Corporate Life

Here’s how you land a high-paying job—it has nothing to do with your college major, says an advisor of 20 years

  Why We’re Asking the Wrong Question About College

After 25 years in higher education and working with thousands of students, I’ve reached a conclusion that tends to shock parents: We are obsessing over the wrong things when it comes to college.

Most families focus entirely on the "right" major—the one with the highest starting salary on a spreadsheet. But after two decades of watching careers actually unfold, I can tell you that the "major-to-money" pipeline is a myth. I’ve seen English majors become tech executives and STEM graduates plateau by thirty.

The truth? While your major gets you your first job, it doesn't determine your life. Research from the Burning Glass Institute confirms that while technical fields lead early on, the gap often closes within a decade.

If you want long-term success, stop chasing a label and start focusing on these four pillars of career longevity.

1. Shift from "Passion" to "Alignment."

We often tell kids to "follow their passion," but passion without a plan is just a hobby. On the flip side, picking a major solely for the paycheck often leads to burnout.

The secret is alignment. I encourage students to look at the intersection of three questions:

  • What am I genuinely interested in?

  • What am I actually good at?

  • Where are the market opportunities?

Data from the Foundation for Research on Equal Opportunity shows that even within the same major, outcomes vary wildly. The winners are those who are intentional about how their studies connect to the real world.

2. Starting Salary is a Moment, Not a Trajectory

We treat the "First Job Salary" like a final score, but it’s really just the opening kickoff.

Technical degrees often command high early pay—that’s a reality. However, Inside Higher Ed notes that graduates with adaptable skills continue to see salary growth long after others have leveled off. Don’t let a modest starting salary in communications or political science discourage you; ten years later, your starting point will be a footnote, not the headline.

3. Portable Skills are the Real Compound Interest

Technical skills can get you in the door, but "portable" skills keep you in the room. Employers consistently rank the following as their top needs:

  • Communication & Leadership

  • Complex Problem-Solving

  • Decision-making under pressure

I once advised three students at Howard University with completely different majors. All three served on the homecoming committee—a massive, high-stakes operation. They learned to manage teams and navigate crises. Today, all three are high-earning leaders in the event industry. Their majors were different, but their transferable skills were identical.

4. The "Hidden Curriculum" Outside the Classroom

Some of the most vital growth happens when the professor isn't looking. Leadership roles, student organizations, and hands-on projects carry immense weight.

I’ve watched student government leaders go on to run complex corporate operations and campus media enthusiasts build empires. In many cases, how they spent their time mattered more than what was written on their diploma.

The Bottom Line: Don't just pick a major; build a profile. College is less about the name on the degree and more about the evidence of what you can do.


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