The latest trend in entry-level jobs is to avoid them altogether. More and more recent college graduates are heading start-up businesses, writes The Boston Globe. In fact, at high-powered schools like Harvard and Carnegie Mellon, thirty to forty percent of students create their own companies within five years of graduating. For students thinking of leaping to the top of their own corporate ladder, certain skills may come in handy. For one, they may have to learn to market themselves. More advice can be found at:
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Thursday, February 23, 2006
IEEE Career Alert: Tech Jobs Are Jumping
3. Start Up, Not at the Bottom
The latest trend in entry-level jobs is to avoid them altogether. More and more recent college graduates are heading start-up businesses, writes The Boston Globe. In fact, at high-powered schools like Harvard and Carnegie Mellon, thirty to forty percent of students create their own companies within five years of graduating. For students thinking of leaping to the top of their own corporate ladder, certain skills may come in handy. For one, they may have to learn to market themselves. More advice can be found at:
The latest trend in entry-level jobs is to avoid them altogether. More and more recent college graduates are heading start-up businesses, writes The Boston Globe. In fact, at high-powered schools like Harvard and Carnegie Mellon, thirty to forty percent of students create their own companies within five years of graduating. For students thinking of leaping to the top of their own corporate ladder, certain skills may come in handy. For one, they may have to learn to market themselves. More advice can be found at:
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