During college, we frequently must take many classes that are irrelevant to what our major or minor is. One example is, as a marketing major at Western Michigan University, you are required to take accounting, finance, statistics and various other math classes. Even though this could be an important subject matter to learn, once you graduate and are employed in the field of marketing on the creative side, math is unnecessary. WMU also requires students to satisfy different “areas,” such as science or fine art. These might have to do with a minor, but generally are also irrelevant classes.

Jumping back to business math classes, accounting and finance are two of the most difficult subjects I ever had to study. This is most likely because I do not have a math brain; I am much more of an imaginative thinker. Now that I am finished with school, I do not make use of mathematics whatsoever, but genuinely respect those that have opted for a career path in a math field.

There are specific companies out there that provide accounting services, like virtual bookkeeping. This strategy of outsourcing accounting enables an organization to fax or e-mail financial files, such as bank statements, copies of checks and billing statements to the outside organization, who in return manages your accounts and sends back a financial statement each month.

This particular service is ideal for smaller businesses that do not currently have the capital to employ a personal accountant, or even for more substantial firms that do not want to carry out their own accounting. In any case, after studying the topic in college, accounting can be complicated if you are not well-versed in the subject. Being a strong left brained individual, just about anything right brained, like math or perhaps science is not my forte. I idolize that kind of thinker as it will under no circumstances be me, even after taking classes in college on those subjects.

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Filed under: Business & Management

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