In the several years I have been teaching I have observed a few students who are trying to come up with some sort of formula job for making money. Which field pays the best, how do I qualify, how much will it pay me? The problem is that they are equating this with job satisfaction, a huge mistake. Putting pills in a bottle all day long as a pharmacist indeed may bring a high starting salary, but frankly it does not sound like much fun to me. Besides, how long before voice recognition, bar codes, and a sort of computerized warehouse of drugs have machines filling the bottles instead of people? Think about it, the machines don’t get tired standing up or worry about the kids at home.
Richard Watson addresses some of these issues in an innovative column. And he points out what I have been saying, repetitive jobs will be replaced by machines, creative jobs are in design. And as I have also suggested the MBA is becoming old hat, there is an oversupply and like anything else, when we all have a cabbage patch doll, the novelty wears off.
I ran across this at the http://www.fastcompany.com site, I suggest you bookmark that one, great stuff about our changing world.
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