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Tuesday, September 04, 2018

More and more companies ditch college degree requirements for jobs

Big companies like Google, Apple, and IBM are no longer requiring applicants to hold a college degree.

This is a significant change. Historically, employers have required a college degree whether or not it was necessary to do the job.

Is this because colleges are no longer teaching the needed skills, or because there are so many job openings to fill that standards are dropping? Could it be that vocational training and self-taught skills are enough for certain jobs in the modern-day economy?

Glassdoor compiled an August list of 15 big companies that no longer require a degree to apply:

Google
Ernst & Young
Penguin Random House
Costco Wholesale
Whole Foods
Hilton
Publix
Apple
Starbucks
Nordstrom
Home Depot
IBM
Bank of America
Chipotle
Lowe’s

This is a welcome change for many jobseekers, as well as high school graduates considering whether college is worth the exorbitant cost. With college tuition soaring nationwide, these companies are giving young people an opportunity to succeed without going into debt for a degree they may not even use on the job.

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3 comments:

Anonymous said...

that standards are dropping?

Typical BS statement. I have been doing my trade for over 35 years without a college degree and can run circles around any recent graduate.

80% of the time your degree is only proof of your ignorant decision to spend tens of thousands of dollars on a worthless piece of paper.

Anonymous said...

What is your trade?

Anonymous said...

Of course not. They are minimum wage stand ins for now until the robots roll in.