Do I Need a Marketing Degree?
Marketing is one of the few fields that is indispensible, regardless of the industry you’re in. It’s also a lucrative field, and for a certain type of creative, problem solver, or thrill seeker is a very rewarding field of work. Because marketing is such big business, and there are so many opportunities at every level of the field, we regularly get asked about the best way to enter into a marketing career. By proxy, the question often takes the form of “do I need a marketing degree?” Many of the best marketers i’ve met have degrees — often very rigorous ones — but not necessarily degrees in marketing. This might be because the academic discipline of marketing is relatively new, or because they work in settings that value results more than credentials. Take with this the fact that many of the top marketers in organizations hold a variety of degrees, and the picture becomes a bit more complex. In short, needing a marketing degree or not just depends…
Top reasons you need a marketing degree:
1.) It’s hard to get the full breadth of knowledge complementary to marketing positions without a degree tailored for it
This isn’t to say that there aren’t other degrees that provide a huge range of background knowledge on marketing-related skills, or that you can’t learn many marketing skills on the job, but rather that the academic knowledge that is complementary to marketing positions is very specific, and multidisciplinary. It’s an off chance that another degree would prepare you for marketing positions through select classes in business, psychology, web technologies, communication, creative writing, design, statistics, advertising, and well, marketing. Graduate level study is even more specialized, making it even more doubtful that a full marketing education could be obtained without a marketing degree. At a bachelors level, an undergraduate degree in marketing might be composed of something like the following (from LSU’s E.J. Ourso College of Business’ B.S. in Marketing Degree):- 2 semester-long accounting classes
- 3 semester-long economics classes
- 2 semester-long mathematics classes
- 2 semester-long oral and written communication classes
- 2 semester-long information systems and decisions science classes
- 1 semester-long finance class
- 2 semester-long management classes
- 1 semester-long business law class
- 2 semester-long upper level business elective classes
- 6 semester-long marketing core and elective classes
2.) You have an undergraduate degree that thought you how to reason, read, write, and think. But you need specialized knowledge quickly.
While the exact stack of knowledge needed by marketers will vary by position and industry (and likely learned on the job), oftentimes a degree is the quickest way to obtain a wide breadth of specialization knowledge that might be applicable to many marketing positions. If you’re in a marketing position and looking to stay with your current organization, you might be well served to continue learning through work. But if you’re seeking to catch up with industry professionals, or looking to change positions or industries, a marketing degree might be the quickest route. Particularly for students who have already obtained a rigorous undergradaute degree — in a STEM or liberal arts field — there are many post-bachellaureate and certification programs that can help you quickly gain specialized marketing knowledge. At the graduate level, a number of MBA programs with marketing concentrations may also be achieved in as little as a year and a half. Though not many, there are also boot camps for some marketing disciplines, or a very wide range of courses. For students who know the exact tools they would like to master, these are often valid options.FEATURED ONLINE PROGRAMS
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>Master’s in Marketing Communications
The Marketing Communication master’s concentration prompts you to analyze consumer behavior, conduct market research, and engage the power of brands and messages in order to develop powerful digital marketing strategies. Evaluate various tactics, measure their effectiveness, and explore the intricacies of working with or in complex, multi-functional teams to execute compelling marketing campaigns. Highlights:
- Top 100 university
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