00:00as someone who has a doctorate myself
00:02and as someone who happens to be an
00:04introvert and is someone who has
00:06happened to help thousands of people
00:07choose their dream careers or degrees I
00:10get asked this question all the time
00:12what is the best degree or career for
00:17and the truth is you can do any degree
00:19or career if you're an introvert and
00:22don't let anybody tell you otherwise
00:23because you're awesome but with that
00:25being said there are definitely some
00:27careers in some degrees that are going
00:29to be more likely to be a good choice
00:32for you if you're an introvert so that's
00:34what we're going to be talking about in
00:37now there's also different types of
00:39introverts that can do well in different
00:41careers and understanding these things
00:42and having different options for
00:43different careers you can look into as
00:45an introvert can save you like 10 years
00:47of Smashing your head against the wall
00:49trying to figure out what a good career
00:51for you is now I remember being in
00:53school being a shy introverted kid and
00:55having absolutely no idea what I should
00:57do with my career and I remember there
00:59was this one time where I did a job
01:00where I serve people at a race track and
01:03I would literally be interacting with
01:05hundreds and hundreds of really annoyed
01:08people every single day because they had
01:10to wait in a super long line before they
01:12finally got to me and by the end of the
01:13day I was absolutely exhausted I
01:15remember going home laying down and
01:16basically just staring at the ceiling
01:18for an hour and then the rest of the
01:19night I only had energy to watch Netflix
01:21and play RuneScape but luckily over the
01:24years through trial and error I tried
01:25out a bunch of different jobs that I
01:26liked and some that I didn't like and I
01:28found some that were relatively good for
01:30me and these were jobs where I actually
01:31felt energized when I got home right and
01:33these were jobs where I actually enjoyed
01:35my work as well and another thing I
01:36learned is that the way they that you
01:38spend time working is incredibly
01:40important right so if you try to get a
01:42fish to climb a tree that's probably not
01:44going to work out very well and if you
01:46try to get somebody who's introverted to
01:48constantly have to meet up with large
01:50groups of new people that they've never
01:52met before all day long on a day-to-day
01:54basis that's probably also not going to
01:56work and just like a fish would be able
01:58to swim very easily through the water
02:00introverts actually have super powers
02:02that I'm going to get into later on in
02:04the video right and these are powers
02:05that extroverts don't have and this is
02:07something that's extremely important in
02:09life is that you play to your strengths
02:11and seriously if you're an introvert
02:13this video is going to give you an
02:14unfair advantage and it's probably going
02:16to save you five to ten years of
02:18struggle because most of the advice out
02:20there on what to do if you're an
02:21introvert is extremely basic and it's
02:23just not helpful at all so if you
02:25appreciate me doing these types of
02:26introvert related videos go ahead gently
02:28tap that like button it lets me know
02:30that you want me to do more of them and
02:31let's get into it right now
02:35so the first one on this list is going
02:37to be health and pre-health related
02:40degrees and what I mean by this is a
02:42health degree at the bachelor's level
02:43would be something like a BSN which you
02:46would use to get into nursing and then
02:48there's also a lot of people who will do
02:50kind of like a pre-health track which
02:52could be a bunch of different things but
02:54basically you're using it in order to
02:55get into a graduate level health program
02:57to become a doctor a PA a nurse
03:00practitioner or a pharmacist and you
03:02might be surprised that I said this one
03:03because as a healthcare practitioner you
03:05do actually have to interact with a lot
03:07of different people on a day-to-day
03:09basis but this one actually does depend
03:11heavily on what specialty you go into
03:13and this is the one that I chose myself
03:15because I got a doctorate in order to
03:17become a pharmacist and as a pharmacist
03:19you are actually expected to be a leader
03:22right by definition you got a doctorate
03:24you're expected to be a leader because
03:26you are going to be sort of above people
03:28who are pharmacy technicians for
03:30instance you're going to be checking
03:31their work making sure that everything
03:33they do is not going to harm the the
03:35patient and so you might think here well
03:36if you're in healthcare you have to
03:38interact with a bunch of people plus
03:39you're expected to be a leader in many
03:41circumstances so why the heck would
03:43introverts go into this and most people
03:44naturally see leaders as being
03:46extroverts and this isn't surprising as
03:48in the book quiet the power of
03:50introverts by Susan Kane she basically
03:52argues that modern society is built
03:54almost entirely around extroversion in
03:57school systems for example deaths are
03:59purposely arranged in such a way to
04:00facilitate group projects and high
04:02levels of interaction and activity and
04:04most teachers believe that students
04:06should be extroverts and then when you
04:08graduate school and you get into the
04:09workforce you're expected to be
04:11extroverted because you have to promote
04:13yourself right you have to promote your
04:14personal brand in order to rise up
04:16within a company and as you've probably
04:18seen if you worked in companies before a
04:21lot of the time the most capable people
04:23are not the ones who end up getting the
04:25promotions it's the people who
04:26self-promote quite a bit it's the people
04:28who network with others it's the people
04:29who are proactive about becoming leaders
04:32in certain situations and by the way
04:33this is a great book if you're an
04:34introvert you should definitely read it
04:36because it's going to help you
04:37understand your strengths and it's going
04:38to help you get past all the
04:39frustrations of being an introvert in
04:41the modern world right so I have it on
04:43my Kindle here I don't have a physical
04:45copy because I'm kind of like traveling
04:46around a lot but yeah definitely
04:48recommend uh reading this book so when I
04:50was going through pharmacy school and I
04:52was working in healthcare I was actually
04:53shocked at how many other introverts
04:56were in healthcare as well and many of
04:58them were in these leadership type
04:59positions like doctor pharmacist PA
05:01nurse practitioner Etc right I thought I
05:04was going to be the only introvert there
05:05but what I found is introverts actually
05:06have super powers in many cases so for
05:09instance introverts tend to have
05:10extremely strong one-on-one
05:12communication skills and part of that is
05:15because they're good listeners so if
05:17you're an introvert you probably have no
05:18issues talking with one of your best
05:19friends in a one-on-one situation if
05:22you're anything like me I have no issue
05:23with that where I have a bit of an issue
05:25is when I meet a bunch of new people and
05:27I'm in a large group and most of them I
05:29don't know that tends to drain my energy
05:31and make me extremely tired introverts
05:33also seem to be very introspective and
05:35self-reflective so you know in
05:37healthcare there's always something new
05:39that you can learn so even if on a
05:40technical level you know everything
05:42about a certain disease state for
05:44instance let's like let's say you know
05:45everything about diabetes there's always
05:47more that you can do for instance
05:49patients probably hear a hundred
05:51different times from their doctor nurses
05:53Etc that they need to go ahead and
05:55exercise right they need to go out and
05:57walk 20 minutes a day but if you're not
05:59able to sell them on that if you're not
06:01able to convince them to do that then
06:03you're not doing as good of a job as you
06:06could as a healthcare practitioner right
06:08so you might know everything about
06:09health care everything about diabetes
06:11everything about exercise but if you're
06:13not able to communicate that in a way
06:15that the patient understands and
06:17convince them of why they should do it
06:19in order to improve their own health and
06:20improve their own outcomes then you kind
06:23of have failed and so for instance
06:24something you could do that really
06:25resonates with people is tell them a
06:27story of a different patient that you
06:29had that was in a very similar situation
06:30to them and they started walking every
06:32day for 20 minutes they just you know go
06:34walk their dog for instance every single
06:36day and they reported losing 20 pounds
06:38they had better mental health they felt
06:40better they felt more energized all day
06:42long and they had all these different
06:43benefits and then you explained to them
06:45kind of like the health and the
06:47technical reasons behind that and
06:48they're going to resonate with that much
06:49more because of the fact that you told a
06:51story storytelling is essential to good
06:54communication not only does it convince
06:55them on an emotional level but they're
06:57also able to actually remember it
06:59because the human brain remembers things
07:01in stories so that's just one example of
07:03skills that you can work on as a
07:04healthcare worker to get better results
07:06for your patients and this is something
07:08that if you're an introvert you would
07:10probably think about right you would
07:11probably think about huh the Pharmacists
07:13and the Pas that get the best results
07:15for their patients are good storytellers
07:17they're good communicators how can I
07:19become a better Communicator as well and
07:21sell my patients on why they should do X
07:23Y or Z introverts also tend to be much
07:25better at just sitting down and really
07:27diving into a patient profile to figure
07:30out you know if there's any dangers in
07:31the profile to figure out what you know
07:33can be done to make things better and to
07:35solve any problems that the patient
07:37might have so yeah there are absolutely
07:39superpowers that introverts have that
07:41extroverts don't in health care now when
07:43it comes to the numbers if you've been
07:44watching my channel you know that
07:45Healthcare degrees and Healthcare
07:46careers are some of the best out there I
07:48would say personally Healthcare
07:50occupations are probably second best
07:52behind technology related careers and
07:54they're actually growing faster than any
07:56other type of career out there so
07:58according to BLS they're projected to
07:59grow about 13 percent over the next 10
08:02years and the median annual salary for
08:04healthcare workers is 75 000 a year now
08:07let's just take nurse as an example so
08:09this is a bachelor level degree there's
08:11about 210 000 results if you type in
08:13nurse then sort by entry level on
08:16LinkedIn that is a lot of demand for
08:18nurses if you look it up on Glassdoor
08:20nurses make about seventy thousand
08:21dollars a year but keep in mind that's
08:23just the entry-level role there's a lot
08:25of other roles nurses can go into a lot
08:27of the time nurses actually end up in
08:29leadership positions within hospitals so
08:31in conclusion I actually did enjoy
08:33working in healthcare before the the
08:35whole um cough cough situation happened
08:37once that happened it did become kind of
08:39a nightmare of illogical thinking it was
08:42highly politicized and it became kind of
08:44all about politics instead of helping
08:46people which is the reason that I got
08:47into it in the first place you know it
08:49became about following the science and
08:52listening to the scientists and the
08:54doctors except the ones that had a
08:55different opinion than the most powerful
08:57people in the world which were
08:58controlling everything at the time you
09:00know anybody who had a different opinion
09:02was misinformation they got blocked
09:04banned censored and canceled and
09:06rightfully so because how dare they have
09:07a different opinion than the most
09:08powerful people in the country that
09:10would be like speaking truth to power
09:12which is a part of you know freedom of
09:14speech which is a terrible thing but
09:16yeah corruption in the U.S Health Care
09:18system is a topic for another video
09:22next one we're going to talk about is
09:24statistics and Mathematics degrees and
09:27if you're really good at math and
09:29statistics and you enjoy it you will
09:31probably never be without job
09:33opportunities why because you're rare
09:36most people are not good at math and of
09:37the ones who are good at it a lot of
09:39them don't really enjoy it and of course
09:41not all introverts are great at math but
09:43I have noticed that people that are good
09:45at math do tend to be introverted now
09:47I'm personally good but not amazing at
09:49math and there's some parts of math that
09:51I just cannot stand for instance there
09:53was this Advanced statistics class that
09:54I took where it was right after my lunch
09:56and typically I will actually you know
09:59sit at the front of the class because
10:00hey you're paying all this money you
10:02might as well get a front row seat right
10:03but in this class the teacher was so dry
10:06and the material was just presented in
10:08such a boring way that I would
10:09constantly just be dozing off in class
10:11like I would be making eye contact with
10:13the teacher and just like my head would
10:15be dropping like every five seconds and
10:17I didn't want her to hate me so I
10:19decided to actually sit kind of towards
10:20the middle so she didn't notice me
10:22literally falling asleep almost every
10:24day now if we get in the numbers
10:25mathematics is actually ranked number 22
10:28on my college degree ranker and that's
10:30out of 900 plus degrees so when you look
10:32at the numbers it does rank really well
10:34so statistician for instance on LinkedIn
10:36at the entry level there's about 12 000
10:38results and there's a bunch of different
10:39career paths you can go into a lot of
10:41people will go into Finance for instance
10:43and become Financial analysts that one
10:45on LinkedIn there's about 72 000 results
10:47and if you look on Glassdoor
10:49statisticians make about 85 000 a year
10:52and financial analysts make 73 000. and
10:55again that's just the entry level
10:56there's tons of positions out there
10:57where you can make more money than that
10:59now one thing I want to emphasize here
11:00and this is something I talk about a lot
11:02in other videos is you want to focus on
11:04going into the career right not picking
11:07the degree the degree is simply just a
11:09tool that you can use to get to your
11:10goal and the goal is a career and in
11:12many cases depending on the career you
11:14want to get into you won't need a degree
11:17and that segues perfectly into the next
11:19one on the list which is a marketing
11:21degree so the most valuable skill in
11:24marketing is digital marketing and this
11:26is something where if you look at
11:27curriculums of marketing degrees and
11:29I've done this in other videos you'll
11:31see that they barely even touch on
11:33digital marketing and I've shown many
11:35different examples of people on this
11:37channel who have been able to get into
11:38digital marketing without getting
11:40marketing degrees now why is marketing
11:42such a valuable skill well for one it
11:45pairs with any other skill for two it
11:47teaches you human psychology and for
11:49three if you want to go into higher
11:51level positions or you want to start
11:52your own business it's going to teach
11:54you how to monetize that right so it's
11:56going to teach you how to actually
11:57market products so you can make money
12:00from good ideas you can make money from
12:01solving other people's problems in the
12:03form of a product or a service and one
12:05thing that my business partners and I
12:06have noticed after helping like
12:07thousands of different people is for
12:09some reason digital marketing tends to
12:11be great for introverts so for instance
12:13Ashley was an artistic yet introverted
12:16person who wanted to figure out how she
12:17can get a really good job so she could
12:19pursue her artistic interests on the
12:21side and after trying a bunch of
12:22different things that didn't work for
12:23her she started searching across the
12:25internet and she stumbled upon digital
12:27marketing and after researching digital
12:28marketing for a little bit she basically
12:30found that SEO or search engine
12:31optimization was the right choice for
12:34her and SEO is basically how you can get
12:35your website ranked on the top of Google
12:37search and by the way I did an entire
12:39interview with her which you can check
12:41out right here so when it comes to the
12:42numbers marketing actually came out as
12:44my number 24th ranked degree again
12:47that's 24 out of over 900 different
12:49degrees that I analyzed and if you type
12:50in digital marketing you search by entry
12:52level on LinkedIn you're going to see 89
12:55000 results and if you type in digital
12:57marketing associate on Glassdoor you'll
12:58see they make about 53 000 a year if you
13:01type in SEO Specialists they make around
13:0359 000 and remember these are the
13:05entry-level jobs these are jobs you can
13:07get actually without a college degree
13:09there's many other jobs you can move
13:11into within a few years that make it up
13:12to these six figure level so in
13:14conclusion digital marketing is probably
13:16the skill that I recommend learning the
13:18most for some reason it applies to just
13:20about all types of personality these out
13:22there and people just tend to have
13:24really good outcomes with it and this is
13:25especially good for introverts that
13:27aren't good at math and they don't want
13:28to learn how to code or go into
13:29technology this can be a phenomenal
13:31option and there's actually a free
13:33training which I'll link down in the
13:34description as well as the pin comment
13:36below that'll go over the different
13:37types of digital marketing computer
13:39science is going to be next on the list
13:42and this is one that I of course have
13:43talked about a ton on this channel and
13:46this one tends to be dominated by
13:47introverts so now one of my favorite
13:49people on the internet Naval ravacan
13:51actually had a tweet storm where he
13:52talked about skills that are incredibly
13:54valuable and he basically said that the
13:56most valuable skills are ones that you
13:57can leverage so he says Fortune requires
14:00leverage business leverage comes from
14:01Capital people and products with no
14:03marginal cost of replication and the two
14:05that he gave in his example are code and
14:08media and what exactly is leverage well
14:10Archimedes said if you give me a place
14:12to stand and a lever long enough I will
14:14move the world Leverage is where you're
14:16one person but you can do the work of 10
14:1820 maybe even 100 or a thousand people
14:20and then Naval goes ahead and he's
14:22splits leverage into two different
14:23categories so there's permissioned
14:25leverage and permissionless leverage so
14:27he says capital and labor are
14:29permissioned leverage everyone is
14:30chasing Capital but someone has to give
14:32it to you everyone is trying to lead but
14:34someone has to follow you and so he
14:36basically says that the two types of
14:38Leverage that are permissionless are
14:40code and media and media is kind of what
14:42I'm doing now I'm broadcasting this to
14:44everybody in the world it could
14:46potentially get a million views probably
14:47not but you know it could potentially do
14:49that and then code is software
14:51development essentially you can write a
14:52piece of code that a million people use
14:54you could write a piece of software or
14:56make a website that millions of people
14:58can use and it's just one person that
15:00created it now there aren't that many
15:02skills out there where you can do this
15:03not even close to it and coding is one
15:05of them so computer science actually
15:07ranks as my number one degree on my
15:09college degree ranker out of over 900
15:11Degrees now if you look up software
15:13developer on LinkedIn at the entry level
15:15you'll see 162 000 results and if you
15:18look up software developer on Glassdoor
15:19again at the entry level 95 and dollars
15:22a year so ridiculously high pay
15:24especially for an entry-level job now
15:26there is one small problem with this
15:28degree even though it does objectively
15:30rank number one when it comes to the
15:32numbers this is one where you can
15:34actually get into it without a college
15:36degree so there are other ways of
15:38getting into software development
15:39without getting a computer science or a
15:41software engineering degree now a lot of
15:43people who get into it do get computer
15:45science or software engineering degrees
15:46and there's nothing wrong with that it's
15:48definitely not a scam and it's
15:49definitely worth the money it gives you
15:50a good Roi but with that being said for
15:52the right type of person you might be
15:54able to teach yourself coding and get
15:56into it without getting a degree right
15:58there's no accrediting body here that
16:00says you have to have this degree in
16:02order to become a software developer
16:03also this one absolutely can be done
16:05remote I know there's a ton of people on
16:07this channel probably over 90 percent
16:09who want either a remote or semi-remote
16:11job and so what I did is I created a
16:13video called the remote jobs tier list
16:15that goes over the best remote jobs and
16:17you can check that out right here next
16:19one on the list is going to be an
16:21information technology degree now going
16:24back to our analogy about leverage
16:26information technology is basically a
16:28way to leverage technology within a
16:31business so it's basically the
16:33technology side of the businesses
16:35infrastructure and it's a way to make
16:36human beings as well as your business on
16:38a whole more efficient and so it's
16:40another incredibly valuable skill and
16:42it's also another one where you're going
16:43to spend a lot of time working by
16:45yourself and if you are going to
16:47communicate with people it's usually
16:48going to be in a one-on-one setting and
16:50if it is with a group it's probably
16:51going to be with people that you already
16:53know and are familiar with and this is
16:55one where we've had great success
16:57getting people into it roles so for
16:59instance we were able to get somebody in
17:01in 10 days and 14 days and I actually
17:03interviewed both of those people on the
17:05channel and yes I literally mean they
17:07went from zero experience to getting a
17:09job in 10 days and 14 days and as a
17:11degree information technology is ranked
17:1315th out of over 900 Degrees and I would
17:16say this is probably the easiest way to
17:18get into the technology industry other
17:20than Tech sales Tech sales is probably a
17:23little bit easier but a lot of
17:25introverts probably do not want to be
17:26like cold calling people on the phone
17:28trying to do sales so if you're an
17:30introvert this is probably the easiest
17:31way to get your foot in the door in the
17:33technology industry now there are a ton
17:35of different super random careers you
17:37can get into one of them is going to be
17:39information technology specialist and
17:41there's 16 000 results at the entry
17:43level on LinkedIn and if you look up
17:44information technology specialist on
17:46Glassdoor you'll see they make about 61
17:48000 a year so yeah it is probably the
17:51easiest way to get your foot in the door
17:52I interviewed Antoine on this channel
17:54and he basically started off in it then
17:56he went into kind of like an I.T
17:58Logistics type role then he went into
18:00software development then he
18:01transitioned into Tech sales and now he
18:03makes over 500 000 a year so yeah it is
18:06a great place to kind of break into Tech
18:08get your foot in the door once you're in
18:09it's very easy for you to move around to
18:12different roles so next on the list is
18:14going to be an accounting degree and
18:15this is one that my amazing girlfriend
18:17Lucy who's standing over there got
18:19herself and she is also an introvert and
18:21accounting is extremely important for
18:23basically any type of business out there
18:26now it does tend to be relatively number
18:27heavy so there is math but the math you
18:29use tends to be extremely basic and it's
18:31more about kind of organizing things and
18:34then having them like easily accessible
18:36and in such a way where it's easy to
18:38communicate data to other people you're
18:40probably going to be using tools like
18:41QuickBooks and Excel quite a bit now a
18:43lot of the work tends to involve stuff
18:45that you can basically just do on your
18:47own and if you are going to be
18:48communicating with other people it's
18:50typically going to be in a one-on-one
18:51setting and if you're communicating with
18:53people in groups it's usually going to
18:54be people that you already know so it
18:56tends to be really great for introverts
18:59now when it comes to the numbers
19:00accounting comes in at number 34 on my
19:03college degree ranker out of over 900
19:05Degrees if you type in accountant at the
19:07entry level there's over 54 000 results
19:10in the United States and if you type in
19:11account non-glass store you're going to
19:12see 59 000 a year and remember that's
19:15just the entry level I interviewed the
19:17financial controller uh Brian on the
19:19channel and he makes I believe over 200
19:21150 300 000 a year so that's kind of a
19:24higher level account role and that's
19:26something you can get into next one on
19:28the list is going to be engineering and
19:31this is one that of course is a great
19:33degree that you can get it's also
19:34brutally difficult now engineering is
19:37actually the degree that creates the
19:38most millionaires as well as the most
19:40CEOs out of any type of degree out there
19:43so for instance Jeff Bezos of Amazon
19:45actually got an electrical engineering
19:47and computer science degree and one big
19:49reason for that in my opinion is that
19:51engineering is all about practical
19:53problem solving so this tends to work
19:55really well when you're trying to solve
19:57problems in the real world practical
19:59problem solving is basically the heart
20:01of Entrepreneurship and Entrepreneurship
20:02is basically where you're solving other
20:04people's problems in the form of a
20:06product or a service now the funny thing
20:08is most Engineers are introverts as well
20:10so this kind of goes against The
20:12Stereotype that you have to be an
20:13extrovert in order to be a good leader
20:15and this is another thing that Susan
20:17Kane talks about in her book quiet the
20:19power of introverts she argues that in
20:21some case is extroverted behavior and
20:23people blindly following charismatic
20:25leaders is what leads to many of the
20:27disasters in the world such as the fall
20:29of Enron and the 2008 financial crisis
20:32she also talked about a study from
20:33Brigham Young where they found that
20:34there wasn't much of a difference in
20:36charismatic leaders and how well they
20:37did when they studied 128 CEOs of major
20:40companies and she also talks about some
20:42research in the book that suggests that
20:43introverts in many cases are actually
20:45better as Leaders so for instance as an
20:47introvert if you're managing proactive
20:49employees in many cases that can
20:51actually be better leaders that are
20:53introverted are more likely to listen to
20:55suggestions from proactive employees
20:57rather than dominating the situation
20:59like many extroverts do so it's kind of
21:01a yin and yang type situation where if
21:03you're an introvert you tend to be more
21:04introspective you tend to be better at
21:06listening to people and if you have a
21:07bunch of people who are kind of like
21:08proactive who are working under you they
21:11kind of just let them do their thing and
21:12this is actually exactly what I do in my
21:14business I just hire really smart people
21:16and then I just kind of leave them alone
21:18and let them do their thing and only
21:19give them support when they reach out to
21:21me and they need eat it and she argues
21:22that in many cases this leads to better
21:24outcomes and I would happen to agree
21:25with her so as you can imagine
21:27engineering absolutely dominates at the
21:29top of my college degree ranker list
21:31it's probably like 15 out of the top 30
21:33or something like that so for instance
21:35if you type in mechanical engineer on
21:37LinkedIn at the entry level there's 40
21:39000 results you type in civil engineer
21:40there's 50 000 in chemical engineer
21:42there's twenty three thousand mechanical
21:44engineers make eighty one thousand
21:45dollars a year civil engineers make 78
21:47000 and chemical engineers make a
21:49whopping hundred and two thousand so
21:51yeah engineers make great money a lot of
21:53them are extroverts and it can be a
21:54great choice for the right type of
21:55person but with that being said
21:57engineering is absolutely brutal so keep
22:00that in mind because it's one of the
22:01hardest degree paths that you can go for
22:03next let's talk about a social science
22:05which is economics and you probably
22:07didn't think that I was going to include
22:09a social science on the list so
22:10economics can lead to a bunch of really
22:13high paying jobs and it can be a great
22:15opportunity for introverts introverts
22:17tend to be highly introspective as I
22:18talked about before and they spend a lot
22:20of time kind of thinking about how the
22:22world works and thinking about how
22:23different systems interact with each
22:25other and understanding basic economics
22:27especially microeconomics is an amazing
22:29way that you can sort of fundamentally
22:30understand how the world works now if
22:33you type in Economist on LinkedIn at the
22:35entry level you're going to see a 111
22:37000 results but with that being said
22:38typically to become an economist you're
22:40going to need at least a master's level
22:42degree but with just a bachelor's
22:44there's other roles that you can go for
22:46so for instance Financial Risk analyst
22:47is one you could go for and that's about
22:496 000 results you could also become an
22:51investment analyst and that one's about
22:5310 000 results and if you look on
22:55Glassdoor economists make 99 000 a year
22:57Financial Risk analysts make 82 000 and
23:00investment analysts make ninety nine
23:02thousand so yeah economics is another
23:03really good one keep in mind with this
23:05one that you really do need to plan out
23:07your career right this is not one where
23:09you can just go into it and kind of know
23:11that when you graduate you're going to
23:12be good to go kind of like an
23:13engineering degree you really need to
23:15plan things out and speaking of planning
23:17your college degree out I actually have
23:18an entire video dedicated to that that's
23:20going to show you step by step exactly
23:22how you can choose the perfect degree
23:24for you and I'll put that right here
23:26definitely check it out