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How to find a job for information management and information system majors?

Get out of the way I'll answer! I am a senior student of 985 Information Management Department, and I signed up as an ERP engineer in a manufacturing industry in Shenzhen. There will be some embarrassment in the employment of information management major, but at one point, you can still find a satisfactory counterpart job!

Most information management majors are not suitable for first-tier Internet companies. If you are looking for a technical post, the skills you have learned are really shallow and empty, which is far from the requirements of the enterprise. For example, the following figure shows the job requirements for an Internet company to recruit JAVA engineers. In addition to work experience, please see the specific requirements:

Article 1 is not satisfied at all. We also learn Java, but we really don't learn JVM and concurrent network programming mentioned in the requirements, and the teacher doesn't teach us. We have to rely on ourselves if we want to study! Not to mention the second one. Our teacher never mentioned all kinds of popular frameworks and design patterns. More needs will not be listed one by one. IT application software development engineers also have job requirements:

In fact, our professional and more accurate employment target is the manufacturing industry, not the first-line Internet industry. After all, we have learned so much about production management. There are human resources posts, system analysis and design posts, information system development posts (mostly outsourcing posts), supply chain posts, ERP implementation posts and ERP development posts that I reported. The following figure shows the demand for supply chain work in leading manufacturing industries.

It can be seen that the requirements are still relatively broad, and science and engineering management classes accept resume delivery. If students want to engage in technical work, they must learn their own courses well and learn a lot of technical knowledge by themselves during their undergraduate years. If you want to engage in non-technical work, do more internships. I wish all students can find their favorite jobs!