So I want a typical "office job" but I don't know what titles I should look up to even begin searching for it. Not data entry/receptionist but that cubicle type of stuff. I''ve been googling but I don't know what those types of jobs are specifically and "office job" doesnt really help.
I'm so sick of food service and retail if I keep having to do this shit I'm gonna go crazy.
I have an "office job" ina c ubicle but some days it involves driving.
Most of those you go to college for. If you want a generic one get a certificate in bookkeeping or something to that effect and go from there.
Despite the hype, a lot of engineering and jobs and the like are almost entirely in the office and you rarely leave your desk.
>>18032977
I was thinking of getting a degree in communications since I figured bookkeeping was more math and payroll related. I'm absolutely god awful at math but if it's more of the organization of payroll or finances maybe I'll check it out.
I work as a BI / DW consultant.
I spend all my days hacking sql, doing dimmensional modellering, for invoces, orders, ledgers and shit. I also do a lot of ETL, draging arrows between boxes, parsing json, handling events from message queues etc.
Its a hard task because you need to understand the needs of the bussiness users, be able to hack some scripts and java and be a fucking DBA at the same time.
You also need to provide an interface for users who don't understand sql, but needs to get numbers into an excel sheet.
Its too much work for one person, yet i am just one person.
>>18033005
That sounds really intense. What degree did you get in order to get your current job?
>>18033023
I have an MSc in computer engineering, but i don't think you really need that.
You just need to be clever, i guess some college would be preferable in order to be precived as 'legit'.
I didn't learn much about this in college, except for some basic database and programming skills. I've learnt most of it by reading books.
sales
accounting, hr, IT, occupational health, logistics, marketing, market research, manager
think of how a business runs and what is needed