So three not-getting-me-a-new-job interviews later, I've decided I need to take a different and additional path to getting a new job besides "ask everyone you know if they know of opportunities and network madly" and "apply for every job you come across on Craigslist" and "put your resume all of the places
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Comments 8
When you say that you want to fix things, are you talking on an IT scale or on a larger, fix-the-world type scale?
For what it's worth, my husband loves his MBA program at Bainbridge Graduate Institute. He's taking the hybrid option, so he has online classes three days a week and he has to travel to Seattle once a month for an intensive. We're only a few hours away from Seattle, but I know there are people in his cohort from all over the country. He's only been in school for a few weeks, but he's already gotten a ton of career counseling and support. And they have to do a study-abroad segment later -- it will either be in Spain, China, India or Cuba.
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Given that skill set, I think you'd be a great MBA candidate. You would probably be great at resource management or community planning or investment. The cool thing about an MBA (as opposed to so many other degrees) is that it's so very versatile. It opens a lot of doors, but it doesn't lock you into any one field. And the interest in China would just be icing on the cake!
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I would suggest informational interviews here; I think Option 6 also sounds like a good idea. If your interviews don't get you anywhere...well, they still do, because that's new information you didn't have before (e.g. "business analysis is not really for me").
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If you want connections for teaching English in China, I actually have some friends who went and did that.
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