by Civil Servant » Tue Dec 02, 2008 10:51 am
The accounting credential will serve you far better than the (undergrad) business administration one. It sounds to me like you're thinking of a double major (?) -- my advice would be to chuck the latter one in favor of doing something specific and quantitative to distinguish yourself among all the other accountants who will hit the market at the same time as you do; "business administration" at the undergrad level doesn't necessarily give a potential employer any useful information about what you're capable of and can even sound like a dodge. Or even pick up a non-squishy minor like econ or quant finance or math that demonstrates initiative and will give you the ability to see accounting issues in a broader perspective. Getting some internship experience doing shipping or government or military accounting might be a good idea (these workforces skew older and there will be lots of retirements in the coming years) -- if that appeals, look into getting a cheapo student membership in the Association of Government Accountants and any other organizations that will look good on your resume, and attend meetings and schmooze like crazy. You should definitely be looking to take the CPA exams right as you're graduating, and investigate other professional credentials as well (CGFM? CFA?) that you might want to pick up later on -- it's great to talk about these plans at job interviews or to have started on them independently. There will be jobs out there in a few years, but the key thing is going to be setting yourself apart from what will be lots and lots of other applicants. So start buckling down now and you'll be in a very good position.