Take it from someone who knows and served in the military and has been around , there is nothing wrong with getting a Business Management or Business Admin degree it's good to have a broad array of options because if you want to work in human resources you can, accounting you can, you also can just get a certificate in accounting/finance attach with your business Management/admin degree . for example what if you get tired of finance ? what if you can only get jobs working in a bank ? if you want to switch it up and try something else it will be more of a hassle as oppose to just having the 2 degrees i said early because honestly its hard to say if you will still like what you are doing 5 years from now you might want to switch it up? maybe go a little bit into tech also
Take it from somone who studied that general garbage and got 0 real skills or proficiency, its better to have a specialty because then you actually have something to offer. Admins may get exposure to certain topics or subjects but barely knowing a thing about a lot of areas is useless compared to someone who is excellent at one subject.
@@newnewme6470i didnt. Admin majors have no actual skills. Its only applicable if you work in a small business and have to know just enough to get by. In a real job your limited skills and specialty is a liability
Business Administration is a proper multi tasking degree ! You can take side by side accounting , or any skill degree in order to increase chances for hiring on priority.
To the person who says Admins have no skills that’s a lie lol. Most my CEOs for my rehab hospitals have their business administration and they are very intelligent
that's true, every job posts nowadays mostly requires a Business administration or just a business related degree. this guy in the video is chatting honestly.
@@AidenYusonot at all. Business admin major always had a reputation similar to management. They're general fields with 0 advantage over other business related majors. I studied admin and then switched to finance. Companies looking for interns wanted people with actual skills. What unique skill do admins have? I work at top 5 bank now and make 6 figs so I would switch 1 million times over
I hate hearing bullshit about degrees that are supposedly "too broad" if it's broad, it's better, it means that you can do many more jobs than degrees that are either limited, or degrees/diplomas that pigeon-hole you to one specific job type. That's the draw back with "specialized degrees", what if you do a "specialized degree" but later on after doing it, you either no longer like it or worse, the job scope and demand for that job is or gets extremely low, what then? With a broader degree, you can do much more because you learn a great deal about different job types, not only that, you also learn soft skills and information that can easily be tranferred to almost any other job type, such as time management, people management, negotiation, critical thinking, etc. And even if, and that's a huge if, these broad degrees become a problem, you do still have the option to specialize in one field, such as Accounting, Finance, HR, Marketing, Law, Information Systems Management, Operations Management, etc, the sky is literally the limit, all things considered, Business Managenent degree/diplomas are the best way to go.
Doesnt matter what you do. Its not about the degree its about the person. Many grow during their colleges or studies but most importantly it matters what you do with yourself and how you create opportunities
@@ivand0007 in order for your major or anything of that sort to bring about benefits it's still dependent on how the person uses it and that lies solely on what they did with themselves
I like to think of business admin as a foundation to specialize in. If your specialty doesn't work you still have a platform to stand on to get a mid level or entry level job in pretty much whatever industry you want
The reason why you learn about financial management, accounting, marketing management, business law, and quantitative analysis is because an MBA graduate is expected to have a foundational knowledge in all these areas. MBAs need to understand everything about a business. If you want to go into finance, pursue an MBA with a concentration in finance. MBA programs are versatile because there are so many different areas to concentrate in. I have an MBA with a concentration in Digital Innovation and Information Systems and I'm in a Doctor of Business Administration program with a concentration in Information Systems and Enterprise Resource Management. Get an MBA.
the reason why I’m looking into a bachelors in business admin is exactly because it is broad and diverse. I plan on working for myself for the rest of my life and mainly am looking for a degree that would help me learn the fundamentals of business. what would you recommend to someone who is getting their education for their own knowledge in my shoes?❤
exactly going back to school, I took a year break im 22 now I don't want to work a job I want to work for myself and grow buisnesses I feel like buinsess education will help.
It being broad is exactly the problem, no one puts out job ads for a business administrator. Study specific. I studied marketing and work in marketing and I love it so far. If you can choose please please please choose based on what's in demand in the long term, studying something broad is useless
@@natasharules6737 I am 21 and a business administration associate degree student what are some good Business bachelors programs that are good and in long term? I hear a lot of people talking about accounting.
@Matthew accounting is the best business major especially if you aim to become a Chartered Accountant. I will link a video on the best business majors, the best one is information science it pays well and is the least regretted. My sister does it and it involves management and software (coding)
Finance is definitely the way to go. When i was an admin major and i couldn't find internships. I had no actual skills to offer to an employer. I switched to finance in junior year and actually had something to offer in terms of my skillset. Anything an administration or management major can do, so can a finance major. Thats just how it is. Having a specialization helped me leverage my skills to get into a top 5 bank. For the people saying admin gives you more flexibility later, well by then do you really want to go back to grad school? Especially knowing less than the people who stuck by their choice? You'll be behind them too.
Being in top management and also having a masters in business, i suggest you take MBA and focus on 2-3 items under its umbrella. General scope courses is very good if you know how to use it at your ADVANTAGE. Be productive and do not focus on careers that can be replaced by AI in years and decades to come such as marketing, accounting etc.
I did my undergraduate degree in business administration, but it was hard to find a good career opportunity. After months of networking, I finally got a job offer from an aerospace engineering company, but it was out in the middle of nowhere. I decided to go back to school for a masters in business administration but chose to specialize in organizational science, where I gained a lot of knowledge about human resources and business consulting, as well as broadened my understanding of other aspects of business (corporate finance, information technology, supply chain management, etc). Now I am working towards my Doctorate in Business Administration. I guess not getting a good career easily was a good thing because it gave me the opportunity to get more educated sooner than expected. I also finally got a good career opportunity at the same time. So I guess this guy is right. Unless you want to go the more difficult route like I did.
Honestly I agree with you and im also miltary but im also educated and I know experience in business administration matters pick something that makes more than your enterperuship businesses that usually bring in 3k to 4k a month I agree that its broad and also doesn't make much money pick something such as "finance and accounting" like you mentioned focus on things that are not as common I live in California and I know alot of non miltary students had a hard time finding jobs that just graduated from Cal poly Pomona. This is the reason I would personally stick to Medical field, Engineering or trade school. I have a BS degree in Public Health Administration. I regret getting an Adminstration degree. I'm back in college now to get a more hands on degree that pays more.
I work in healthcare and MOST of our entire senior leadership has MBA and started with Bachelors in Business Administration. Most of our CEOs did not have a focus. It depends on the route you want to go and where you want to land. Now positions like our hospital Controllers (Chief Finance Officers) have degrees in accounting/ finance. But our CEO has Masters Business Admin so just depends on focus. Me I switched to Bachelors of Business focus on Marketing since I use to work the floor but now am a marketing liason. But still with this focus I can reach corporate level but it depends on current role and future goals on what’s best
agree. I'm now on master in international business and I just recently opened my mind because I'm now looking for a real future job. I realised that a lot of job required a specific skill, such as finance, or data, computing (for business analyst). I want that job so much but I realise that I'm not qualified..even after my master, I have to take a class for certificate to have a real specification. What's good for learning business is just that I learn everything under business but that's it. I don't really have a specific skill in one area
@shahirrahman6706 yes. For example I want to work as a business analyst, but it requires programming, and I have to understand using SQL, PowerBI, Phyton. These kind of things I never learn at my master degree because my major is not specified, it's too broad and general. So what I can do is taking a course either online or offline to have a certificate and then I can work on what i aim. I regretted choosing international business major. Should have chosen something specific
@@reginamarthalia7176 thanks for the reply I think you can learn programming and the data analyst softwares on your own from UA-cam or online so you could try those out Also I'm planning on Studying internal business for my bachelor's would it be a good idea and I could take something more specific for my master's?
@@shahirrahman6706 yes but by just learning from UA-cam, I don't get any real proof/diploma/certificate, which is needed to apply for jobs. If you are planning to study IB for bachelor, go for it and for master, I suggest take a specific one
No business degree that’s “broad” is bad but business degrees that are too specific are usually the bad ones. With an ever changing world and uncertainty in many areas having a general business degree can ensure your happiness as you can pick the industry you want to be in at any time. Your only a couple certifications away if you want to specialise or you can get on the job training through work experience. Either way with a general degree you will never be out of work it’s the equivalent to what Nurses are to the healthcare industry! RN’s scope of practice is broad but you don’t hear people complaining.
Probably dont listen to young people on matters like that. Go and listen to someone who has the degree you r thinking about getting and has some work experience. Someone who knows how useful a certain degree will be in the long run
Depends on student You got a smart A student who is gifted can major in art history at harvard and a get a job as director of finance accounting real estate or whatever because the guy was studying extra stuff while taking a easy road to his degree If you are a c student at state school you better get CPA and masters degree in accounting
As an upcoming doctor of business administration, this is absolutely incorrect. Listen to this if you want to learn to be an entry-level practitioner. If you want to learn to be a manager who makes it far PAST an entry-level analyst position, learn more than one skill. And, no you don't pick your own classes for business administration. In BA, you will manage people with a finance degree ten years post-graduation. It's a MANAGEMENT degree. So, what do you want to do? Sell products, analyze numbers, or lead people? A Business Administration degree is a type of degree, like a bachelor of science or bachelor of arts. You're comparing oranges to apples. Do you get it? Business Administration degree in Marketing. You have a bachelor's in Marketing. Do you understand? Yeah it's general, it's not a major...
Shouldn’t we be asking someone a little further along in their academic career? I mean, most CEOs have MBAs. Management IS a role in business. You can learn to be a practitioner with a finance degree, or you can be that guy’s manager with a business administration degree focusing on finance. If you want to own a startup: a finance degree isn’t going to give you those skills, a business administration degree will, though. It’s two different things for people who have different goals.
As an MBA grad, it's best they just have finance as their concentration. If you want to work somewhere else or even end up becoming an entrepreneur you'll need to know everything else too with the help of AI.
@@MI64SH I think so, after working in corporate America for 15yrs I think the MIS degree is very effective program. One of the few that actually teaches you skills for employment. The goal is learning how to use business systems, analyze information, process implementation, process improvement and reporting to management is the main objective. Generally, those are the main skills you need to focus on. Doing so will allow you to build relationships with Executives there by allowing you to move quickly into respected positions making 100k very easily and grow throughout your career as they come available. Knowing eps softwares, analysis techniques and soft skills presentation skills are your bread and butter to a strong successful career in business no matter the company, no matter the industry. The goal is the same like previously mentioned. Many people spent half their careers developing relationships and getting to a place where they can grow and develop. Many companies have internal training, so school won't teach you everything but the problem is most people waste the first 5 to 10yrs learning the corporate game, or they end up stuck in a entry job for 10 or 15 yrs figuring this out. I'm one of them. I returned to college after doing research on degree programs that actually teach you effective skills for good business employment. Easy jobs to look for are program analyst, project management and or frontend systems management, process improvement, oversight and quality control. These are easy 100k jobs. Most degrees don't touch all these areas but the MIS Degree does.
I’m 32, just got my GED because I want to work on a degree. I’m obviously starting out with an associates but I’m dead locked about what to study. I currently work in a restaurant as a relief/ training manager and thinking about studying business management will probably change major after 2 years. Any advice?
For me I want to know in general how business operates. Wouldn’t this be great for people who have a specialized skill already and want to make a business? Like let’s say your chef but want to start your own food network or restaurant. Wouldn’t you need a general crash course in business?
Lol this guy doesn't know what he is talking about. I've recruited for some of the top finance people in Chicago, and any Business degree or relevant work experience was enough to get your foot in the door. I hired for VP level and above vacancies at Finance and Tech companies, starting salaries at $250k and up. I can tell you that hiring managers are not looking at Business Administrations and saying "that's too broad". Instead, figure out the type of work and skills you want to have. But if you're 19, don't restrict yourself to one practice so quickly. Try multiple disciplines of business until you find the one to settle down in when you've been at 3-4 companies.
If they doing admin then sure stick with it, but Its nothing wrong with Business Admin, I have my BS and getting my MBA, my director of my department actually only preferred people with BA degrees and when I left I went on to make even more work Public health administration. Finance will give you a specialization sure but if you only plan to do the paper side and minimum math then BA is fine. Accounting will be pretty mid earning if you don’t go on to get your CPA. My point is there are plenty of good jobs you can get with the BA it all just comes down to the person.
Probably he didn’t go to college 😂 Business degree is one of easy to get a job. And if you get MBA, it makes boost your salary and allow to go higher position
I think this guy is completely wrong. I see a lot of management jobs in all areas making very good salaries in all type of industries and departments with this Business Administration. It is broad so you increase your chances of being hired anywhere at almost every department and being a manager
@@alejandroomaldonadoo8826i like be to analytical, I know a little about cameras but no one will take me seriously bc I shot rap video, I like cars . I hate sales commissions jobs
I have an MBA and a good paying job. I went with the general Business Administration route. Doing a general business degree is not bad, in my opinion, because you learn a bit of everything about business science and it allows you more opportunities than it would with a concentration specific business degree like finance.
He is 100% correct! Finance or accounting is the way to go regarding a business degree. If you major in general business, the first question will be, how many hours of accounting did you take? I know, I majored in finance. Early in my career, that question came up often. Also for those saying it locks you in, I disagree. I’ve done accounting, supply chain, project management, and banking. I’m currently an analyst and love it. I’ve learned so much over the years and that finance degree was my way in.
LMAO yeah that’s your opinion bud 👍 it depends on the persona and what work ethics they can bring to the table. Don’t matter what your studying if your good at the job then your going to get payed well no matter what. Lol don’t listen to this bogus.
Graduated with a BBA in Finance. Worked in Business Consulting at a Big 4 firm and I now work in insurance administration for federal government contractors.
Bad advice, you can't focus on 1 thing in business. It's not about finance only. BM is has all of it. SALES, LAW, FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING,ENTREPRENEURSHIP AND BUSINESS MANAGEMENT....
@NashTheo well I have 🤣🤣too bad I have, you should think about it like this, these things correspond that's why we learn them, doing BM doesn't limit you, that's why it's a good thing, now you must be a one trick pony. It's 2024 now, not 1997.
@@mukeloncube410 idk what your experience is but I graduated with a BBA in Finance. My videos are based on personal experience from things I have done or seen in the industry as a whole. This is a Finance/Business channel.
Take it from someone who knows and served in the military and has been around , there is nothing wrong with getting a Business Management or Business Admin degree it's good to have a broad array of options because if you want to work in human resources you can, accounting you can, you also can just get a certificate in accounting/finance attach with your business Management/admin degree . for example what if you get tired of finance ? what if you can only get jobs working in a bank ? if you want to switch it up and try something else it will be more of a hassle as oppose to just having the 2 degrees i said early because honestly its hard to say if you will still like what you are doing 5 years from now you might want to switch it up? maybe go a little bit into tech also
Preach!
I really loved this comment!
Take it from somone who studied that general garbage and got 0 real skills or proficiency, its better to have a specialty because then you actually have something to offer. Admins may get exposure to certain topics or subjects but barely knowing a thing about a lot of areas is useless compared to someone who is excellent at one subject.
@@alltheworldsastage4785no
@@newnewme6470i didnt. Admin majors have no actual skills. Its only applicable if you work in a small business and have to know just enough to get by. In a real job your limited skills and specialty is a liability
I still think business management is a safer choice than my previous major psychology for me personally so idk
Lol you & me both…so let’s stop watching theses videos and overthinking it 💀
@@joanasi25 samee💀
@sunnissi6026 You mean those who get a degree in business management or administration management end up working in a call center? If so, why? 😮
Same, but I think it's better to specialize.
Business Administration is a proper multi tasking degree ! You can take side by side accounting , or any skill degree in order to increase chances for hiring on priority.
No you don't 😂
Admins have 0 skills
Exactly!
To the person who says Admins have no skills that’s a lie lol. Most my CEOs for my rehab hospitals have their business administration and they are very intelligent
@@larenzhudson8614 Do you have hospitals?
Business admin can be a safer though because you can qualify for a variety or jobs and work in many different industries
Exactly, and you can still do a specialization.
that's true, every job posts nowadays mostly requires a Business administration or just a business related degree. this guy in the video is chatting honestly.
Not at all. Whatever a business admin major is qualified for, a finance major is just as qualified for.
@@alltheworldsastage4785youll be behind people who specialized
@@AidenYusonot at all. Business admin major always had a reputation similar to management. They're general fields with 0 advantage over other business related majors. I studied admin and then switched to finance. Companies looking for interns wanted people with actual skills. What unique skill do admins have? I work at top 5 bank now and make 6 figs so I would switch 1 million times over
I hate hearing bullshit about degrees that are supposedly "too broad" if it's broad, it's better, it means that you can do many more jobs than degrees that are either limited, or degrees/diplomas that pigeon-hole you to one specific job type.
That's the draw back with "specialized degrees", what if you do a "specialized degree" but later on after doing it, you either no longer like it or worse, the job scope and demand for that job is or gets extremely low, what then?
With a broader degree, you can do much more because you learn a great deal about different job types, not only that, you also learn soft skills and information that can easily be tranferred to almost any other job type, such as time management, people management, negotiation, critical thinking, etc.
And even if, and that's a huge if, these broad degrees become a problem, you do still have the option to specialize in one field, such as Accounting, Finance, HR, Marketing, Law, Information Systems Management, Operations Management, etc, the sky is literally the limit, all things considered, Business Managenent degree/diplomas are the best way to go.
Doesnt matter what you do. Its not about the degree its about the person.
Many grow during their colleges or studies but most importantly it matters what you do with yourself and how you create opportunities
Most people dont put in the work outside so no, your major is your best bet at gaining skills. Its not just the person
@@ivand0007 in order for your major or anything of that sort to bring about benefits it's still dependent on how the person uses it and that lies solely on what they did with themselves
@@ivand0007 either way you look at it you have to someway fix or better your self cause in the mind that's where it all starts.
Facts don’t let school stop you from learning.
I like to think of business admin as a foundation to specialize in. If your specialty doesn't work you still have a platform to stand on to get a mid level or entry level job in pretty much whatever industry you want
The reason why you learn about financial management, accounting, marketing management, business law, and quantitative analysis is because an MBA graduate is expected to have a foundational knowledge in all these areas. MBAs need to understand everything about a business. If you want to go into finance, pursue an MBA with a concentration in finance. MBA programs are versatile because there are so many different areas to concentrate in. I have an MBA with a concentration in Digital Innovation and Information Systems and I'm in a Doctor of Business Administration program with a concentration in Information Systems and Enterprise Resource Management.
Get an MBA.
the reason why I’m looking into a bachelors in business admin is exactly because it is broad and diverse. I plan on working for myself for the rest of my life and mainly am looking for a degree that would help me learn the fundamentals of business. what would you recommend to someone who is getting their education for their own knowledge in my shoes?❤
exactly going back to school, I took a year break im 22 now I don't want to work a job I want to work for myself and grow buisnesses I feel like buinsess education will help.
@@diaadrenaline187 i'm 22 too lol
It being broad is exactly the problem, no one puts out job ads for a business administrator. Study specific. I studied marketing and work in marketing and I love it so far. If you can choose please please please choose based on what's in demand in the long term, studying something broad is useless
@@natasharules6737 I am 21 and a business administration associate degree student what are some good Business bachelors programs that are good and in long term? I hear a lot of people talking about accounting.
@Matthew accounting is the best business major especially if you aim to become a Chartered Accountant. I will link a video on the best business majors, the best one is information science it pays well and is the least regretted. My sister does it and it involves management and software (coding)
Finance is definitely the way to go. When i was an admin major and i couldn't find internships. I had no actual skills to offer to an employer. I switched to finance in junior year and actually had something to offer in terms of my skillset. Anything an administration or management major can do, so can a finance major. Thats just how it is. Having a specialization helped me leverage my skills to get into a top 5 bank. For the people saying admin gives you more flexibility later, well by then do you really want to go back to grad school? Especially knowing less than the people who stuck by their choice? You'll be behind them too.
Hello
True. It’s the reason why I now am working on getting my Masters in business analytics
I want to become business analyst too but im majoring in IT business management.
Being in top management and also having a masters in business, i suggest you take MBA and focus on 2-3 items under its umbrella. General scope courses is very good if you know how to use it at your ADVANTAGE. Be productive and do not focus on careers that can be replaced by AI in years and decades to come such as marketing, accounting etc.
I did my undergraduate degree in business administration, but it was hard to find a good career opportunity. After months of networking, I finally got a job offer from an aerospace engineering company, but it was out in the middle of nowhere. I decided to go back to school for a masters in business administration but chose to specialize in organizational science, where I gained a lot of knowledge about human resources and business consulting, as well as broadened my understanding of other aspects of business (corporate finance, information technology, supply chain management, etc). Now I am working towards my Doctorate in Business Administration. I guess not getting a good career easily was a good thing because it gave me the opportunity to get more educated sooner than expected. I also finally got a good career opportunity at the same time. So I guess this guy is right. Unless you want to go the more difficult route like I did.
Your situation is just one example, most people have a different experience.
bc you didnt know what you wanted to do.
I believe you are completely right.. Thank you.
It's good but think twice again
Honestly I agree with you and im also miltary but im also educated and I know experience in business administration matters pick something that makes more than your enterperuship businesses
that usually bring in 3k to 4k a month
I agree that its broad and also doesn't make much money pick something such as "finance and accounting" like you mentioned focus on things that are not as common
I live in California and I know alot of non miltary students had a hard time finding jobs that just graduated from Cal poly Pomona.
This is the reason I would personally stick to Medical field, Engineering or trade school. I have a BS degree in Public Health Administration. I regret getting an Adminstration degree. I'm back in college now to get a more hands on degree that pays more.
Tell me you are boring without telling me u r boring
I work in healthcare and MOST of our entire senior leadership has MBA and started with Bachelors in Business Administration. Most of our CEOs did not have a focus. It depends on the route you want to go and where you want to land. Now positions like our hospital Controllers (Chief Finance Officers) have degrees in accounting/ finance. But our CEO has Masters Business Admin so just depends on focus. Me I switched to Bachelors of Business focus on Marketing since I use to work the floor but now am a marketing liason. But still with this focus I can reach corporate level but it depends on current role and future goals on what’s best
But wouldn’t business administration be ideal for starting and managing your own business since it has so many different factors?
Yes .he’s a worker and not a leader obviously
agree. I'm now on master in international business and I just recently opened my mind because I'm now looking for a real future job. I realised that a lot of job required a specific skill, such as finance, or data, computing (for business analyst). I want that job so much but I realise that I'm not qualified..even after my master, I have to take a class for certificate to have a real specification. What's good for learning business is just that I learn everything under business but that's it. I don't really have a specific skill in one area
What do you mean take a certificate under a specialization could you elaborate?
@shahirrahman6706 yes. For example I want to work as a business analyst, but it requires programming, and I have to understand using SQL, PowerBI, Phyton. These kind of things I never learn at my master degree because my major is not specified, it's too broad and general. So what I can do is taking a course either online or offline to have a certificate and then I can work on what i aim. I regretted choosing international business major. Should have chosen something specific
@@reginamarthalia7176 thanks for the reply I think you can learn programming and the data analyst softwares on your own from UA-cam or online so you could try those out
Also I'm planning on Studying internal business for my bachelor's would it be a good idea and I could take something more specific for my master's?
@@shahirrahman6706 yes but by just learning from UA-cam, I don't get any real proof/diploma/certificate, which is needed to apply for jobs. If you are planning to study IB for bachelor, go for it and for master, I suggest take a specific one
in my country you can't take just a bba there's always a bba with specialization in finance, human resources, marketing, supply chain and the likes
Oh Lord! here i am doing my 4th year in business administration and it really like really is broad!!!
@@TheRefinedBudget ofc it is worth it also at the same time so tiring for me but yeah definitely works out.
Is it difficult
@@YordanosFupdate ? Were you able to be hired ?
I'm currently studying business studies degree 👁️👁️
Is it difficult or easy?? Can I apply for this course with arts stream ( math and economics)
@@gurleenkamboj7730 of course you can. I think business degree is easy compare to other courses
As i am planning to move abroad that's why I m asking is there any difficulty that i can face in this course
@@gurleenkamboj7730 same, i'm also planning to move abroad
Any tips for this course?
No business degree that’s “broad” is bad but business degrees that are too specific are usually the bad ones. With an ever changing world and uncertainty in many areas having a general business degree can ensure your happiness as you can pick the industry you want to be in at any time. Your only a couple certifications away if you want to specialise or you can get on the job training through work experience. Either way with a general degree you will never be out of work it’s the equivalent to what Nurses are to the healthcare industry! RN’s scope of practice is broad but you don’t hear people complaining.
Probably dont listen to young people on matters like that. Go and listen to someone who has the degree you r thinking about getting and has some work experience. Someone who knows how useful a certain degree will be in the long run
Depends on student
You got a smart A student who is gifted can major in art history at harvard and a get a job as director of finance accounting real estate or whatever because the guy was studying extra stuff while taking a easy road to his degree
If you are a c student at state school you better get CPA and masters degree in accounting
I agree but the average person does not attend nor pursue professional certifications (i.e CPA, CFA).
So would you say study business management or business admin?
As an upcoming doctor of business administration, this is absolutely incorrect. Listen to this if you want to learn to be an entry-level practitioner. If you want to learn to be a manager who makes it far PAST an entry-level analyst position, learn more than one skill. And, no you don't pick your own classes for business administration. In BA, you will manage people with a finance degree ten years post-graduation. It's a MANAGEMENT degree. So, what do you want to do? Sell products, analyze numbers, or lead people? A Business Administration degree is a type of degree, like a bachelor of science or bachelor of arts. You're comparing oranges to apples. Do you get it? Business Administration degree in Marketing. You have a bachelor's in Marketing. Do you understand? Yeah it's general, it's not a major...
Really good advice! Everyone needs to listen to this so business administration is basically almost equal to mass communication major lowkey
bad advice you clearly didn't read what I wrote smh
bad advice
Not true at all.
I’m about to get my associates in general business and I’m not sure what to do for my bachelors :(
Don’t bother with the associates just go straight B.S
Associates get looked at like a diploma
What about Business Management International Management
Shouldn’t we be asking someone a little further along in their academic career? I mean, most CEOs have MBAs. Management IS a role in business. You can learn to be a practitioner with a finance degree, or you can be that guy’s manager with a business administration degree focusing on finance. If you want to own a startup: a finance degree isn’t going to give you those skills, a business administration degree will, though. It’s two different things for people who have different goals.
As an MBA grad, it's best they just have finance as their concentration. If you want to work somewhere else or even end up becoming an entrepreneur you'll need to know everything else too with the help of AI.
Most Finance degree plans cover all business subjects.
Thank you Mbappe 😊
Thats right!!! Management Information Systems is good too!!!
Is MIS good major?
@@MI64SH I think so, after working in corporate America for 15yrs I think the MIS degree is very effective program. One of the few that actually teaches you skills for employment. The goal is learning how to use business systems, analyze information, process implementation, process improvement and reporting to management is the main objective. Generally, those are the main skills you need to focus on. Doing so will allow you to build relationships with Executives there by allowing you to move quickly into respected positions making 100k very easily and grow throughout your career as they come available. Knowing eps softwares, analysis techniques and soft skills presentation skills are your bread and butter to a strong successful career in business no matter the company, no matter the industry. The goal is the same like previously mentioned.
Many people spent half their careers developing relationships and getting to a place where they can grow and develop. Many companies have internal training, so school won't teach you everything but the problem is most people waste the first 5 to 10yrs learning the corporate game, or they end up stuck in a entry job for 10 or 15 yrs figuring this out. I'm one of them. I returned to college after doing research on degree programs that actually teach you effective skills for good business employment. Easy jobs to look for are program analyst, project management and or frontend systems management, process improvement, oversight and quality control. These are easy 100k jobs. Most degrees don't touch all these areas but the MIS Degree does.
@DS Sheppard i got the same question might do that
I’m 32, just got my GED because I want to work on a degree. I’m obviously starting out with an associates but I’m dead locked about what to study. I currently work in a restaurant as a relief/ training manager and thinking about studying business management will probably change major after 2 years. Any advice?
For me I want to know in general how business operates. Wouldn’t this be great for people who have a specialized skill already and want to make a business? Like let’s say your chef but want to start your own food network or restaurant. Wouldn’t you need a general crash course in business?
Aye you know i never thought of it that way
Lol this guy doesn't know what he is talking about. I've recruited for some of the top finance people in Chicago, and any Business degree or relevant work experience was enough to get your foot in the door.
I hired for VP level and above vacancies at Finance and Tech companies, starting salaries at $250k and up.
I can tell you that hiring managers are not looking at Business Administrations and saying "that's too broad". Instead, figure out the type of work and skills you want to have.
But if you're 19, don't restrict yourself to one practice so quickly. Try multiple disciplines of business until you find the one to settle down in when you've been at 3-4 companies.
I need some one tell me which ones to avoid, 🙏🙏
Yes please tell us
If they doing admin then sure stick with it, but Its nothing wrong with Business Admin, I have my BS and getting my MBA, my director of my department actually only preferred people with BA degrees and when I left I went on to make even more work Public health administration. Finance will give you a specialization sure but if you only plan to do the paper side and minimum math then BA is fine. Accounting will be pretty mid earning if you don’t go on to get your CPA. My point is there are plenty of good jobs you can get with the BA it all just comes down to the person.
Probably he didn’t go to college 😂 Business degree is one of easy to get a job. And if you get MBA, it makes boost your salary and allow to go higher position
I have a BBA in Finance
Lol
@@NashTheo Then, it’s your personal problem. Don’t blame all business degrees are useless
Shoot I messed up 😂
Same
no you didn't, trust me
Hi, I am trying to study (Business - Accounting, Law or Marketing Level 3) at college in the UK. what are your thoughts? Got any advice. Thanks
GREAT VIDEO. As a compliment, you look like Gylian Mpappe
Should I get my associates in science and business and do a major for accounting? Because I know there’s a business administration, and just business.
I think this guy is completely wrong. I see a lot of management jobs in all areas making very good salaries in all type of industries and departments with this Business Administration. It is broad so you increase your chances of being hired anywhere at almost every department and being a manager
Okay got my degree in business administration. What should I do to recover from this poor decision?
It's not that poor of a decision. You can get a variety of jobs with that degree. Just find what you like to do
@@alejandroomaldonadoo8826i like be to analytical, I know a little about cameras but no one will take me seriously bc I shot rap video, I like cars . I hate sales commissions jobs
what’s your thought about business degree majoring in marketing
Super broad, almost a hard to get job as non specific busn admin.....
I wouldn't listen to this dude. There's more UA-cam videos giving pros than there is cons
Robert Kiyosaki has Bachelors degree in Business Administration. Non conformist finance master, and a billionaire mastermind.
Most people are focused on working for someone like him, so business admin wouldn’t do them any good, they might as well zero in on a specific skill.
I have an MBA and a good paying job. I went with the general Business Administration route. Doing a general business degree is not bad, in my opinion, because you learn a bit of everything about business science and it allows you more opportunities than it would with a concentration specific business degree like finance.
@redg2197 I make $45,000 a year. While that's low for an MBA I have the opportunity to build up my experience and move up to a higher position.
Wondering the same thing as first guy
He is 100% correct! Finance or accounting is the way to go regarding a business degree. If you major in general business, the first question will be, how many hours of accounting did you take? I know, I majored in finance. Early in my career, that question came up often. Also for those saying it locks you in, I disagree. I’ve done accounting, supply chain, project management, and banking. I’m currently an analyst and love it. I’ve learned so much over the years and that finance degree was my way in.
LMAO yeah that’s your opinion bud 👍 it depends on the persona and what work ethics they can bring to the table. Don’t matter what your studying if your good at the job then your going to get payed well no matter what. Lol don’t listen to this bogus.
So that can be good for people that don’t want a specific career lol
What about international business
Mbappe
What?
@@eternalz5317 French Football (global ⚽️) player
This is something who is afraid to achieve would say.
Not good advice for over achievers at all
Turns out im an over achiever
I don’t think anyone with a mindset to work for an employer should waste their time with business admin.
what do you think about marketing? is that also too broad?
what about management?
Lol bro finance is gonna be automated in the next 15 years good luck
Is Bsc.international management and business too genaral ?
Is HND is business management worth it?
Wish someone told me this. SMFH
Reason?
For someone that is wanting to get into real estate you think it would be a good idea for it to be broad or no?
You are going to be fine 😂
@@bubblez9104 spend a month doing biz admin it’s pretty mundane entry level. I’m now in sales instead - how’s your journey?
@@xaudaniel what kind of sales?
bro, you seem too young to be giving any advice
Sorry..what job experience do you actually have ?
Graduated with a BBA in Finance. Worked in Business Consulting at a Big 4 firm and I now work in insurance administration for federal government contractors.
Don’t listen to gappy do want u want
Bad advice, you can't focus on 1 thing in business. It's not about finance only. BM is has all of it. SALES, LAW, FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING,ENTREPRENEURSHIP AND BUSINESS MANAGEMENT....
Jack of all trades and master of none. Good luck.
@NashTheo well I have 🤣🤣too bad I have, you should think about it like this, these things correspond that's why we learn them, doing BM doesn't limit you, that's why it's a good thing, now you must be a one trick pony. It's 2024 now, not 1997.
@@mukeloncube410 idk what your experience is but I graduated with a BBA in Finance. My videos are based on personal experience from things I have done or seen in the industry as a whole. This is a Finance/Business channel.
@@mukeloncube410 once again, this is based on personal experience in the industry.
Get a masters and your sorted
This man clearly dosnt know.
This individual does not have what it takes to lead. example he bows his head to highest authorities