AMA time

>Majored in math/statistics
>3.6 GPA
>Now an actuary at Anthem making 6 figs with even more upward mobility possible

Come at me

do you suck dick

are you a kike

do you meme

Do you want to kill yourself as an actuary? I was thinking about it (currently programmer) but it seems super fucking boring

if this is a serious thread. I'm currently getting a degree in Mathematics and will be attempting to become an actuary after I have graduated. Any tips of suggestions?

24
Sous chef at Wendy's
160,000k

Intern at banks/firms/insurance. Get your ass out there

Eh it's ok. My other friend in mathematics tried becoming an academic and last I heard he's getting counseling after the rope snapped

>Majored in Finance/Spanish
>3.5 GPA
>Interning at an international firm that works with airlines and airports
>Will likely turn into a job when I graduate this year

Can't complain. I won't be making 6 figures for a few more years though.

>majored in Geology (masters from USC, PHD from Stanford)
>3.1 GPA
>making 7 figures as a contractor for various oil companies

Majored in accounting
5 years experience
Unemployed for the last 6 months

"Accounting is guaranteed employment!"- my tax accounting professor

Oh and I spend most of my time in the field and not sitting at a desk in an office (though i do spend too much time doing that these days).

literally the GOAT career. everyone thought i was making a huge mistake studying geology, but I knew better.

>no 11" cock

>Geology

i know a guy who graduated in Geology and he barely found aj ob and is now basically making minimum wage

maybe 25k € a year lmao

>Read Computer Science
>Can work in nearly any company in the world
>5 figures (23yo Britbong)

Feels very nice.

just got an Airport Security job. Decided to redo my my Bachelor degree as the one I got is pretty useless. So my 3-5 year plan is getting my B.S in Mathematics with concentration in Statistics. Work for the TSA until I can transition to another job in the Government field using my Math B.S.

>Majored in Engineering
>Dropped out and travelled around the world working
>make loads of connections and laugh about how bullshit Uni is
>People liked me and get headhunted into a role in specialist Insurance
>£80k in London and get to travel to Asia and Australia for business once a month
>no debt and the satisfaction of telling degree cucks I'm a drop-out and watching the rage and envy in their eyes when I've told them I've travelled the world and used connections to get a job

How does it feel that your career is literally only lucrative because it's guarded by a bunch of needless tests?

Has he looked abroad? The geology industry here entered a massive boom because of the fracking/oil revolution. Its slowed down a bit now but not too much. Of course it helps I went to a couple great schools. I was getting job offers before I even graduated- before I even started looking.

How much does the TSA pay? I heard they are hiring a lot of new people right now... something for you neets to think about.

What do you do for a living?

yeah well a PhD from Stanford is something else i guess plus the US industry is good for it

i dont know what his problem is.

He is working in some small office with some engineers as of right now. Maybe he gets out of it once.

If i were him id look abroad aswell or in china or maybe norway? who knows.

Seems kind of tough to get by with a geology degree unless you end up in some consulting firm or something

When did you graduate? If it was recently you're lying.
T. Actuary

what are good geology schools? the one I go to is pretty unknown, it is a small private university in the northeast.

>tfw Wendy's chef making 450k a year plus stock options

If Bernie becomes president...

A math is kind of worthless in the job market.

Surprisingly Penn State is considered the best program. Stanford is right up there too of course. I also run into a lot of University of Michigan grads.

2013

Uw Madison has a word class geology department.

Theoretically it can prime you for a lot of careers but realistically people would rather just hire someone who uses its applications in another field like finance or engineering

>23
>sandwich artist
>$87k

Dude you suck

If I owned a company I would hire mostly math majors or people who minored in math. It is the subject that really teaches the kind of thinking needed to solve problems.

The only decent jobs for math majors are things relating to finance/software/insurance/education If you are headed to those fields it is best to major in that field and minor in math.

I can't think of any application of complex analysis outside of electrical engineering and the companies would prefer to hire an electrical engineer major with a math minor rather than a math major with a minor in EE.

Also data science is getting pretty big and it is pretty math-y.