- Elizabeth Messner
- Colorado Springs, Colorado
- I live in an apartment near campus.
- I am taking Management 305, Marketing 305, Calculus, History, and a Japanese class.
- I work an average of 30 to 35 hours per week. I currently hold 2 part time jobs, one is at Foothills Gateway and the other at Landmark Event Staff. At Foothills Gateway, I work as the Supported Living Services Coordinator's Assistant. At Landmark, I work one the field at all the home CSU football games. I also do my own services as a petsitter for people around the area, babysitting and housecleaning as needed.
- I chose CSU because I had attended this school in the past and I loved Fort Collins. I chose CSU the first time because I was really wanting to study Veternary Medicine, and CSU was the best school for this option.
- After living abroad and working as a teacher, I decided teaching music or any subject for that matter, was not something I wanted to do. I love working with kids, but that was something I needed to keep as a hobby such as volunteering. I chose Business to be my major mainly cause I had had previous jobs in the accounting industry and really enjoyed them. My family is full of accountants, so I am very familiar with the type of work.
- I love watching HGTV! I also love playing all my instruments: guitar, flute and bass. I play a lot of games as well either on my computer or consoles and enjoy watching a lot of movies.
- I do not know anyone in the class.
- I know some of the professors, such as Prof. Lawerence, who taught my accounting class. I also know Prof. Mister, who also taught an accounting class. I know Prof. Deines and Prof. Weiss are my current professors for management and marketing.
- I would love to study abroad, though my concerns with the process are that since I only have a few specific classes left till I graduate, I will just be wasting my time on classes I will not need. I am also very concerned with the cost, as I do not qualify for most need based financial aid.
- I do not have any questions.
I am not considering Marketing as my concentration because I see marketing being a narrow choice in the field of business. Narrow to me is something I can not apply to multiple fields. With Marketing, I see jobs in advertising and statistics. I love statistics, but not having to create my own statistical research for my job. I see marketing being similar to sales. I have never enjoyed sales. I do not see marketing as a skill I can use in my everyday life either, which is something I want.
Management for me is not an option mainly because it is too broad. Every industry has management. With this degree, I would feel like I had no honed skills to help me land a job I would really enjoy. This concentration, to me, is something for post graduate study to aid my education because it is so broad. I have come to this conclusion from my experience with management classes, most seem psychology based, rather than fact based. I prefer a concentration a bit more concrete. Having more information about the career specifics would be helpful to encourage me to look into management further.
Real Estate is something I never considered. I am not sure why either. Though real estate is something I am interested in, it might be too narrow of a choice to apply to many industries. I know very little about the major itself and what it offers, yet again I would assume one would be limited to working in the real estate industry. What I don't want is to discover a company I would really want to work for and find that this company is not in my industry, therefore will not have any jobs in my field.
Computer Informations Systems is not something I considered because I love computers as a hobby. If I had to work with computers every day as a career, I would ruin a lot of my hobbies. I do not enjoy programming, nor understanding how systems work. I do enjoy building computers, and the hardware part of them, but not the software. Though, CIS is neither overly broad nor narrow, it is an industry which I think would become very routine for me.
Finance I something I do want to to add to my curriculum and most likely end up working in. My family have all either worked in Finance or Accounting fields, therefore I find I am more drawn to these fields myself. I absolutely love working with budgets. I find myself budgeting my money on a weekly basis and looking forward to find new ways to save even more. I also really enjoy learning more about investments and planning retirement. I have helped friends save more for themselves and would love the opportunity to plan retirements or everyday life for people. Though I have not had direct experience, I believe I would also like apply my love for budgets to the business side, for instance working with project budgets.
Accounting is the concentration I have determined to study for many reason. Accounting deals with many aspects of finance that I loved about finance, such as budgets. I am really interested in retirement planning and that would include a lot of tax information. I feel I will get the best background for these things in the field of Accounting. The tasks and jobs that are offered in Finance, will almost always allow an Accounting degree as well. So I see Accounting as very versatile. Where finance is not as interchangeable.
I am INFJ, using the Jung Typology Test. The Keirsey career possibilities suggest that I would be best fit for a counselor. Other career possibilities suggested using the INFJ code with other sites would be: clergy, teacher, musician, medical doctor, marketeer, other medical fields, child care worker, and photographer, just to name some.
My colors from the Princeton Review career test were yellow and blue, suggesting I should look into careers such as: banking, tax law, accounting, systems analysis, finance, engineering, and government work.
I have taken the Jung Typology Test once previous to this and I have had very similar results, suggesting to me that I really do fit that type. I agree with it once I read through the descriptions for that type. I agree with the career fields that it suggest for me to try, yet I have tried those as a career and find that I prefer to keep that side of my personality to volunteer oriented work. With the Princeton Review career test, the career suggestions really fit how I see myself and the careers I am really interested in. It also describe the reasons for my interest with accuracy. I have learned from these tests how my everyday traits can be applied to a specific type of job and how it will affect my liking of that job. By going with the grain of your personality it can make your work much easier and natural for you.