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Finish Company Provided Mba Or Look For Jobs In Nyc

What are the job prospects after an MBA in Canada?

I have been actively researching this topic since I moved to Canada from US. After extensive research on various sites (Poets and Quants - Covering all that matters in the business school world, with in-depth analysis of B-schools rankings and full-time MBA programs, Google), attending seminars from Canadians schools in Toronto, talking to alumni who are based in the US (LA/SFO where I want to land up), I have come to the conclusion that:Canadian MBA from a well known school is equivalent to a mid to low tier MBA school in the US. MBA in Canada from a good Canadian school like Ivey School of Business, UofT Rotman or York University will lead to great prospects in Canada only. Canada is a very small economy as compared to the US and therefore the said prospects are very limited and competitive in nature. Therefore, you may end up in a middle management job in Canada for the rest of your life. There are some people who have managed to make the move to the US but again can manage to be in middle management positions which is not that bad. Most of the Canadian MBAs cost as much as any degree from a top tier US college which has higher prospects. Therefore, in my mind the ROI is limited  to low. Most Canadian universities, even the top ones, are unheard of by anyone outside of Canada. This is a disadvantage. The networks are local and limited. Therefore, you cannot expect to reap the benefits of the sameI am considering an MBA in the US since I do not want to limit my options. This has better prospects world wide.

What is the scope of getting job in Canada after an MBA from India?

None! My friend did MBA from India but they don't consider it, and she ended up doing a PG diploma from Canada to get a work permit and PR.Although if you have good experience it should be good. But, frankly they don't take MBA from India seriously because it's pretty hard to get admission in MBA over here the excellence required is beyond imagination.

How do I get a job in the US after doing an MBA in India?

In my opinion, the best option about getting a job in United States after a masters in India is to have an undergraduate technical degree. Even with that in mind, and less you have a sought after skill or occupation, the chances of qualifying for the work visa program is minimal.It is conceivable that you can get a job on one of the subsidiaries of a multinational company and hope that you can have an L1 visa transfer. Or, you could marry an American national and enter the United States as a spouse of an American citizen.Best of luck in your career. Pardon my typographical, spelling, and punctuation as i am using speech-to-text software.

How much do entry-level accounting jobs pay?

That first answer is a complete joke. With a masters in accountancy (MSA=30 credit hours,,,shorter than MBA) you should be able to find an entry level job for no less then 40k. If you go to a more established firm, 50k is min. My first job after my masters was for 52 plus bonus that brought me to a 60kplus yearly salary in my first yr.

You cant go wrong with accounting, just dont get sucked into some small mom and pop book keeping position unless it pays top dollar

Can I get a job in the US after doing my B.Com (hons.) in India?

Yes .  Why not.. I was a BCom graduate too.. I worked in US for 7 years.  one thing you should remember is you need a h1b visa to work in USA.  With just BCom, you may not get that visa.  You may have to have some skills that they (the citizens of US of A) does not have.if you take up a non IT job, the probability is very less of going there.  A IT job should be a better option.  Learn something like an ERP / CRM / BI / BW tool which will fully go with your degree and get a job in a company who can send you to the USA.If you want just  a job with BCom, SE Asia and Gulf should be better options for you.There are other non job based options.  you may marry a US citizen and go there or get some blood relative of yours who live in USA to sponsor you for a Green card.  or you can go with your wife (if she is working in an IT company and the company sends her there, you can take up employment if u go  on a L2  or a H4 visa.You can go there, do your masters in a good university, you may find a good job too.

What are some high paying jobs (over 200K per year at 30 years old)?

As others have said - The money figure you mentioned is something that is highly rare by age 30 and many very smart people will never top the $100,000/yr mark in their careers.

In the field that I work in - Computers - there is probably 1 out of 200 people making that kind of money by age 30. Probably some of the high level IT managers at age 50 are not making those dollars.

At some point in college, probably by your junior year, you are going to need to decide what you like doing, what you are gifted at and what you can make money at. Getting these elements together can be tough because many of us like to do things that we could not earn a living at. We lack the talent or the connections or we want to enter a field where there is too much competition already. I remember thinking how smart I was in an advanced computer class in my junior year. I got a 96% on a difficult test and was pretty proud until all my classmates sitting around me were showing me their papers and they all had grades as good as or better than my 96. When you get to a certain level you will find a lot of people with 4.0 averages so congrats on yours - it is great but you will need to see if you can pull that in college, also and Yes - Employers look at those grades in college when you are applying for work.

So I wish you well in your hopes of hitting those numbers but the competition is pretty tough out there right now. In many cases in Technology areas you have 50-100 people appliying for one job posting and only 10 -15 of those people getting an interview.

Best wishes!

Can you get a job in USA, after an MBA there?

Yes u can get

I'm stuck in a dead end job. Should I get an MBA or go to a programming bootcamp to reset?

I was in a similar situation and I decided to get my MBA. I thought that obtaining my MBA would give me the clout and the skills to find any job I wanted. But to be honest, more and more companies are looking for practical experience. It's a catch 22 because you can't get a job without experience, and you can't get experience without the job. It is also evident that the educational system has become estranged from learning. There is a growing disconnect between obtaining knowledge and practical application. So during school there are reduced incentives to actually take the time to learn the material.During my schooling I heard students frequently complain about the usefulness of the course material, saying things like “When will I ever use this?”. I actually hear this a lot from many friends I have in different grad schools.I think this problem exists when learning and application are placed on a linear timeline as opposed to a feedback loop. MBA programs try to front load the work and then expect each person to remember and apply each concept and theory when thrust into the ‘real world’.Oddly enough, right when I finished my MBA, I attended an entrepreneurship boot camp and my life changed more in 3 months than 2 years of graduate school. It gave me the time and support to rethink my career and start on a path I love.Check out this post for a longer explanation: Is our education system impoverishing our future?

What are the job opportunities for Indian students after doing a postgraduate degree from the UK?

As of 2016 - bleak.There are a number of reasons for this - the UK has a shrinking economy, hence jobs have reduced. The Guardian (2016) reports that graduate jobs have shrunk by 8% since 2015. Most of my students (maximum of whom were from the UK and EU) did not find any work after their under graduation.Being an Indian, you are on the 3rd list of priorities for any job opening - and this is as per regulation and has nothing to do with racism or qualifications. Priority 1 = UK citizenPriority 2 = EU citizens (despite all the talk of brexit, the employers have not changed the criteria)Priority 3 = Not priority 1 and 2 (People from India, Pakistan, Middle East, Africa, USA, China)If a person from UK and EU satisfies the criteria laid out for the job, then your applications will not even be seen. (I was plain lucky that no one from these countries qualified for my work as a lecturer!).Plus since 2013, any employer wishing to employ a non UK / EU citizen has to seek permission from the home office PRIOR to taking your interview. This includes paying them the fee - and most employers shy from doing this (My reasonably large university had paid the fee and obtained permission for employing 6 such people for the year that I was taken). This advance payment and permission system immediately repels most employers who do not find it worth the trouble.Even if your employer has the required permission, you will have just 2-3 months to search + find the job. You will receive your passing out certificate in October / November, and your student visa will be valid upto January. In other words, you have to hope for all the above to happen precisely at that time. That does not happen in the real world. For example: academic openings typically are advertised in Feb - May.And while you may be willing to do anything (even being a waiter / stacking shelves in Tesco) till you get better work in line with your education, these jobs will not get you a work permit, without which you are not allowed to live in the UK.Having said that, if you are keen, observant and eager to learn, the education that you receive in UK (from inside the classroom and especially from outside the classroom) is excellent, highly valuable and I simply cannot put a price on it.Just don't expect it to enable you to work there.

Want to get a second bachelor's. What are my options?

You're in a bad situation, with no easy way out. Probably you need to bite the bullet and go into debt.

You can minimize debt by choosing a private school which will give you maximum course credit towards a 2nd Bachelors (a Master's is probably not a good option unless you are competitive for professional school). Another possibility is public but out-of-state colleges. Look specifically at Oregon Institute of Technology.

Probably Computer Science and Engineering are not good ideas unless you're VERY sharp in Math and Science. You could easily (probably?) find yourself failing halfway through. However Engineering *Technology* is within reach. The math and science, while still rigorous, are easier. Normally, you should not attend for-profit colleges, but, in this case, you should look into DeVry's TAC/ABET-accredited Bachelor's degrees in Engineering Technology — specifically, Electronics, Computer, or Biomedical Engineering Technology. DeVry runs year-round, so, with credits, you may graduate in two calendar years. Oregon Institute of Technology also has TAC/ABET-accredited degrees in Engineering Technology, but a degree will take longer.

Lastly, there are a few online degrees in Engineering Technology. Perhaps the best is the TAC/ABET-accredited Electrical Engineering Technology or Nuclear Engineering Technology from non-profit Excelsior College. DeVry has TAC/ABET-accredited mostly online degrees. Grantham's degrees in Electronics and Computer Technology are also worth a look, but these are not TAC/ABET-accredited.

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