barnsleyman123 wrote:I am interested in Business Management (advertising maybe), I am in the top 25 % and I have a 4.0 GPA.
-Thanks
OK. The following advice is worth exactly what you (didn't) pay for it. That being said....
COLLEGE IS NOT WHERE YOU GO FOR VOCATIONAL TRAINING.
Yes, a college degree is often a necessary stamp to get you in the door for an interview. Sad but true. Sometimes you have to have the degree. Fact of life. But a university is not designed to do job training. (Ask around. You'll see for yourself.) Universities are good for 2 things, and two things only:
1. A handy dandy place to pull easy a55.
2. A great place to teach critical thinking skills and concise expression.
That's what college is good at. It is a place to educate you, since all high school is good at is giving you a place to go
instead of jail.
Do not go to college for job training. Go - if you don't know your calling in life - for
an education. Learn the classics. Learn how to string together a few coherent sentences in a couple of languages. Learn how to trick sorority girls into thinking you're worth sleeping with. Learn why Joseph II of Austria was a cool guy, and how it might matter in the 21st century.
But don't be fooled. You won't learn how to "business manage" in college. Instead, you learn how to "business manage" by...wait for it....
managing. If that is your goal, you will learn much more quickly (and avoid piles of student loan debt) by working your way up and carefully observing what works and what doesn't work in a REAL business. If you're one of those fortunate few who know exactly what they want to be when they grow up, then maybe - just maybe - you will be better served by going out and
doing it.
If you're not one of those lucky few? Go get an education. It's never a bad investment. Just don't ask college to do what college sucks at doing.
If you want to get a pretty good job quickly, where you can get laid in a real bed and have the freedom to buy a boat, go to welding school. Or ITT. Or whatever. You won't be carrying the debt, you'll have a manageable lease on a new car, and you'll have the freedom to read all the books you would have
paid to read in college.
***Edit: Whatever you do, don't forget the following: College girls confuse
dirty with
sensitive. So don't shave. Take lots of showers, of course. But don't shave. They love that s**t. (And write some awful poetry. It goes with the not-shaving bit.)***
P.S. - The best advertising guy I know majored in English and spent his summers learning computer design at ITT. He makes money by the truckload.