Originally posted by bux2011
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The IT industry does not respect academic qualifications much, especially in the private sector. And since the current (and previous) government policy is that 50% of school leavers should have a degree (and a huge debt), you are not going to be standing out as anything special.
Why not stay on and get a Master's degree? Something relevant to the business sector you want to work in: banking.
Another option is to become a qualified accountant. Most serious IT systems boil down to being a financial system, yet there are very few accountancy-qualified IT professionals. The few I have met earn serious money because the accountants own the purse strings and they reward their own.
So, I suggest you should stay in college, maintain the professional contacts you have already made, and ask them what skills they would like to see in a fresh graduate and decide whether another year doing a Master's would be the best investment you could make at this point in your life.
You've got a plan so lay the best possible groundwork now once and for all by: keep on researching, keep making professional contacts, join the relevant professional bodies now while it is cheap (as a student) (ask for membership as Xmas presents - people love good ideas for Xmas presents like that when they know it can effect the rest of your life) and carry on drinking the cheap beer and shagging the cheap totty for another year.
And doing a 2nd degree once you have started work is far harder than you can currently imagine.
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