As someone who just graduated 2 years ago, I had the same EXACT mindset. LET ME TELL YOU 😂 No ones paying you big bucks for your FIRST job, it's all about experience. Hopefully they all make that much once they climb the ladder in their fields.
@@damon5851 Location also matters. These students are in Northern Virginia, aka the DC suburbs with a high cost of living. So their salary expectations are completely reasonable.
No they're not, they live in the DC area. All of their first job salaries are reasonable for the Mid-Atlantic region. The cost of living justifies these salaries.
@@josephinebournes8212 i live outside of NYC, I'm certain the average or 75% percentile starting salaries for those positions for people with no experience are significantly lower.
@@rarelyaccurate6252 As someone who has lived in the DC area for 12 years, I know exactly what I'm speaking about. First time homebuyers wanting a non-fancy 3 bed, 2 bath home in Northern Virginia can easily expect a $500,000+ price tag. Northern Virginia also has the best school systems in the country. Northern Virginia is home to many federal government agencies, including the Pentagon. Northern Virginia is home to many of the largest Defense contractors (e.g. Booz Allen, Lockheed Martin, SAIC, MITRE). The jobs are plentiful, homes are expensive, taxes are higher, therefore, starting salaries, even for 22-25 year olds are higher. This is NOT Texas, Oklahoma, or Kansas.
@@josephinebournes8212 I’m 23 from northern Virginia. Yeah those jobs exist but it’s not like every 22-25 years gets one. It might be different for people who live here versus people who moved here for the job like you. Not everyone who grows up here is an engineer or tech person. Entry level government jobs are almost always 55k and under. Kids who are working on the hill are making like 30k lol. If you work in tech, consulting or maybe sales you can make what your saying you can make here for an entry level job out of college, but that isn’t the majority of 22-25 year olds who live here. Even the entry finance jobs around here for 22-25 year olds aren’t that lucrative. The money your talking about generally requires graduate degrees or industry specific licenses and experience. You’re so arrogant you didn’t grow up here and your not 22-25, you literally have no idea what it’s like. So please show some humility or help me and my friends get those 6 figure jobs if there so easy to get and preferably jobs that don’t profit off of war.
I am a Data Scientist with a master’s degree in bioinformatics. I live at the boarder line btw Maryland and DC…with no job experience, my first job right out of graduate school, paid me 80k/year. I did not negotiate my salary, though. I just needed that to gain work experience. So, the young men and women in this videos made reasonable assumptions.
Dude, data scientists make good money, plus you have a master's degree. Besides comp science, these majors aren't known to be high paying. The average entry level position in the US is only about 40k+.
@@Lucy-wc5vf I know, but you need somewhere to kickoff your career. I did a 3 month internship at NIH before that job! Most of the computer science major with Bachelor’s degree, tend to go into software engineering (I guess some the young individuals in the video are thinking towards that).
Houston’s all over the place. Doesn’t matter how much you make, you’ll end up spending more time setting in traffic, than you will sleeping & working combined.
The cost of living higher on the east coast than 3rd coast. If you making 6 figs in houston, TX you are a BALLER If you making 6 figs on the east coast , you just an above average guy
Everyone has the idea that they're going to start out making the big bucks. In reality you got to work your way up to it. People have no patience in life.
@@mosu8779 It was good! I graduated in the spring and am heading to William and Mary next month to finish my Bachelor’s. If you’re going, I’d recommend one of Dr.Stakland’s philosophy courses for an elective. His ethics course was my favorite class, by far.
thanks for that ill def consider his course. just out of curiosity of all the choices how'd you decide on your field of study? ive wasted so much time just being indecisive and i have no real passions embarrassingly enough. would you happen to have any advice? but congrats on your graduating at nvcc and gl at W&M
Construction Management is great! Pay is awesome but if you don’t like math it may not be for you. You will have to take Calculus, Physics etc. Also it’s management level work so leadership is important.
The comment section: "I graduated with a 'high paying degree' these students have a realistic view on their entry level compensation!!" It depends on the major, the college, and location. Most people I know entry level are making 50-70k in NYC!
They would need to get their foot in the door now. The guy can do construction now, the others can get a cert and start working in tech. The girls can become cnas. The other guy can get a real estate license now. Don't wait.
These kids are dreaming. They think it's all just gonna come to them by luck and hope. They have no idea of the cut-throat competition they're about to come up against. I hope they're all ready to work long, long hours and take a lot of bullshit while they climb the ladder. Which btw, can take years and years because of the politics at a company. These kids been sold the big lie!
This may not be everyone' experience, but for a good majority of people, it is. That includes myself. They really should talk about this more in college, since a good amount of college professors have years of experience in their field.
I love the inthusasism that these kiddos have! They want to be successful, so nice to see! Now, unfortunately lol less than 10% of people actually land a job in their career field and with this crazy administrations inflation... these kiddos will probably make half on what they project and then they have to pay double on goods/needs to survive. Time for a administration change...
I graduated from a college in that area. And seriously, non of my friend is making that much fresh out of school 😂 But of course, I think that would be possible for CS students. It’s reasonable expectation, but given the job market as this moment, it is really hard to actually reach that expectation
CS major making 100k... hmm... its all about Cost of Living for Tech. Yeah you could make $100k in Bay Area but that is poverty. Aim to make $$$ in a Mod or Low cost of living area with remote work now. Being new to CS and a company, I would rather make LESS money in HCOL if I get to go into office and learn from people in office.
@H graduation from a college and where you end up working your first job are too totally different things. Plus new grads are more likely to get a job and move for it than a experienced professional
making 100k in your first year of real estate is just not very realistic. Just because you have a degree doesnt make you any more knowledgeable than someone else who took the real estate exam with no education background
This is what republicans need to see. It’s not kids taking out loans to major in 15th century Congolese women’s gender studies. It’s kids taking out loans for respectable, practical, necessary fields and careers, who have been told over and over that they will make close to or over 6 figures, and then go into the real world and realize everything they’ve been told and guaranteed was all a lie and have all this debt with no realistic way of paying it all back, without being in debt for the next 5 decades and not be able to buy a house or have any sort of upward mobility and be stuck in their lower middle class socioeconomic class.
This is exactly why this channel is a joke…. She interviews people in big markets that further inflate their salaries… people watch it and take it for gospel… Then they go to a community college and thing the average college graduate makes between 70-100k starting… I’m sorry to say but for most of these people… 70k is your ceiling… a few of them have a CHANCE at hitting 100k.. Mostly the computer science guy IF he can find a job.
As someone who just graduated 2 years ago, I had the same EXACT mindset. LET ME TELL YOU 😂 No ones paying you big bucks for your FIRST job, it's all about experience. Hopefully they all make that much once they climb the ladder in their fields.
i make 106 with my first job out of college lol. it all depends what major you get into
@@damon5851 Location also matters. These students are in Northern Virginia, aka the DC suburbs with a high cost of living. So their salary expectations are completely reasonable.
@@damon5851 Yeah but I mean some of these people are literally listing "manager" in their job titles. No ones a manager for their first job.
@@damon5851 what major did u do?
It depends on what you do.
Lmao, theyre all gonna be so dissapointed
No they're not, they live in the DC area. All of their first job salaries are reasonable for the Mid-Atlantic region. The cost of living justifies these salaries.
Minus the physician assistant. They make a lot
@@josephinebournes8212 Facts. I know for sure the CS student will not be disappointed.
Those last 2 brothas going to be big disappointed. Lmao they both gonna be making $15/hr after college
@@wantapgt why?
I appreciate their enthusiasm, but by and large they are wildly optimistic.
False!!! You must not live in, or understand, the DC area's job market.
No, they're not. These young people live in the DC suburbs and their salary expectations are completely reasonable.
@@josephinebournes8212 i live outside of NYC, I'm certain the average or 75% percentile starting salaries for those positions for people with no experience are significantly lower.
@@rarelyaccurate6252 As someone who has lived in the DC area for 12 years, I know exactly what I'm speaking about. First time homebuyers wanting a non-fancy 3 bed, 2 bath home in Northern Virginia can easily expect a $500,000+ price tag. Northern Virginia also has the best school systems in the country. Northern Virginia is home to many federal government agencies, including the Pentagon. Northern Virginia is home to many of the largest Defense contractors (e.g. Booz Allen, Lockheed Martin, SAIC, MITRE). The jobs are plentiful, homes are expensive, taxes are higher, therefore, starting salaries, even for 22-25 year olds are higher. This is NOT Texas, Oklahoma, or Kansas.
@@josephinebournes8212 I’m 23 from northern Virginia. Yeah those jobs exist but it’s not like every 22-25 years gets one. It might be different for people who live here versus people who moved here for the job like you. Not everyone who grows up here is an engineer or tech person.
Entry level government jobs are almost always 55k and under. Kids who are working on the hill are making like 30k lol.
If you work in tech, consulting or maybe sales you can make what your saying you can make here for an entry level job out of college, but that isn’t the majority of 22-25 year olds who live here.
Even the entry finance jobs around here for 22-25 year olds aren’t that lucrative.
The money your talking about generally requires graduate degrees or industry specific licenses and experience.
You’re so arrogant you didn’t grow up here and your not 22-25, you literally have no idea what it’s like. So please show some humility or help me and my friends get those 6 figure jobs if there so easy to get and preferably jobs that don’t profit off of war.
Okay but graphic designer makes 50-60k in DC area😂
I am a Data Scientist with a master’s degree in bioinformatics. I live at the boarder line btw Maryland and DC…with no job experience, my first job right out of graduate school, paid me 80k/year. I did not negotiate my salary, though. I just needed that to gain work experience. So, the young men and women in this videos made reasonable assumptions.
Dude, data scientists make good money, plus you have a master's degree. Besides comp science, these majors aren't known to be high paying. The average entry level position in the US is only about 40k+.
@@Lucy-wc5vf I know, but you need somewhere to kickoff your career. I did a 3 month internship at NIH before that job! Most of the computer science major with Bachelor’s degree, tend to go into software engineering (I guess some the young individuals in the video are thinking towards that).
@@Lucy-wc5vf the physicians assistant one is very reasonable
They think they gonna make 70k+ per year right after college with no experience?
No wonder they feel underpaid when they get there first job
Yeah, usually after the 1 yr mark people start to make what they really deserve
*Community college lmao
@@william2154 ok? There isn’t a big difference
Now you have to go back and find out what they really earned!
As a worker and resident in this part of the country, I'm willing to give away free advice on how each of them can earn those first time salaries.
@@josephinebournes8212 can you drop some advice here, please?
lol they literally have no idea what they are doing so cute.
Aye I went to NOVA!! Too damn expensive to live up there
Bless Their Heart. They MAY make it........eventually
Lmao "expecting" wait till you need experience on top of a bachelor's
I know everyone is saying these kids are in for a surprise… but guess what??? They haven’t even factored taxes yet!!! 😂😂😂
Please go to Houston, TX. I would love to see the salary difference between these higher paying cities etc
Houston’s all over the place. Doesn’t matter how much you make, you’ll end up spending more time setting in traffic, than you will sleeping & working combined.
The cost of living higher on the east coast than 3rd coast.
If you making 6 figs in houston, TX you are a BALLER
If you making 6 figs on the east coast , you just an above average guy
"secret service to make big money".......Foreign powers definitely take note of her career
Everyone here in the comments is so condescending. I graduated with a BS and my very first job was over 80k. It’s not unrealistic
Everyone has the idea that they're going to start out making the big bucks. In reality you got to work your way up to it. People have no patience in life.
No way! I’m going to NVCC right now. At the Annandale campus, too
hows it been so far?
@@mosu8779 It was good! I graduated in the spring and am heading to William and Mary next month to finish my Bachelor’s. If you’re going, I’d recommend one of Dr.Stakland’s philosophy courses for an elective. His ethics course was my favorite class, by far.
thanks for that ill def consider his course. just out of curiosity of all the choices how'd you decide on your field of study? ive wasted so much time just being indecisive and i have no real passions embarrassingly enough. would you happen to have any advice? but congrats on your graduating at nvcc and gl at W&M
Wow that first guy is very optimistic lol
Construction Management is great! Pay is awesome but if you don’t like math it may not be for you. You will have to take Calculus, Physics etc. Also it’s management level work so leadership is important.
The only one I really believe is the construction management guy
Why
I was just scrolling through shorts and then this pop up
The comment section: "I graduated with a 'high paying degree' these students have a realistic view on their entry level compensation!!"
It depends on the major, the college, and location. Most people I know entry level are making 50-70k in NYC!
The real world is gonna slap them in the face!
All these kids got high expectations lol
They would need to get their foot in the door now. The guy can do construction now, the others can get a cert and start working in tech. The girls can become cnas. The other guy can get a real estate license now. Don't wait.
lmao Im expecting at most 30k per year as starting
Awww the graphic designer guy. That's v unrealistic. (I'm a graphic designer)
I went thereeee!
These kids are dreaming. They think it's all just gonna come to them by luck and hope.
They have no idea of the cut-throat competition they're about to come up against.
I hope they're all ready to work long, long hours and take a lot of bullshit while they climb the ladder. Which btw, can take years and years because of the politics at a company. These kids been sold the big lie!
No, they're not. I live and work in this part of the country and their expectations align with the DC region's high cost of living.
It is a fallacy tho.. Big lie
This may not be everyone' experience, but for a good majority of people, it is. That includes myself.
They really should talk about this more in college, since a good amount of college professors have years of experience in their field.
@@rcruzthomas good majority of universities do...idk about colleges tho
Unless they intern while studying, none of them are going to make that.
Hate to break it to you but you don't need a business degree to sell houses
Here’s your job offer, 45k a year. How does that sound?
The one aiming to become a Physician Assistant is in for a very pleasant surprise... depending on the area she works in, of course.
I love the inthusasism that these kiddos have! They want to be successful, so nice to see!
Now, unfortunately lol less than 10% of people actually land a job in their career field and with this crazy administrations inflation... these kiddos will probably make half on what they project and then they have to pay double on goods/needs to survive. Time for a administration change...
Note to everyone not living in the DC area: their salary expectations are completely reasonable and reachable.
Yes
I graduated from a college in that area. And seriously, non of my friend is making that much fresh out of school 😂 But of course, I think that would be possible for CS students. It’s reasonable expectation, but given the job market as this moment, it is really hard to actually reach that expectation
They about 30k too high
@@ShadowKiller71 30,000$ a year?
@@upsidedownChad You're not negotiating properly. There's a method to this salary madness.
Come to Mason I graduated from NOVA last year
Business administration making 6 figures first year 😂😂 we’ll give you 50k
Hannah you lookin good in those jeans I'm just sayin
They all saying 30k too high
CS major making 100k... hmm... its all about Cost of Living for Tech. Yeah you could make $100k in Bay Area but that is poverty. Aim to make $$$ in a Mod or Low cost of living area with remote work now. Being new to CS and a company, I would rather make LESS money in HCOL if I get to go into office and learn from people in office.
@H graduation from a college and where you end up working your first job are too totally different things. Plus new grads are more likely to get a job and move for it than a experienced professional
Then they gotta move to certain states cause there are states that pay 6 figures for all those careers
Construction manager with no experience
Hahahahahaha ya for sure.
Get ready to spend your $18/hr labor job on your student loans!
I work at a university and have seen multiple CM grads start at $80k, though it is the high end. Usually $65-$80.
80k with associates and no experience. I call cap
@Lumi different for software engineering
Funny, everyone making 100k when only 24 percent of Americans make over 100k.
sonographer...70k.......to start.....BWAHHHHH
That physician assistant better negotiate 100k a year. DO NOT LOWBALL YOURSELF. Students loans are real
making 100k in your first year of real estate is just not very realistic. Just because you have a degree doesnt make you any more knowledgeable than someone else who took the real estate exam with no education background
Delusional. Poor students about to get a REALITY CHECK 🚩🚩🚩
I know I did!!!
You must live in a flyover state.
This is what republicans need to see. It’s not kids taking out loans to major in 15th century Congolese women’s gender studies. It’s kids taking out loans for respectable, practical, necessary fields and careers, who have been told over and over that they will make close to or over 6 figures, and then go into the real world and realize everything they’ve been told and guaranteed was all a lie and have all this debt with no realistic way of paying it all back, without being in debt for the next 5 decades and not be able to buy a house or have any sort of upward mobility and be stuck in their lower middle class socioeconomic class.
The moment you wish UA-cam mobile would let you posts Gifs to the comments lol
No job, no power, just freedom.
Poor kids
I wonder if the kid going into construction management has ever worked construction in his life...
hope is not reality lmao unlucky guys
This is exactly why this channel is a joke….
She interviews people in big markets that further inflate their salaries… people watch it and take it for gospel…
Then they go to a community college and thing the average college graduate makes between 70-100k starting…
I’m sorry to say but for most of these people… 70k is your ceiling… a few of them have a CHANCE at hitting 100k..
Mostly the computer science guy IF he can find a job.
Hannah you must have been cutting back on the mayo because you looking great girl!
Tf
there is always option for only fans 😁😄
People who pay for only fans are incels that don’t know how to spend money properly
The comments are cracking me up 🤣 Y'all some haters
Lmao there so unrealistic
𝗣𝗼𝗻𝗼𝗴𝗿𝗮𝗴𝗵𝘆 500,000 𝘁𝗼 1𝗺𝗶𝗹𝗹𝗶𝗼𝗻