Marry Bill Gates.
2006-06-16 16:22:46
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answer #1
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answered by Ranto 7
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I am not a person of a great piece of paper that says I am a professional, but I am a person who has owned and operated her own business in a cut throat market and I have succeeded very well.
I no longer have the business I started, because I sold it and now do this all day long. I watch and I listen and I can tell you that the piece of paper is important only if you are wanting to be an employee and not the employer.
The only way you are ever going to have any real money is if you own the business yourself. If you work for someone else, you are making them a lot more money than they are paying you. This is the way they make money and stay in business.
The internet is still the way of the future. You just have to keep watching what is successful. Like Yahoo Answers!
If you took the accelerated course in computer programming, and all the other ones as well, it still would not do anything for you except get you a job working for someone else. Except maybe experience at the business you want to create for yourself.
I believe you need the technical know-how and to gain the experience you will need to work for someone else for a while to put food on the table, but if you do go to school, don't aim for what someone else needs, go to school to gain what YOU need to be able to become a owner, instead of being owned.
I am not going to say more. This is just something you could think of when you are looking for training in something. You may want to work for an employer. It may be what you would prefer, owning the business is a big responsiblity to take on.
When you get education, get education for yourself, and your vision of what you want your life to be. Train to be your training.
Fuzzy explaination I know, but if you are a professional, then you are not Mr. So and So that works at the school. You are Mr. So and So the teacher at the school. Understand. work some where or be the reason there is work somewhere.
2006-06-16 17:01:50
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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John,
Re an earlier response: I look up each and every school experience from "serious" candidates. An 18-month BA carries about as much weight as the diploma would if it were soaking wet and I put rocks on it.
There are still lots of folks running around from the dot-com bust looking for jobs who have lots of education and no jobs. It seems as if software design is the way to go, but you'll have to do your time in school. Maybe you could get over the "big bucks/no effort" notion; employers don't want people who want big bucks for minimal effort.
2006-06-16 16:41:29
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Check with AIU-online (American Intercontinental University). They are accredited and have several computer programs both Bachelor's Degrees in 9 months and Master's Degrees in 13 or 15 months. I went with them for awhile until my life turned inside out. It's completely online, I thought it was great.
2006-06-16 16:22:39
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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My guess would be a cashier position at your local wal-mart store. You can earn cash while you learn keyboards and product code.
2006-06-16 16:21:02
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answer #5
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answered by pink 2
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this is a trick question right?
2006-06-16 16:18:08
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answer #6
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answered by Pobept 6
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