Jobs Outside of Majors DC

You can land a job in a field outside the scope of your college major -- if you know what to do. Read this and know more about that.

Local Companies

Fox Valley Technical College
(202) 347-5610
401 9th St., NW
Washington, DC
Jobs for America's Graduates - DC
(202) 580-6550
1701 Pennsylvania Ave., NW
Washington, DC
Career Technical Institute
(202) 552-3060
2131 K St., NW
Washington, DC
Accountemps
(202) 626-0120
1201 F St NW
Washington, DC
Adams Grayson Corporation
(202) 828-1100
1625 I St NW
Washington, DC
Boyden Global Executive Search
(202) 331-3390
1317 F St NW Ste 350
Washington, DC
Citystaff
(202) 861-4200
1701 K St NW
Washington, DC
Worker Rights Consortium
(202) 387-4884
5 Thomas Cir NW Fl 5
Washington, DC
Labor Ready
(202) 526-3339
1311 Rhode Island Ave NE
Washington, DC
The Employment Agency
(202) 296-6606
1725 K St NW
Washington, DC

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An accounting graduate gets a job as a passport specialist with the federal government. A music major and an art history major both find their niche in public relations. A sociology grad ends up working for a major nonprofit organization as a speakers' bureau coordinator.

These are all true stories and proof positive that you can land a job in a field outside the scope of your college major -- if you know what to do.

Get Experience

You may think you've got the wrong degree for the career you want to pursue. But you can make up for that -- and then some -- by grabbing hands-on experience however you can.

"If you're going into a career that's unrelated to your major, experience speaks volumes," says MacKenzie Lucas, an art history graduate from the University of Wisconsin-Madison who is now working as an assistant account executive in the Chicago office of PR giant Ketchum.

While still in college, Lucas completed two PR-related internships: one in a U.S. senator's office and the other with a boutique PR agency. She even interned at Ketchum for two-and-a-half months after she'd already graduated, which helped her land her current job.

Identify Transferable Skills

Many skills you've gained in college are transferable, meaning they fit a wide range of fields and careers no matter what your major.

Beth Moseley is an accounting graduate of Converse College in Spartanburg, South Carolina. She recently began working for the U.S. State Department as a passport specialist, conducting background checks and looking for instances of fraud in passport applications.


Click here to read the rest of the article at YoungMoney.com.

Featured Local Company

Fox Valley Technical College

2023475610
401 9th St., NW
Washington, DC

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