I need your wizdom, /biz/,
>be me
>graduate with a bachelors in a meh tier subject from a meh tier university
>get a breddy gud job at a government agency, learn actual hard skills with market value, start a career
>in a year or two I will have enough experience to go into consulting
>but, now I have been offered the option of taking a two-year-masters degree in a much better subject from an almost ivy-league school
Should I take this education? Is it worth two years just to get the degree when I already have a career going? Will my current degree haunt me unless I improve upon it?
Come on, /biz/, I know you know this stuff
>be me
learn how to greentext newfag. it's not a le reddit comic
I'm not in a position to answer this so here's a bump
Also do you enjoy your current work and will you enjoy the work the master degree gets you? Some more details will probably lead to better answers
>>1342197
Chill senpai
>>1342021
Do you want to launch your career to the moon or stay at your comfy, cushy job?
>>1342222
But what would I actually get from that degree?
>>1342021
>be a redditor
You have to go back.
>>1342204
>Some more details will probably lead to better answers
Alright, so basically I work at the tax agency. I get to learn mostly everything there is to know about corporate taxes.
The degree I could get would be in taxes.
>>1342246
Would the extra knowledge from the degree help you, or are you comfortable with your current level?
>>1342260
No, i'm pretty sure the knowledge itself would be rather thin compared to what I get at the job. It's the school name I'm thinking about.