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AIBU?

To ask what your high-paying jobs are?

289 replies

patienceandprudence · 26/09/2021 13:56

My DD is in uni doing History. We’re working class through and through, and while she we were chatting about jobs she said that more than anything she’d like to earn a good amount. I’ve no idea what to suggest and DD only came up with a role in the Civil Service.

I always see people on here with high-paying jobs. What could she do with a History degree?

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Quick99 · 26/09/2021 14:00

Depends what high paying means to you. Some people it would be 80k plus.
I wasn't expected to go uni and the jobs I was interested in as a school leaver were around 20k.
I went uni in early 20s and now I'm on 40k which seems like a lot to me but I know it wouldn't be to others.

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FreeBritnee · 26/09/2021 14:00

Engineering.

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FreeBritnee · 26/09/2021 14:01

Sorry I didn’t read your last sentence where you said she already had her history degree. Graduate program?

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Quick99 · 26/09/2021 14:01

Sorry didn't answer your question but if 30 to 40 plus seems like a decent amount then the civil service or Local government and work up would make sense

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XelaM · 26/09/2021 14:01

Law

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Quick99 · 26/09/2021 14:02

Local gov grad scheme is 26ishk a year for 2 years while you do management training

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qualitygirl · 26/09/2021 14:03

What is her idea of a good amount though? Does she have a figure in mind?

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XelaM · 26/09/2021 14:03

A lot to me would be six figures.

My brother is in IT and the starting salary for IT specialists is eye-watering. He is 10 years younger than me and earns more (and I'm a high earner)

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Cheesepuff1 · 26/09/2021 14:04

Property - construction / development / land / project management . "easy" enough after a few years experience to be earning 70 to 100k

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Sciurus83 · 26/09/2021 14:04

I wouldn't recommend civil service if you want to earn like people on here claim to! (9 years civil service)

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Direwolfwrangler · 26/09/2021 14:05

I work in local government as a senior manager, £55k. If I progress the upper management levels earn well over £100k. I have a degree in a similar subject.

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DrFosterGloucester · 26/09/2021 14:05

Law city or US firm.

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BirdIsland · 26/09/2021 14:06

I have a history degree, I did a conversion course into law. It's a good skills fit imo. Salary range for law is wide so it depends what you mean by a good salary, but if she aims mid-tier and above she'll get paid well.

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Notgoingonholiday · 26/09/2021 14:07

My DH has a history degree and is an HR director.

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Redhotchllisteppa · 26/09/2021 14:08

Law. The skills required for a history degree transfer well.

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patienceandprudence · 26/09/2021 14:09

Do six-figure jobs exist outside of London without starting your own business?

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xksismybestletter · 26/09/2021 14:09

I'm a public sector chief executive. Language degree

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TheProvincialLady · 26/09/2021 14:10

I have a degree that is similar to history. I would recommend that she steers clear of any obviously history related jobs eg museums, heritage as they are woefully paid and insecure. I currently work in NHS project management and earn £65k+ with lots of prospect for promotion. If she’s very well organised and a good communicator it’s worth pursuing.

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marangu · 26/09/2021 14:10

She could apply for Big 4 consulting roles, they also run summer holiday opportunities/internships.

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YouJustDoYou · 26/09/2021 14:12

Do six-figure jobs exist outside of London without starting your own business?

Pilot. Plumber (my ex bil is a plumber and is on almost as my pilot relative). Lawyer. IT (you can earn thousands in IT if you're on-call).

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RosesAndHellebores · 26/09/2021 14:12

Law/HR
However I would caveat that with also being very numerate. DH was a high earner because his specialism was finance related. I climbed the greasy HR pole because it's increasingly about data and metrics.

What does she want to do? What does she love? She'll never make a fortune without passion for the role.

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Notgoingonholiday · 26/09/2021 14:13

Do six-figure jobs exist outside of London without starting your own business?
Yes

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HappilyHadesBound · 26/09/2021 14:14

I would also suggest law conversion.

My daughter is looking at various routes to law (only doing GCSE's at the moment) but is considering everything from apprenticeships, a direct law degree, or another degree followed by conversion. Lots of options, and grades aren't as restrictive for the other routes as they are for the law degree.

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patienceandprudence · 26/09/2021 14:15

@RosesAndHellebores History is her passion, wirh education being a close second, unfortunately neither of those interests will ever lead to a highly paid job. The plan was primary teaching until we met her favourite primary school teacher last summer, who told her she had left teaching and to never ever go into it.

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AlwaysNC2021 · 26/09/2021 14:16

She could train as a trade mark attorney. No law degree or conversion required and you train on the job (paid by the firm). Lots of people with history degrees. Starting salary normally around the £30k mark, rising to £60kish on qualification and if you make partner it can easily be 6 figures. Not limited to London but can be v competitive.

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