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Hi, I completed my BE and specialized in E&C. Now, I am pursuing my MBA. Next year, I have to choose my specialization, and I am greatly confused about whether to choose HR or finance. In my college, placements are only available for finance and marketing roles; there are no placements for HR. I fear that job opportunities might be limited for HR. However, I am interested in both HR and finance. Is it okay if I choose finance since I am an engineering graduate? Will I get a job that involves finance functions along with a technical aspect?

Please guide me on which specialization is best, offers more job opportunities, and is more suitable for engineering graduates.

With regards,
Mamatha

From India, Bangalore
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Hello Mamatha,

If you ask this question in an HR forum, you may get suggestions to pursue HR, and vice versa with finance forums. Go according to your personal interest. That's all. Because if your interest lies in HR and based on your observations and suggestions, if you opt for finance, even if you secure a job, you wouldn't enjoy job satisfaction, and vice versa. So, choose according to your interests. Finally, a word, neither HR nor finance professionals are idle for long periods without opportunities. All the best.

Thanks & Regards
CRK
crk.mbahr@yahoo.com

From India, Vijayawada
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Mamatha,

From your post, I believe the following:

- You are an engineer.
- You have an affinity for both HR and Finance.
- You want to know if Finance/HR has better job prospects.

Both have equal opportunities. All you need to do is wait and have patience. Sure, there's an easy placement option for finance, knowing that there's campus placement. But if we remove the concept of campus placement, there's not much difference in job hunting for either position.

Moreover, you may find many people ending up with contradicting job roles as they took up what came their way but later wanted to shift to a role related to their academics.

In my institute, there were campus placements for all specializations, and yet only 4 out of 13 were placed. However, all of us who weren't placed, including me, were patient enough to wait for 8-10 months before landing our jobs. Eventually, we got many offers not related to our academics, but we didn't accept them. One of our friends is still unplaced but not demotivated to accept whatever comes his way.

Which specialization to take:

I would say that no one but you can answer this question best.

Ask yourself what your passion is and what motivates you.

What would you like to do for the next 30 years and never get tired of it?

What would drive you to work every morning early, regardless of how stressed you are or how late you were last night?

Irrespective of the specialization you choose, do justice to it. Otherwise, you might lose your passion when life tests you.

If you'd be accepted for technical finance-related jobs:

Finance is all about numbers. If you look at a Balance Sheet, P&L statement, and all other things - it's numbers, numbers, and more numbers.

If you're good with numbers, have good analytical and numerical skills, and have an affinity for finance, who can stop you from dreaming about finance?

All you need to prove is that you're confident with finance. Unless you are confident and have faith in yourself, none of the interviewers will have confidence in you and trust your abilities.

Again, I say, do what you love to do. Do not follow the crowd. Do not choose finance because your friends suggested it or HR because someone you sought advice from suggested it. Follow your heart.

Hope this helps :)

From India, Mumbai
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Ram Singh (Raja),

MBA has several specializations, with the most common being Finance, Marketing, HR, Operations, and Systems. Check where your interest area lies and select. Specializations should be chosen based on your level of interest.

From India, Mumbai
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Hi Ankita, Being a science student, how can he decide what is good for him? It is very confusing for a science student as doing an MBA adds value to your profile many times not due to interest or passion for many individuals. These specialization topics can easily be understood by a commerce graduate, not by a science graduate. This is my point of view on this.
From India, Delhi
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From India, Mumbai
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