How is financial fraud analytics for a career? Decent prospects/wages or dogshit admin slave?
>>1226645
>financial fraud analytics for a career
What is this?
>>1226645
Depends. Is this an associates program, bachelor's, masters, what?
Bottom line, it's not particularly well known, so be prepared to explain it in every interview until you have some job experience
>>1226645
You'll sit around on a cuck wage analysing people who are making more than you
>>1227945
As far as I can tell, you basically collect a shit ton of data, either secretly or through police seizures, and then search through it to find evidence of fraud as part of a court case, investigation, etc.
>>1227952
Graduate programs. All the UK big 4 accounting firms seem to do it, but I'd never heard of it before. I meet the requirements for it and have fairly useful skills for it, but I'm half expecting it to be a little like what >>1228776 is saying: a dead-end job with shit money and no progression.
>>1227952
>Depends. Is this an associates program, bachelor's, masters, what?
lol @ Forensics Auditing being offered as an associate degree...
Is that like a mail order medical degree?
>>1228801
By "graduate programs" I meant jobs. Not degree etc.
Maybe there is such a thing as a degree in it (wouldn't surprise me these days), but I'm not interested in that.
>>1228805
>Forensics Auditing being offered as an associate degree...
there is no way. I have a Masters and B.S. in accounting and I feel like I dont understand accounting at all. There is no way I could catch fraud in a company let alone somebody with a 2 year