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SoCalGuy858 wrote: » There's many paths in, and having a related degree is definitely a plus. Education may not directly result in a job, but I've never seen a situation where it's hurt!
Khaos1911 wrote: » I have an MIS degree as well and I had no trouble finding jobs when I was in school nor currently. I actually had a two year IT internship my junior year and before I graduated got offered a Full-time IT job from a fortune 100, so it can definitely be done. Alot of MIS major at my company are IT Business Analyst and work with ERP solutions such as SAP. That may be something that interest you.
Khaos1911 wrote: » I don't live in a big city either, but luckily there are a few fortune companies in a 30 min drive. I lucked up and with no IT experience got a paid internship in Information Security where I did compliance work, made sure documentation was ISO compliant, reset passwords, created user accounts, and handled Sarbanes Oxley duties. I learned all my job function from the other interns there (I have no idea why they would have interns handling such sensitive information, but I made the best of the opportunity and used it as a spring board.....) As for Internships/jobs, what are you interested in? What aspects of IT or business do you enjoy? I'd start there and cater my searches/resume toward those interest.
TechGuru80 wrote: » What year are you first of all? That makes a bit of difference in the advice you should be getting. When you finish your degree, assuming you are a traditional student, companies are not going to put you in a senior level position. They should understand you need to grow and in some companies they want you to be green to teach you. Although we don't know your curriculum for school...certifications should be part of your life (not before finishing class work), learning some type of scripting or programming, and getting some type of experience. Frankly those first two items should be high on your list because depending on what year you are in school, the experience might not mean much compared to having the foundational certification knowledge. Especially if there aren't many opportunities in your area of the country or world. Start with vendor neutral CompTIA...at minimum network+ and security+. From there you can branch on what you enjoy learning about but generally it's either an OS cert like MCSA for servers or Cisco for networking. There are a lot of options to improve your skill set and make you more valuable but take it one step at a time because your interests and the demand can change yearly.
goatama wrote: » Apologies if this is impolite, but, uh, why are you getting an MIS degree? I mean you're afraid of the technical, and not sure if you want to be a business analyst, so why exactly did you choose this for your major? What is your passion? I had a coworker who got into IT and got a degree in MIS because he thought that's where the money was. Unfortunately it was not what he really wanted and he's been miserable ever since. He's going back now for his MBA. But he's been in IT for so long that he's pretty much all in now.
TechGuru80 wrote: » For certs like Net+ and Sec+, buy the book and watch some videos. They are conceptual and don't require knowledge on equipment. The knowledge won't ever hurt and it's not like they take forever to get ready for. What has been your curriculum for your major? I mean surely your MIS program covered a wide variety of subjects. Databases is another popular area...stuff like SQL.
goatama wrote: » If you enjoy both the business and tech aspect, and you think you're interested in BI or Business Analysis, I'd definitely recommend getting some good experience with databases. SQL, MySQL, Oracle, etc. and then start looking at Big Data Analytics. It's a marrying of the two, tech and biz, and is definitely about to explode in the industry. So many companies out there right now have tons and tons of data, but it's just sitting there, not being used. A CIO at one of my former jobs liked to say that we were "Data rich and information poor".
N2IT wrote: » I don't see why you couldn't land a job with just a MIS. It's a bachelors aligned with IT. Why wouldn't you be able to land a gig? Did you do an internships? Try to get on as a Junior / Associate Business Analyst.
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