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Majoring in Getting a Job

November 7, 2008 by Eric Rosenberg

This one is for the college students and parents of college students (or soon to be college students) in the audience.

As an undergraduate, I majored in finance. As a business major, I knew that I would have opportunities for a job no matter what happens in the economy. My friends who were in engineering had a similar post-college job mentality. Friends majoring in political science were generally law school bound. Friends in a science were going to medical school. However, I have some friends who majored in something that they could not get a job.

A degree in economics is also sure to be useful in any economy, as an increasing number of private businesses, government agencies and non-profit organizations are hiring these people to forecast sales and analyze market trends. In fact, jobs in this industry are expected to grow significantly by 2020 because organizations are looking for any advantage that they can find over the competition.

If you are about to go to school, think of it as an investment. You might enjoy classes in sociology or history (I enjoyed those electives), but can you get a job in them? Without grad school, no. That is unless you want to be a teacher.

As you spend your money or your parents money on school, think about it as an investment. What is the ROI? (Return on Investment) As a finance major in state, my four years of college cost about $60,000-$65,000 including room, board, tuition, books, etc. The college investment of my time and money were intended to lead to a return.

Upon graduation I got a job. I worked at a bank for 6 months before becoming a financial analyst. Lets say I make about $40,000 per year (roughly the average starting salary for a finance major). At that rate my break even point will happen in 1.5 years.

English majors paid less for tuition, but still spend roughly $60,000 for the college experience. A history major has fewer job options and will make far less. At $25,000 per year the break even point is over 2 years. Many English majors have trouble finding a job. If you could have made the same $25,000 per year without your degree, why even get it?

Engineering, business, pre-med, and pre-law have a career path. If you want to be a teacher history, English, and other liberal arts degrees have a future career as well. If you don't know what you want to be when you grow up, get a business degree. With that, you can do almost anything. If you do know, major in it. Pick a degree that will give you a good ROI. My MBA program now will cost over $80,000 for two years. An low end MBA graduate makes $60,000 per year. That makes the break even period 1.3 years. I think that is a good financial decision. The costs are high now, but the lifetime returns are far greater.

As you make your way through college or have kids going through school, make sure that your investment is a good one.

Filed Under: Education, Investing

Your Credit Card Should Pay You

October 28, 2008 by Eric Rosenberg

I charge everything to my credit card. Everything. I know that goes against what I told you about credit cards, but this is a bit different.

When I told you to stop using credit cards, I meant you should stop using the credit part, not the card. If you pay off your card in full every month, you pay no interest. If you don't pay it all off, you are paying up to 30% to borrow that money.
So, I do charge everything. I pay it off in full twice a month (on payday). My balances are never high, so my credit score stays up. I pay in full, so I pay no interest. And, importantly, I get paid by the credit card company to use their card!
I currently use a Chase credit card with rewards. I get 1%-5% back on purchases depending on the type. I used to use a Citi card where I got 1% back across the board. When you would buy something anyway, why not reap the benefits?
A credit card company charges merchants each time the process a transaction. The fees are negotiated between the merchant and the processor, but costs are usually about 2% or more. If the bank gives you 1% back, they are just splitting the profit with you. Either way, they are making money. You should make money too.
If you have a real spending problem, do not use credit cards. If you don't, and can live on a budget, it is time to get paid by the credit card company.
Now go forth and earn rewards. Check out CreditCards.com and CreditRatings.com for some comparisons, but do research on your own too, don't just trust them. Make sure, when signing up for a card, that you don't have a lot of other new credit (or your score will go down). Pick a card with a low interest rate (just in case) and no annual fee. AMEX has great rewards, but you have to spend a lot to make rewards that pay off the annual fees. I shopped around at CitiBank, Chase, MBNA, Bank of America, and a bunch more. I picked the card I use for several reasons. 1. They paid me $50 when I signed up and used the card once, no other strings attached. 2. No annual fee. 3. Cash Rewards (points are okay if you would really use them, but I like cash). 4. Reputable bank. 5. Low interest rate.
If you have any questions, leave them in the comments. Otherwise, I expect that your credit card will be paying you shortly.

Filed Under: Credit, Debt Management, Travel

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I started a little side hustle blog in 2008, and left my full-time day job as a Senior Financial Analyst to turn my side hustle into a full-time gig. Learn how I did it so you can build your side hustle. It all starts with the first dollar.

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