For as long as I can remember, I have always wanted a career in business. My father owns his own business and some of my earliest memories include being told to sit quietly with my brother as my father met with customers and companies. It fascinated me how everyday was different for him, and that he saw and dealt with an ever-changing group of people. Early on, this fascination with the flexibility of his job made me want the same in my life, and that desire never really went away. When teachers, peers and random adults like my dentist asked me what I wanted to do when I was older, I always knew I wanted to own my own business. With this career goal in mind, I entered senior high school already searching for the perfect university to attend.
Every child wants to “be something” when they grow up. A doctor, a lawyer, a veterinarian, the list continues indefinitely. Most people fixate on one particular career; even if it changes, at any given moment they have one goal. For some reason, that never happened for me. My friends and family would ask “what do you want to be when you grow up?” and I would immediately rattle off a laundry list of different things. “An inventor, a scientist, a dancer, a chef, a translator! I’m going to learn every language in existence!” was my excited reply. Apparently I was quite the ambitious child.
When I asked myself what I was I going to be when I got older, I had no answer. This made me realize that I had to make a decision and I had to make one fast. An area of study I have always been interested in is business. My dreams as a child have always been to become the President of The United States or an owner of a business. Working for a business would be intresting, but owning one would be more fulfilling. I would be able to expand my imagination by coming up with new ideas and control the company as a whole. I love designing and creating different things that make people happy, and if one day I became an owner of a company that produced products that satisfied people, that would make me happy. I soon came to the conclusion that in
Up until recently, I was like many of my peers, uncertain about what the future would hold for me. I did not know where exactly I wanted to attend school, what I wanted to study, or what I wanted to do career-wise. But, after taking high school classes like Business Information Management, Human Resources, Banking and Financial Services, and Accounting I, I found my long awaited answer, a fascination in the business and financial world. I loved attending these classes and learning new and exciting
My intended major is Business. Business content is generally a comprehensive accounting, economics, finance, marketing science and organizational behavior concepts. The concept in society is prior to the operation of business and personal financial management on the benefits and influence. Because the relationship between industrialization and information technology services was booming, commercial terms a large number of derivatives, so business is considered in making the business a way to enter the job market prior to the social utility, Therefore, I also chooses Business as my university departments. Because of world trade and development, globalization has made countries increasingly dependent; therefore, business is importance and
Ever since I was young, I knew I wanted to have a spectacular career, I wasn't sure which one I wanted, but I knew it had to be something I was in love with. As I got older I realized more and more that a college education would be the essential in accomplishing this goal. Many great careers require a high level college education, therefore getting this education early on will enable me to be successful.
Something that make me smile, gets me excited, makes me do something is softball. I have played ball all since the day I could walk. I started off playing baseball since I was 2 years old. Then at age 8 I went on to play softball for a select softball team in Pearland. Playing softball has always made me smile! I love the intensity, excitement, and the teamwork that is used to play ball. We all look out for each other and try to pick each other up even when we are not all in the spirit. Some activities that involve science, technology, engineering, and math that I find to be fun is robotics and underwater robotics. Robotics has always been a big part in my life because my dad is a robotics teacher for this school and I always loved playing
being born and raised until my teenage years in New York kick off my the development of myself today. New York is one of the biggest cities in the world filled with different cultures and people very diverse. this is the being of my shaping of myself being around so many people with different lifestyles which help me to learn that even in this big city there is the world out there that one day I hope to see. New York also shapes me to be a hard worker the pride that is taken in being successful in life by achieving a professional career and making a living so being around motivated and career driven peers and family. at the age of 12 my family packed up and move from New York to Georgia to live down south and see what southern hospitality was all about. living in Georgia was totally different things were a lot slower and family was extra important, a closer bond than the average family in new York also sports, sports were
Passion is necessary to excel. Once someone loses desire or motivation for something it becomes quite difficult to continue doing well in that field. I went through a crisis of lost motivation in my first two years of high school.
I was raised in upstate New York, where my father runs a small business. I have always admired my father, but I never gave much thought to following in his footsteps to pursue a career in business. From an early age, I've gravitated towards the sciences as a way to understand the world around me. I grew up watching episodes of Bill Nye the Science Guy, diligently recreating every experiment I could at home. I enjoyed the discovery process inherent in the scientific method—proposing a hypothesis about the world and proving or disproving it with data. My coursework in high school and college contained a healthy dose of math and science, and for much of my time at Dartmouth I expected to enter academia, or at the very least, become an engineer.
When I was little, I always asked myself. What do I want to be when I grow up, but I never asked myself what I do not want to be when I grew up. In the course of growth, I longed to work to have my own money, but my parents did not allow me to work because I was not old enough to work. I always had the interest to go to college full-time but in a life circumstance, I decided to start work part-time. I think that the worst job for me would be customer service because I do not have the patience to work with clients.
I do not know. Four incredibly hard words to say. Four incredibly rational words to say. I have only been alive for 18 years, and I do not know how I will spend the rest of my life.
In conclusion, i have found that business has a wide range of jobs and career choices. I'm going to school for accounting to get out and make a good paycheck so i can save up to be an entrepreneur and own a hotel. The way i want stuff and spend money im going to have to have a great
Creativity is the endless imagination that moves the world. Today’s creative minds build tomorrow’s innovative industries. These industries result in increased employment expanding the economy bringing optimism to social and business groups, thus empowering countries. By complementing economics with creativity, I plan on revolutionizing the modern world.
My mother’s reaction when she had asked me about my career plans was- “Why business?”
I was always viewed by my family and teachers as the intelligent girl who continually had her head trapped between the pages of a textbook. I prided myself on that description, because while some of my peers viewed me as the classic nerd, I knew exactly where the hard work and determination would get me. From the initial hope and creation of the college dream in elementary school, to the perpetuation of my academic accomplishments in middle school, I never held much thought to what I would study once I advanced into the higher level of education. Due to the specialized business classes I took, it was always assumed for me that I would major in a business- or finance-related field to follow my father’s path into the corporate world. It was not until my first year in high school that I truly considered my own interests as potential career options.