07-24-2013, 02:16 PM
Here's my deal. I have my undergrad from TESC in the form of a BSBA - HR / Org Mgmt because my current career is that of an Office Manager role; I'm essentially a Jill-of-all-trades but master none. I went with the HR degree because, as in all areas, you need to know enough about the field to know when you do not know enough and need to seek more expert opinion. Unlike the Accounting, Operations Mgmt support, and other duties I fulfill, HR is the one oddball area where that "I don't know enough" line in the sand is not always obvious until it is too late. So, I went with an HR specialization with my BSBA to increase my knowledge base there, but I'm leaving my HR education where it is at the undergrad level. The bulk of my more complex duties center around Accounting and Ops support (but I have zero desire to further my education beyond my on-the-job training in the latter). I like what I do and I like my employer, but we never know what is just over the horizon; the company is doing well and I do not think anyone is drafting my pink slip any time soon, but I want to make sure my resume stays as marketable as possible "in case" the unforeseen happens down some future road. So that leads me to my question:
What is more marketable, useful, and applicable? An MAcc to qualify to sit the CPA (in AL, a qualifying MAcc has to be from an AACSB-accredited Accounting program), or a more general MBA from any RA school and then a handful of Accounting undergrad-level courses to meet this Alabama's minimum 33 credit hour requirement in Acctg courses (if applying without an MAcc from an AACSB program, you must have at least 150 total post-bac credits, and 33 UL Acctg credits from an RA school). I do want the CPA at some point; my employer is constantly updating the qualifications for my position when hiring counterparts at other locations, and while they grandfather in those of us already in the role, I do not want to be the lowest qualified someday if layoffs come around as they did a few years back. I just can't decide which of these two routes will make for the most competitive resume. I was heavily leaning towards the MAcc...but a more general MBA could leave options open if the unforeseen happens and I need to apply to any 'ol biz admin opening. I don't know.
Thoughts?
What is more marketable, useful, and applicable? An MAcc to qualify to sit the CPA (in AL, a qualifying MAcc has to be from an AACSB-accredited Accounting program), or a more general MBA from any RA school and then a handful of Accounting undergrad-level courses to meet this Alabama's minimum 33 credit hour requirement in Acctg courses (if applying without an MAcc from an AACSB program, you must have at least 150 total post-bac credits, and 33 UL Acctg credits from an RA school). I do want the CPA at some point; my employer is constantly updating the qualifications for my position when hiring counterparts at other locations, and while they grandfather in those of us already in the role, I do not want to be the lowest qualified someday if layoffs come around as they did a few years back. I just can't decide which of these two routes will make for the most competitive resume. I was heavily leaning towards the MAcc...but a more general MBA could leave options open if the unforeseen happens and I need to apply to any 'ol biz admin opening. I don't know.
Thoughts?
BSBA, HR / Organizational Mgmt - Thomas Edison State College, December 2012
- TESC Chapter of Sigma Beta Delta International Honor Society for Business, Management and Administration
- Arnold Fletcher Award
AAS, Environmental, Safety, & Security Technologies - Thomas Edison State College, December 2012
AS, Business Administration - Thomas Edison State College, March 2012
- TESC Chapter of Sigma Beta Delta International Honor Society for Business, Management and Administration
- Arnold Fletcher Award
AAS, Environmental, Safety, & Security Technologies - Thomas Edison State College, December 2012
AS, Business Administration - Thomas Edison State College, March 2012