the like), it's all bioinformatics. But that's my understanding do your own research.
Can you make one analyzing the inherent career value it has to society...? This would be a great blueprint for a much needed implementation of meritocracy.
You should bring back your top 100 worst degrees video that for some reason you removed over a year ago. I still remember one of the top 5 of the worst degrees in the 100 was puppetry, that video.
All of your videos are amazing but this is your best yet. One of the best channels UA-cam has to offer.
One small correction is that cooks who work in higher end restaurants actually don't make more. Essentially they are paying for the opportunity to work at a nicer place, learn and improve their resume.
LPN as F tier is definitely wrong. 6 months of school and can make $35/hr
i think his parameters werent base on salary alone, but more so on the future growth of the title. LPN/Lvns can make very good money but the duties and requirements of advancement is neccasary base on them taking care of peoples lives. While they make good money from the start they cap out later. On the ROI, I believe schooling takes on average 12-14 months, but the cost of some programs cost way too much for what its worth. Better to get the prereqs out of the way and go straight into an RN program. Also profit schools target the majority into these programs, while what they learn in anatomy and physiology isnt accreddited if they're planning to become an RN. Regardless of the cons, I believe there are many pros as well depending on life circumstances. Its good career if you just need to get started in a well paying job and have a lot of time on your hands to advance on the side.
Thanks Shane. I just finished my linguistics bachelors program and am going into my double major for CS, so I've been looking into jobs that would get me through college for the next 3 years without interfering with my school schedule. You've given me some good ideas
Cybersecurity or computer science
I make $82,000 a year with a strong union, full benefits and two months off in the summer. If you know how to do being a teacher right it isn't a C tier at all.
Teaching is honestly just so not worth it, the disrespect is unreal. You are treated like between an all out enemy of your children or someone to be distrusted "will that guy either diddle my kids or try to turn them trans? today"
Most students pick up on these vibes and to them you are just an obstacle to get the next grade to please their parents with an endgame of college
Nobody appreciates knowledge, they just know they need to know things so they can get the job that buys them things they can use to get what they want in life
Being a teacher can be pretty awesome like you said if you are all privleged and shit, if you know how to play the game. You're job is hilariously top 0.0001% though of course you think its S tier.
He said assistant
Teacher is really downplayed in our society. Imho, a high-school teacher is probably one of the hardest job in the world because you have to manage and teach 50+ people at the same time.
And those people are in their puberty and widest, the hardest age group to manage imho.
I would rate a high-school teacher position at high as a manager in a corporation.
We def need to pay teachers more.
@@HeavyMetal-jy4vj That's why only go to teach in an Elite top school.
Nice! I’m an auditor so seeing this reassured me I’m In a good place 👍🏻
Glad you enjoyed it Michael!
Electricians S tier was waiting for for that… that’s my guy
Haha you got it.
What about architects and designers?
Hey! Love the vids they are so helpful but I was wondering if you could possibly do a vid on careers for vets? When I finish my 4 years in the Air Force, I’ll have an associates CCAF in aviation (technician for drones), different certs, and possibly soon a bachelors as well! Any advice or potential careers 🤷🏾I feel lost
As a university student, I’m pessimistic about my future career. I just don’t know what I can do and the competition is so harsh 😭
Life is hard, I’m sorry
When you set your mind to something and find a passion the career will follow
Sometimes I just don't want to be alive...
@@frog6054 ikr
@@frog6054 same but emm let’s look forward to tomorrow and do sth positive 💗
Lol my parents are an accountant and nurse. I have a bachelor's degree looking into either one of them, healthcare administration, law school, medical school, or being a pilot. Yeah. My mind had been split. I remember back in the spring of 2018 when I fell off a little and got under the females (instead of not with any and then on top of one) and psychologically out of it due to many things including my issues with my parents and my brother (and their individual issues).
Physicians should be S tier; depending on the specialty, doctors are guaranteed 200K+ salaries.
Not for the average person but for some it’s definitely a great option
@@ShaneHummus It isn't meant for the average person but the job satisfaction is often unparalleled and so are the salaries, I was confused as I thought you were ranking them financially. Yes, we do work our asses off but it isn't that tough to make 300-400k.
@@ShaneHummus hey shane , i plan on majoring in logistics engineering /management , ( it's actually the same thing ) what are your thoughts on this degree ?
@@shrirammahabal8900 Physicians actually have relatively low levels of job satisfaction, 70% of physicians wouldn't recommend the career to friends or family so I'm not sure where you get unparalleled job satisfaction from.
@@aahsimovieprojects I'm a student doctor myself, most of my friends are doctors too, we absolutely hate it, but the job satisfaction is undeniable.
Hi Shane,
Can you do a video on how good is a career as a management analyst. This is a career you never touched on your MIS major video and I think you should cover it
Hi! Thanks for the awesome video! Where would you rank an Aerospace Engineering masters degree/job ? That's what I'm aiming to study next year!
Will this have a part 2? Great content btw!
Yes, because this part included a lot of jobs where you dont need a college degree, a part 2 with more jobs after college (bachelors / masters degrees) would be awesome!
This part was still really quite interesting though, thanks Shane!
Business/finance, tech and engineering seem to be the way to go
seems like jobs that require a degree pay more. thats a surprise
@@97mesut ha yes indeed, the longer the education the higher the pay it seems, although it varies and they weren't all created equal. Wonder why that is🤔🤣
Great content! Keep going especially about IT Careers.
Great video Shane! Respectfully request an updated video on Math degrees. I'm majoring in mathematical science with a minor in data science.
Hey Shane! Thank you so much for your videos, they just keep getting better and better!
Could you please talk about Dietitians and Nutritionists? They weren’t mentioned in this video and it worried me :”)
You rarely talk about them and I wish you would :””)
it's never too late to quit your current job and switch to tech
People never talk about independent health / medicare insurance agent/ (sure you can sell life but I don’t much) it’s extremely lucrative and you own your business…but it does have a high barrier to entry! You have to be pretty smart and very good with the computer - everything online. Lots of schooling too- and It takes a couple years to build your book. But in 2/3 years you can be over 100k easy…! It’s very rewarding and you can do it remote and set your own schedule which is awesome
Don’t work for someone else as they take 50% or your commissions where as if you work for an FMO they don’t..what you earn is all yours
I thought about this... How do you enter this field? I took a Medicare and a Medical billing course with your comment in mind. But I'm not sure how to get into this.
I love how a lot of people are saying SWE isn't S Tier because it's becoming competitive as if even shit SWE jobs in a lot of cases aren't better than a majority of the other jobs on this list lol. Study for interviews and make huge amounts of money or be punished with....a fairly comfortable job making well above the average US salary but not like an ungodly amount more. Oh the horror lol
Right. Like it's competitive for a reason lol. Spending 4 hours on a single bug is less stressful for me than 30 minutes with an angry customer haha
And even so, it's not an oversaturated field, contrary to what the charlatans would have you believe. There's always demand for good developers - just not always demand for either bad and/or entry-level ones. In fact, there's at least 100,000 - 1 million tech positions open in the US now, according to the Department of Labor.
What do you think about ai? Will they take jobs
Thank you ,bro. This video is really needed for beginners in job environment. 💗👍👏
Could be a random request but considering you are in healthcare, can you do a video on how the nurse Randonda Vaughts situation will impact the quality of going into healthcare as a career
Got a degree in culinary arts and hotel/restaurant management years ago and what a waste of time. I am currently working on a degree in data science, if i am going work my butt off then i want to get paid for it.
Best of luck!
tks you to make these. It would be helped me a lot
Project manager: *cries silently in the corner*
I don't think Licensed practical nursing or vocational nursing should be in the F tier...
They can make a ton of money without having a lot of loans.
@@christophermunoz2568 right but they can work in SNFs and home health. And they are hired a lot.
Lawyer is a bad career for someone who wants to be rich, has a useless degree and doesn’t know what to do, and is pressured by society(parents, family, etc.) overall it is a good career if you know why you are getting yourself into and have a passion.
Question, how hard is it to get a job in us for law
@@idkwhy77 depends on the school you go to, how the economy performs, and what regional market you want to practice in. General tip: get into a tier 1 or at least top 75 school. Schools outside of these often have sub-50% employment outcomes. Also, be sure to consult law school transparency before going to a law school.
Shane..
Pls do a video about supply chain, logistics and innovations job lists..
Highly requested.
🙏🏻🙏🏻
Starting my Software Engineer job June 1!
trades are the most important jobs in the country
Just started a plumbing job, flat rate means we can charge 509 dollars for 35$ of parts and half an hours work
amazing video Shane! top tier value
Appreciate it David!
Another thing to note is that it’s not just physical labor jobs that cause damage to the body. Sitting in a chair for 8+ hours each day while staring at a computer screen is also not healthy.
What about geosciences related jobs? Ex surveying, GIS, cartography, etc
geo insurance pays well
You simply can't find content like this anywhere else.
Appreciate it
You should do a technology(Computer) related job with no programming because so many are looking for it. I don't think people know the difference between a systems manager and a programmer and so on.
Why no programming?
@@THATGUY-yf5rp Why I'm changing my major from comp sci to information systems. Programming is interesting but I don't enjoy it enough to do it all the time.
@@codeblue3490 what is information systems about. I wanted to do comp sci but my parents adviced me to do comp eng because of flexibility.
@@THATGUY-yf5rp Well because there are people who are really into technology but hate programming. So it gets confusing for them, like what to select.
Management levels in IT will do, take MBA, you only need to boss around the developers and deliver projects within deadline
Just a criticism but I kinda thought the jobs of the future would have some idea on the future of the career for example data clerk , car mechanic cashier and accountants.
Anything that pays less than 6-figures shouldn't be higher than C-tier
This is false. Remember it's all about location too. You can get paid 100k in NYC and you are defiantly poor. But the same job offers 70k in a location 2hrs from NYC and you're officially way richer than that person winning 100k in NYC. My job for example usually pays around 65k-90k in suburban locations, but the exact same job on cities have a salary of 120k+. It's ambiguous.
Average salary is just not the right way. There are fields like Digital Marketing where many people are earning peanuts and many are literally earning in millions.
As a licensed CNA I promise you it is not a B; more like an F. You’re on your feet all day. You deal with the most nasty/gross and labor intensive parts of nursing. You get zero amount of the respect nurses get. And you get less payed than a McDonald’s employee. It’s a necessary job, but is way underpaid and underappreciated. Which is why I ended up leaving the field to pursue other things.
Light truck -> c tier
Next to all types of teachers
Guess it’s time I can quit my course
RN...S tier 3 years of education
LVN ... F tier 2 years of education
What gives?
Right
Alot of these jobs that require no HS diploma suck which is to be expected but i work at amazon 20.50/hr with 2 years of experience only tier 1 employee and it's super easy (But repetitive) i see alot of 14 and 13/hr here and it makes me wanna cry but then again im from California so i guess it evens itself out xD
the building is suppose to be a part time work one so working past 8 hours a day counts as overtime as well as special events where overtime is doubled instead of the usual 1.5x pay BUT im too lazy to work those, its not uncommon to hear people bring home 1200 USD a week during those events. but hey it's just an entry level job atleast! BUT growth potential within the company is rare, don't expect to move up even if you work like no tomorrow, leadership tends to chose "Favorites"
Shane did it again !
Hey, i'm a videographer/video editor with good education, and I'm wondering what your personal opinion is on the income average of this job?
11:28 you can make 4-6,000 a week as a travel LPN. Not F tier
That’s what I’m saying! Can’t believe it was F tier.
You should have had the list in the description.
Farmers are the most needed people on the planet.
What about writers? They seem to be growing quite well with new projects being thought up every week
Im 35 yr old Police Liuetenant for fed i make $105k not including shift premium and Overtime. I get every other weekend off. Up to the rank of Captain I don't need a degree.
Awesome, thanks for sharing!
Idk how you put LPN/LVNs in F tier when they can make a lotnof money…
Me neither. My mom is a traveling LPN and makes $65 an hr right now
finally careers video!
A video like this dedicated to individual industries would be cool like just healthcare or tech careers.
Awesome video!
Thank you Chris 🙏
Obviously is varies from state to state but here in Tennessee carpenters are making 6 figures a year right now
Do you have other videos about Real Estate?