Why Collage Degree is Worthless | You don't need a collage Degree to change the World.

Why Your Collage Degree is Worthless?


 The levels are informative. Information is the most valuable source on the market. On the other hand, higher education can save time and money and provide better information.


The assortment information is calm and funny.

Of course. Let’s say you want to work for James. Both stakeholders. Applicants should provide a brief curriculum vitae of the “University Marketing Agreement”.

Two sponsors submitted three emails. Copies of marketing campaigns, Shopify store results, and sample CPCs posted in a Facebook promotional package.

Who can tell Jacob about the value they created?



Deeper

Take an even better look at the three participants. He sent you an email. A letter explaining how to make $ 100 a week from Amazon affiliate fees by discussing the James Book and even a long Amazon review posted on the blog, opting out of it and emailing. Postal news. . He also noticed that his book had a 2D second-page image on his website, and provided a free 3D image. He said he hoped the ads for his books and photos would be useful to him, and if he wanted to come here, let him know.

That's pretty damn good information. He just didn't tell her about his candidate status. He didn't even stop to show his worth as two candidates. He actually created value for him.

After five years in the classroom, both graduates and three sent in ten times more valuable information than a diploma and learned how not to create value. What they have done is simple and accessible to everyone. It takes a little courage, hard work, experimentation, creativity and persistence. It does not require any rights, reliance, VPS or other implicit external goodwill on paper.


"But most companies call requirements diplomas!"

Information, my dear, is expensive and imperfect. Imperfect and companies.

Employers use the degree because they saw the relationship between the degree (not the causal relationship) and the degree (not the causal relationship) between degree holders and the minimum employment threshold relative to not holding a diploma. Not because the university is doing something to make people work better. Employers know they don't. They have the information they need to sort through and are looking for quick and easy ways to narrow down candidate pools. Using IQ and other tools is illegal, so they've put together a bag of information which they think makes a lot of sense. The diploma is a data point in this basket.

They use it when there is nothing better. But if you have something better, it will immediately weaken the degree. Businesses (especially human resources departments) are not always very creative. Sometimes you need it to open your eyes. Can you provide information that shows your worth better than a degree?

I hope so. Because even if you have a job, you won't get a job because of it. You will get a job based on other things that are more important. Which begs the question, why get a degree? When you do the hardest job on your resume, no one asks you about your high school GPA. Likewise, when you have a great project or experience, no one cares about your level. You have no interest in making something faster and saving luck.

Businesses don't want levels, they want information. With a little creativity and enthusiasm, you can better provide more information. Oh, and as a general rule, the more interested a company is, the more interested it is in degrees.


If college is your hobby, you're bored

Literally. Look around the middle class in college. I'm going to give you a few minutes to pull students' heads off my desk ...

Take it. Now remember that what you are buying is a piece of paper that says, "I'm probably not worse than these people." Beautiful slim business card.

Many students agree and some say, "University sucks and degrees don't get me a job, but I find it useful by working and networking myself and through a lot of side projects." But then why do you still pay tuition? It just makes you lose money on valuables and builds bad habits in you. (Why do you think teachers are afraid of the free market?)

Be careful to combine skills and experience to make your level the most interesting thing for you.



College is good for lazy, stupid people

I've told you before, I don't judge, I declare the facts. It's just the economy.

Some types of education agree that the university is very interesting. But he says there are many fools and fools, and only wise and ambitious people should be involved. From a cost-benefit standpoint, they have it precisely backwards.

Smart, hardworking people can quickly and easily generate more powerful signals than a college degree to demonstrate their value in the marketplace. Remember, the diploma cries out, "I'm like any other degree holder." If you are working well at it, you need more than one degree of information to demonstrate it.

But not too much greed or emotion for them, a bit of a bad investment. Of course, they can also find better and cheaper ways to tell the world that they are "meh," but at least a degree bothers them. If you have a below average breast, a piece of paper that tells the world that you are probably average breast. Is an upgrade. You have met such people. HR managers quickly realized that their degree was the most influential thing in theirs. Oh yes

If you're keen and laugh about half an ounce, another note is a bad investment compared to your other options. But if you're so lazy and illegitimate that you can't make a better sign, it increases your perceived worth if you buy "I have medium breasts".


You can better expect that you either don't, or have a bad time, degree or not.


"But I've waited all my life and worked for this!"


(Well, my parents too.)

I'm sorry to hear this, but even if you (or your parents) like it, a college degree isn't very effective.

I know, it's hard to hear parents sacrifice everything to get their child to go to college. They may not be able to afford it, which is why they are committed to strengthening the pool so that their own children can someday. For them, college is the pinnacle of parenting success. I have heard parents praise their lost, living, unemployed but dying child as they beat up their business owner, a happy and successfully abandoned child. They are so focused on college as a prosperity personality that they don't listen when you say it is crushing your soul or you will do better.

I appreciate the search for the welfare of their children by parents. I get reputation pressure. I do not judge. But really, they're not doing much right.


I'm not talking about the future, but the present

It's not far, it will happen soon as AI, the internet and drones and 3D printers predict the obvious. It's today. It's already there. The college is dead (here I say this at one point like a TED talk, so you know that must be true).

People think the past tells us about the present, but the future is a good source. The day the car became commercially viable, the stroller sweeping industry died. He won't die, he was already dead. Most people haven't known this for a while.

The underlying value of the college product (information indicated by a degree) has been better explained by some, now it is available to anyone who wants it. The entire college business model is flawed. Any former holder of non-sheepskin can now demonstrate their abilities, prove their worth, make promises and create opportunities. Tough times for Ivory Tower.

The best part is that it is better not to lock yourself behind a door. Something better than you. You are your own credentials. Your business card is your knowledge, your network, your skills, your experience, your confidence and your ability to show how they can help others.

This is an important point. It's not a trendy new college or online degree. It's a new approach implemented by you, leaving a digital footprint that speaks louder than any piece of stamped paper.

Listen, I'm telling you this as a friend. My university degree is also worthless. Will you complain about it or will you build something better?


Some objections ...

"You said it's me, it's not a new program, but haven't you started a program?"

Yes. My Praxis company doesn’t sell our credentials, but it helps you, if you’re ready, to dominate the world where you don’t buy the credentials, you’re the go-to. We are awakening the world to the possibilities that exist today, helping you take your mind to school, creating a valuable signal and apprentices of awesome companies to get your hands dirty now, not after taking a test.

"Wait a minute, are you trying to sell me something?"

Absolutely right! I openly sell this idea and your mindset and let you know if you agree and think Praxis might help you take advantage of it, consult us. If I am right and helpful to you, we will make a profit. If I’m wrong and we don’t create value, we won’t. Or heck, just follow the Praxis blog for free and get busy embracing the mindset.

(Professors are the ones who usually throw the above objections. Because, you know, they don’t make money with dominant speeches that the university is above the cost-benefit review and all. Everyone has to go ...)

"But the value of the university's experience is furniture!"

So. This is an article about degrees. I met my wife on a campus, but guess what? After flirtatiously saying "Hello", he didn't ask me, "Are you upgrading on the tuition?" You can experience every element of the college experience - including sitting in the classroom - without enrolling or paying a dime in tuition. No one does, because they are there for the paper, not for the “furniture”. Do you want the holidays? Move to a college town. Do you want a great career? Do real work.

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