Data analytics seems like a natural pivot from CS, with a lower barrier to entry. Many of job listings I’ve looked at don’t require multiple years of experience or a laundry list of different tech stacks. They seem to just want a quantitative bachelors plus some kind of analytics coursework in R, Tableau, and a few others. There also seems to be a lot of contract or part-time work.
Is this a correct assessment or am I not understanding something?
submitted by /u/tristanwhitney
[link] [comments]
r/cscareerquestions Data analytics seems like a natural pivot from CS, with a lower barrier to entry. Many of job listings I’ve looked at don’t require multiple years of experience or a laundry list of different tech stacks. They seem to just want a quantitative bachelors plus some kind of analytics coursework in R, Tableau, and a few others. There also seems to be a lot of contract or part-time work. Is this a correct assessment or am I not understanding something? submitted by /u/tristanwhitney [link] [comments]
Data analytics seems like a natural pivot from CS, with a lower barrier to entry. Many of job listings I’ve looked at don’t require multiple years of experience or a laundry list of different tech stacks. They seem to just want a quantitative bachelors plus some kind of analytics coursework in R, Tableau, and a few others. There also seems to be a lot of contract or part-time work.
Is this a correct assessment or am I not understanding something?
submitted by /u/tristanwhitney
[link] [comments]