Pipeline/Rig welders are pocketing major money. Check out Jacob Schofield on RU-vid. Some projects are netting these guys 4k plus a week. Depending on the duration and frequency of these high paying projects, these guys are making serious bank.
Well in India you can become a pakoda-wala (fried street food seller). The best part is you don't need any education for that and even govt provides moral support.
Honestly I just want a normal boring desk job that pays a living wage and allows me to live a comfortable life. I don't need a glamorous life, I just want a home, a bed, a desk, and to not be struggling and depressed all the time. I just don't know what to look for that offers that.
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I was a High School dropout! I Joined the U.S. Army at 17. I served 27years,20 of those years with the 7th Special Forces Group. I earned my GED and a Bachelor Degree In Military History while serving full time. In the times before computers and online school. You can do anything in life if you apply yourself. Don’t ever take no for an answer!!!
Kevin Bands Well seeing his age it looks like he could of been around the Vietnam era and they would draft people. And any help they could get they would take.
I’m a boiler maker and you don’t need to be a welder to be one, just find a jod as a helper starting at $20hr and get the certification. I make $31hr but if you don’t mine to trouble you can get a job making $36+ they pay you for food and hotel. I have been doing it for 5yrs now. A lot of overtime you can make easy $100k
I work at a lawfirm and I only have a high school diploma. I started as the receptionist and worked my way up to a manager. You don’t need a paralegal degree to get a high salary. Most attorneys look for experience so I suggest start in reception and learn as much as you can and work your way up. That is what worked for me.
Lydia Santiago yeah I actually have experience for a solo attorney now I'm doing a certificate just to further my knowledge and get more entry level positions as full on legal assistant. But also that way works as well
Juan Beltre at least in California attorneys just care about experience. My boss fired his paralegal to hire me. I also make more money than a paralegal.i wish you the best.
Lydia Santiago yeah I mean at the end experience is what stands out I'm still in the process of getting more experience and learning more im from new York so the demand here is very high for paralegals so I feel confident about it.
Interestingly enough, if everyone is being pressured into college there may be fewer people doing these jobs in the future which means you'll be more in demand and will have a higher pay. College is far from the only option.
Yes, I had planned on mentioning that point but sometimes I forget to include everything on my mind. Half of the U.S. population doesn't even know how to unclog a toilet these days
Nate O'Brien from what I’ve seen over the past 20 years the number is probably much higher than 50% of the population but I promise you they do all know how to plug one up real tight tho
@Qunicy Holman You end up having to scrounge for any job even if it is minimum wage. I graduated with a masters in exercise science back in 2017 and have since been working mostly minimum wage jobs. Why? Probably because I have no network and my program did not involve any practical skills that employers are looking for.
A shaolin monk and learn kung fu. Open kung fu dojo. Work at Burger King for minimum wage. Save for a downpayment assuming u have no history of bad credit
That's the list: 9. Web developer 8. Real Estate Agent/ Broker 7. Boilermaker 6. Electrician 5. Electrical Power Line Work 4. Registered Nurse 3. Elevator Reapair 2. Paralegal 1. Dental Hygienist
Medical claims collections. I've seen people without degrees earn into the 150k+ range once they hit middle management, without college degrees and dumb as a box of rocks..
Become a railroad conductor for BNSF, UP, CN, CSXT make over six figures a year easy. All you need is a high school degree. My first year on the railroad I made 97k from July to January. Railroad need to be at the top of this list.
I make around 100k a year as a cnc machinist and I didnt graduate high school. Teachers said I was dumb. Whats dumb is someone that paid for an education to tell me I'm dumb to make under 40 grand a year.
Dude.. a lot of these careers you mentioned requires a degree of some sort and there’s a lot of other careers you left out. Plumbing is a in demand trade and you can make very good money when you become a master plumber. Some plumbers make over 60$ an hour. Truck driving is a good high paying job too. UPS driver, garbage collector, hair stylist, painter, carpenter, police officer, correctional officer, security guard all jobs that don’t require a college degree.
+Mike Wible That's impressive. What does your buddy haul? I make 80k yearly as a company driver doing dedicated runs out of connecticut. +Bastian X It can! Learn about investing.
In my personal opinion I don't think its that important to go to college, UNLESS you have a set goal on where you want to go in the future. E.g. engineer, doctor etc. It puts you on the back foot with debt and from my experience you don't learn a whole lot (obviously depending on the university you go to).
Cooper Academy - Investing The whole problem is that a college degree (sadly) to a high extend is a signal value to the employers. It shows commitment and that you are able to solve complicated problems and learn theories. But there is arguably a lot of 'wasted' work in a college degree and the employer normally traines the employee anyway. I would actually say that a college degree is for people who know that they want to work in a certain field but not exactly where. For example I study economics and while studying I found out that I want to work in finance. But here is the thing, nothing stops you from just buying the books and study yourself - If youve read(and understood!) a couple of books in a course you are just as well suited as people taking an expensive course. I know people trading fixed income derivatives (complicated stuff) and making big bucks, who never took a degree but just learned the principles themselves and got trained up by the bank. However that's normally extremely smart people and people with an extreme drive - it's not always comparable with the 'normal' people. But well I actually get paid by the government to take my degree so my incitament is probably different compared people in other countries.
Cooper Academy - Investing can you help a single mom with two dead baby daddies and five kids find a great online job that will secure her ????,? ??? I'm not rich but I work hard and have an million dollar book or life story I'm writing
As an air traffic controller in training lemme tell you it’s not worth all the hassle. I’m waiting for marijuana to be legalized in my state so I can start selling that and have a life again
I'm an industrial pipefitter I dropped out of high school and got my GED. I travel the country, build America, and get paid 80k to 120k a year at the age of 24. I own 2 properties that I'm renting out. I call that a success and I'm happy with that.
I own a small residential commercial pressure washing biz.Not an easy start up to get customers but when u get rollin its 100 bucks an hour.I work 4 days a week and 8 months a year make my own hours and call the shots. Go carve something out on your own .Your the man at the wheel.
I’ve found that the welding salaries are always very off. I’m not sure where the statistics are getting their information from but many welders get $700 a week from per diem alone. That’s roughly $36,000 alone if you keep work the entire year. Tack on atleast $25 an hour with overtime usually adding an additional 20-44 hours a week. Boilermakers may be different, but pipeline welders easily make $4,000 a week.
Jacques, I agree with you. I am friends with half a dozen welders and I know for a fact that three of them are making at least $45/hour. I am however in the northeast where salaries are generally higher (NYC, Newark, % Philly)
One of my best friends went straight into the elevator industry after school. No degree required. Did do some studying on the job but the guy is making bank.. with raises every 6 months. Also, investment advisor is a good one too. Surprised it didn’t make the list :P
Its not what you know, Its what you do with that which you know. The Best way to get into some of these industries is to just throw yourself 100% into it. Learn as you go is not a bad idea. Going to sit in a class room for a few years learning a field in my opinion is somewhat a waste of time. Yes, Classes do help but if you are not going to do anything with what you are learning it will become a waste of time. If you are going to sit in a class, work in the field even if you have to do it as a volunteer. Service first and the money will follow and let the school of hard knocks take over teaching you long the way making you an expert in the field you are studying over time.
it allows you that advantage of testing the field that you "Say " you want to do without going in $100K in student loan debt only to find out that the field is not what you really want to do after doing the actual job and being strapped with that debt.
The high paid nurses have a bachelor's and the high paid electricians are 5 year journeyman. Elevator repair is such a rare gig good luck finding that opportunity. Good message though
I didn't want to go to college straight out of high school because I didn't want to end up six figures in debt for something I didn't feel like I was ready for. I felt like the best idea was to give myself some extra time to get out, have experience, talk to people, etc. in order to figure out what I want to do with my life. I was constantly judged, bullied, harassed, and simply dehumanized by society because I didn't do what everyone else said was right. Must I say? I made the best decision and I have NO regrets about waiting!
Become an electrician and come out to odessa in the oil fields, they make 150 per day on top of there 35 hr pay, 12 hrs a day two weeks on one week off
Hell yeah, West Texas is where it’s at! Welders make $5k a week and in Pipeline atleast $1k a week. Starting off I made $1,200 a week after tax as a helper. Then up to my last company $1,700 a week after tax and on a 7 day week $2,300 or $2,200 after tax. I’m also at the lowest at the low entry level as a laborer/helper.
Jay R move out here for a month. See for yourself. Jobs everywhere from menial (retail, food) to Pipeline and oilfields and everything in between. Look up jobs and labor jobs Odessa. Lots will pop up. If you have no experience then you’ll only get in a lower paying company but still alit more than regular minimum wage jobs. As you get experience and know your job will make more pay. Already knowing something like electrician or welding and changing to these two industry’s will make bank!
Josh ooh. Are you jealous? Well that’s why I’m preparing now for the future. Bought my car in April for $15k and paid it off. Bought a separate work truck that’s reliable and is payed. Credit at 700s and everything I have is payed. Although oil will die down sometime I’ll be better off than you. Also pipes will still need to be built when oil goes down like you still saw construction projects after the recession in 08. Lastly, my company does it for natural gas, not oil but we can also do it for them and transport water. Pipelines always booming somewhere, you follow the work where it’s at, there was a busy here some years ago so many moved to Wyoming, New Mexico, Pennsylvania, etc. now people are here in West Texas like me a born and raised Californian.
College gives you the BASE of whatever career you want to go for. It teaches you the basic knowledge. Life will give you the experience. I am pro college. I am almost in my 3rd year and no debt. Believe me, your bachelors means nothing but it looks good on your resume.
I only got a technical high school diploma with welding. started pipeline at 19 first year I made 198k 1styear traveled and perdiem overtime raised my salary to 220k-300k as a military support welder;which basically means I weld anything anywhere everywhere for all classes of military rankings.,company always keeps me busy. I’m now a duplex owner of 2 real estate high class 150 apartments. hard work,persistence,&dedication is all you need. My wife’s brother has a bachelors degree in project management just purchased his own home Worth 280k he only makes exactly 100k a year just as a project controls for oil and gas companies. In my shoes I don’t have a degree and make twice as him. I paid my house in full since I’ve been offshore. My home is worth half a million 500k. I’m not bragging but just stating the life with a degree and no degree. Crazy. My oldest sister is a anesthesiologist she has degrees and makes 300-400k yearly alone! We almost fall in the same range. My parents wanted me to get a degree growing up in Asian household mostly all Asian parents want the best for their kids in terms of careers. I didn’t get a degree and still have got the economics approval. My wife is a neonatal nurse so she does have a degree. Together our salary bumps up to 500k yearly not including our real estate bussiness from which we collect rent on first of the month. But I also think degrees in the future will be a requirement times are changing and evolving, the elderly with knowledge from the 90s are retiring and or getting replaced with young people with degrees. My father is a petroleum engineer for a top company I won’t name but the people under him have been getting replaced with people who have degrees , meaning more younger people early 20s mid 20s zero knowledge but the degree is sure something to defend yourself. I do recommend people get degrees if you want to live comfortably in the future!
onlyrog5 agreed as a military support welder I made up to 300k yearly. But not everyone enjoys the welder life. But I still give props to those getting degrees!
So fyi just to help correct one of the job descriptions no an RN doesn't need a 4 year degree but to work in a majority of hospitals you will need your BSN which is the 4 year degree an RN without a BSN typically won't work in a hospital it will be more or less a jail or juvenile detention or mental institution
Al P. Hmm I guess it depends in the location and programs available. My community college offers a program and most RNs usually have jobs at hospitals lined up for them after graduation.
If kids are lucky enough to live in a school district with an occupational program, it's definitely something to consider. My brother graduated from high school with two years of construction technology training. The day after graduation he was hired as a journeyman by a large construction company. Two years later, at the age of 19, he was promoted to foreman. It took a lot of hard work, and very confident attitude, but he is now at the top of his field and making a six-figure income. He's planning on retiring soon, and he's not even 50 yet.
Danny Luna, you can become an RN with an associate degree. Whether you get an ADN, BSN, or entry level MSN you sit for the same NCLEX (licensing exam) and get the same initials behind your name. Some areas (like Southern California) prefer a Registered nurse to have their Bachelors of Science in Nursing or Masters Degree in Nursing but it’s not a requirement to work as an RN.
It's a risky career becusse usually many pro gamers get burned out. Once they do, they want to leave the comp scene and start streaming. Streaming is also a risky career too. It's a limited career. Eventually you will start becoming less popular (cough cough ninja cough cough). Heck... even pro teams like optic and 100 thieves are already leaving the COD competition too.
In 2018 I made over 200K PLUS had a company car (that I could use for personal trips and general use) full benefits, pension, and a $100K travel expense budget. I put 4 kids thru college and we were a single income family (mom stayed home with kids.....her choice) for 40 years. I certainly don't have that paper but was happy when my kids got it.
Nursing laws will be changing in 2020 which will require almost all registered nurses to have a minimum of a bachelor's degree. Google it, my nursing university professor talked to me about this.
They’ve been saying this for years, I’ll believe it when it actually happens. I have a BSN but I have coworkers who have an associates degree in nursing and they make exactly the same as I do, if not more but without my debt. My student loans are not bad at all, and are definitely affordable with my income but if I could do it all over again, I would get my nursing degree loan free at a community college and then go back to school for my BSN utilizing tuition reimbursement through my employer. You live and you learn...
I used to be a cable installer for comcast. They make decent money. I'm now an alarm technician and make around 50,000 a year. You don't need a degree. Shit, I dont even think you need a diploma
Yes nowadays you do need a bachelors or higher to work as a registered nurse, especially for magnet hospitals. Small hospitals, such as convalescent, will not require a bachelors, but if you want to earn a competitive salary a bachelor degree or higher is a must
The biggest problem is when there is a shortage of high paying jobs, lots of people apply, then its all about credentials. If you don't have a degree but the guy next to you does, there's a better than not change that person will get a chance for an interview before you.
Machinist ( manual, not cnc) learn how to repair industrial equipment. Pumps, valves, compressors, etc. welder, mechanic, millwright. These skills are in high demand, once you are good you can name your price and these jobs will never be outsourced
Hope you are going to 9 more in the next few days. I like the concept, expand on this one big time. You could even research some of the companies in the fields that you highlighted that are hiring at the time of the video.
I work at a car dealership and my co coworkers are salesman and they make around 80-100k a year. The top salesman makes around 200k a year just selling cars!
I commented that before I read yours but yeah sales which is definitely a personality job and not for everyone is definitely a go if you can handle it. Find a company with decent commission structure and you’d b me good myself 89-100 selling internet over the phone something that everybody needs lol
You should definitely include Airline pilot! I think it might top all of these in benefits, salary, and quality of life. American Airlines just removed their 4 year degree requirement. You just need to go through licensing and flight school.
I hate college... I've always been told that college opens the door for high paying jobs. I have a learning disability so it's hard to learn, so I don't think college is a good choice but it's all I know.
You definitely do have to go to school for a minimum of 4 years to get your RN(registered Nurse) 2 years of prerequisite and 2 years of med school. Not easy btw
If you're here listening and reading this. and you REALLY want to get a head. GO TO YOUR LOCAL COMMUNITY COLLEGE FIRST.... See what programs they have. STAY AWAY from TRADE SCHOOLS, and Private, or Corporate Universities... I was making $8 per hour, I started going to community college nights, 4 nights a week... After 3 years I graduated, my pay went from $8 per hour to $22 per hour. Elect/Mech Design Drafting, CAD.
New home sales!!! That’s a really a good one. In some states like Texas, you don’t need a RE Lic. We make anywhere from $100,000 to $700,000 a year. Depending on builder, market, how well one can sell. Love it! There is also one person in DFW Market that made $900k.
It really depends on the state that you are in and your experience. Some people start off working for a builder as a sales assistant. Pay will be around $40,000. It’s a struggle at first, but stick with it. The builder/sales manager will help you and watch you to see how a person is progressing. If one progresses very well, then Sales Associate, and after a sales associate, sales consultants. That’s where your money will come!!! It’s fun, hard work, but very rewarding! I would look for a state that has a hot new home sales market to get into. Hope this helps!
I hope young people see this video. This young man has got this down pat. Just remember it still takes ambition, desire to succeed and reliability. No loafers need apply.
Great video nate , you deff don’t need a degree to make money out there . I went to school for 3 years and wasted over 30k since my income has nothing to do with what I studied.
Sometimes employees aren't looking to hire someone who has a degree in the right field, but just someone who has a degree. Shows that you're at least able to get that degree, even if the courses didn't teach you what you need for this specific job. Try applying for jobs without a degree and you'll see the difference.
My husbands a lineman and his “average” salary is $86,000 a year with no overtime or storm. If he gets overtime and goes on storm, he makes around 120,000 or more a year. And he just had a GED. I do medical billing and coding/case management and make around $58k a year with no college degree at all. I’m currently going for my 4 yr. degree for nursing and then going to grad school after to be a CRNA. You CAN make great money with no college degree. It’s completely possibly 🙏
For me I personally think college is a scam. You have some classes that you don't need to take for a degree. Most books are very overpriced. Tuition costs are at a all time high. Even after getting a degree theres not guarantee that you'll find that job you worked years in school to achieve. Let's not forget that when it comes to jobs right after college, woman have a better chance at being hired than men, that studies have shown.
I am 14 and I'm honestly not made for that college lifestyle. I have dreams of being a surgeon but as much as I try I can barely even pass my Freshman year. Ever since I came to high school my plans changed I honestly want a job that I'm good at I don't want to stress and ruin myself to become a surgeon and be miserable. I'm finding the way to tell my mom in hopes she doesn't disown me loool
Not that it matters but I will end this year right around $160k working at a biotech. I have a GED with zero degrees. How did I get here? It was hard as hell....would have been just as hard with a college degree. I still had to put in the extra hours and still had to do the shit work for years. In my industry, not having the paper means there is a glass ceiling BUT I accept that and live a very happy life now that my experience and accomplishments have gotten to the point where it has real value. Some people claim its ALL about hard work and thats not really true. You need some luck and you need to make the right decision to find and accept a job you genuinely like. You should not dislike Mondays or dislike your job. If you do, then find another one. Try different stuff until you get lucky and land a job you dont dred. then stick with and learn learn learn and volunteer without being a brown noser of course. Sort of odd at times that employees that have bachelors and wild amounts of school come to my GED having ass for answers on a daily basis. My first job in this market paid me a salary of $2,000 per month. Talk about crappy pay! Thing is I LIKED it. I was surrounded by highly intelligent people and I soaked up everything like a sponge. I studied anatomy in my spare time and treated the job like college basically. I had no intention of getting rich with money but instead gained enormous knowledge of the anatomy and market in this field. I was willing to allow my finances to be strained to the max but I had to do my time at the bottom and be gracefull and humble doing it. The most surprising is how fast I rose. I would have guessed it would have taken 10 years to get to my First $100k year when I first started out making $24,000. 5 short years is all it took. The jobs are out there you just have to find one you can like.
Wow! This is crazy, you're definitely an inspiration to anyone who reads your comment......You said you work at a Biotech company, please can you tell me what is your day to day activity and what are the things you did over the years for you to start making an outstanding $160k a year, Because currently I'm about to graduate as a "Biomedical Technician" it's a 2year program and I heard these individuals work at Biotech companies and hospitals...
@@mindhunter8772 Ive developed a stupid nickname here that deep down I kind of like but will not admit ..."the cleaner". I started here doing one specific job unskilled in compliance. Its hard for me to tell you what I do each day without giving away what I do. I have to be carefull because the 1 in a million chance someone from my work recognizing me. I guess I can say I started doing one specific thing and found myself branching out and helping with other things outside of my job title. At the time, this company was a startup so they kind of encouraged helping out where ever one could. I would walk back to the lab and give blood for testing and trials and while there ask questions and offer my help. I would go back to shipping and help put Fed Exs together when we were heavy. I would ask the sales department what I could do to help. I always was getting my shit done and then finding anything I could do. I was willing to clean a toilet if needed. It wasnt long before some departments started actually "looking" for me to help out in situations. Eventually the top people started getting wind and were appreciative. When it really took off for me is when I started answering incoming phone calls and turning complaints into sales. With all my knowledge of our outfit and our products, selling it came easy. I got lucky a few times and set up some extraordinary sales. I found myself being moved into sales reporting to the national sales manager. I then made a huge leap in salary and overlapped the entire division from the inside. I took over or filled in territories when account managers left or got fired. I also helped out all the reps in the field assisting them with the technicals of our products and their sales activities. To this day I still do these same things each day but just alot more of it as we have grown tremendously. I get flow through from all sales, a salary plus commissions. I found I liked to be the jack of all trades and sort of a go to guy for just about anything and this company finds that to be valuable. They are willing to pay me for it which is a true blessing! I work from home now and travel maybe 3-4 times per year all paid of course. So yes, officially I took a path into "sales" even though its alot more than that. Without a degree, I would never be a lead scientist or an HR leader....sales is where I knew I could direct my focus using all I learned and be able to make what in my mind was "bank". It was the only place in the company I could make more than $75k without "the paper". But see, I got lucky to have been in a place where I could prove myself to even get to the point to have a shot at making the money I do. At the core of my day is sales but its not 100% of my day....its more like 50% and the rest is training doctors, helping reps etc. You have a degree which makes you GOLDEN. You can stay specific and make a great living or if you get antsy you can branch out once you are in. I will say finding a startup to work for is the way to go....somewhere small that has big dreams. Find a place that has some fire to dominate their arena. Its not for everyone though because with the promise of high reward comes high risk. Startups close and fail all the time. But.....if you are full of fire yourself you can contribute to the task and lower the "risk" part of that saying for your company. I just went way off subject but this kind of gives you the reasons I do what I do and a little background on the path Ive taken and am still currently taking. I love it and wouldnt want to be anywhere else!!!
@@mindhunter8772 Absolutely! Good luck! Its cool to see others like yourself watching and listening to others to learn. I love the PASSION! Its the key ingredient that you cant train....you obviously have the fire needed to be an ass kicker. You are in a great field that only stands to grow. I dont know youtube real well but if there is someway to privately contact me, do it if you want to know where I work exactly. we always have openings.
@@gmanmiggy1367 no it's can. Some people don't have the mental and intestinal fortitude to run a business. They think it'll be easy until they realize that it's not as easy as selling stuff and that they actually have to do almost all the work themselves. Plus the amount of capital it takes to start a business isn't easily accessible to everyone. Not everyone can work 14 hours a day on something that might not make huge returns for a few years. Not everyone can figure how to price and source parts and products.
Coyote Des facts. Job is highly stressful, long 12 hour shifts (in hospital) you're exposed to many pathogens and the pay really isn't as much as it should be.
I know more nurses than I know any other career people and I can’t even emphasize how much I agree with you. My mum is a nurse she hates it but it’s all she knows and a lot of the young people I know outright tell me they regret it and some are even studying or taking up other trades to leave the field. Ps they tell me doctors are complete dicks to them almost all the times surgeons are the worst
LAKERSRon15Artest And the method of teaching doesn’t change at all. They expect you to be good at everything when clearly no one is perfect. I just want to pursue my passion without getting discouraged by school.
One big one you missed. Auto Mechanic. It is a build as you learn career. Start out in high school auto shop. Get a job at a quick lube place as you go to a trade school like UTI or Lincoln Tech. Starting out base for a C Tech (oil, tires, and minor services) start out at about $13.00 an hour. Training is on going, and if you are working for a dealership or a good garage. They will pay for your training and certification updates. I have been in the field for 31 years. I have made up to 100K in one year. It all depends on you , and the shop you work for. A high school diploma or a GED, and a bit of passion for cars, and you can go far.
My mom's an RN at the same hospital for about 15 years. She only has a certificate. Recently the hospital told her odd she doesn't get her bachelor's by 2020 they'll fire her. She also has to eventually get a master's. She does make over 70k. And works 4 days a week.
Autumn Burton well if u use the fact that you aren’t in student debt. You can work a few years and then open your own business that you’re passionate about. So no just because you go to college doesn’t mean you’re going to get told to do. In fact I feel that way about college.
Autumn Burton , easy for you to say , when you are the USA m in South Africa , a developing country, and you haven’t seen the poorest of the poorest , this info is about life survival, follow your heart after
The big misconception with this is people think you’ll just jump into a job and make a shit ton of money. That’s not the case. You’ll have to work a little bit before you get to that point and it also depends where you work at location wise. For example in NY you get paid more since the tax stamp is so high and you need a 4 year degree to keep your RN license as of 2018. You can get a job as with a 2 year degree but can’t maintain it.
No you don't need a 4 year degree to become a registered nurse, but know that all the good, high paying jobs for nurses require a minimum of a bachelors
@@xandriaelizabethrain443 No you don't maybe that's what the hospital's would like you to have, but to sit for the exam to get your RN license you do not. I just looked it up there's tons of community colleges offering RN programs in California. You are misinformed.
For a high paying web developer job, I recommend 1) getting a bachelors degree in something, 2) learning code by watching online tutorials and reading forums, and 3) gaining experience by doing side jobs and personal projects. Building a portfolio and reference list is priority number one because a degree does not tell a employer what you can do. Your work and previous clients do. Bachelors degrees are equivalent to high school diplomas. It’s just a piece of paper to get you through the interview process. Lastly, you will NOT start out at 74K. You will have to work for free, then you will get a little money, then you’ll get a little bit more, and then you’ll make the average (hopefully).
I’m a golf course mechanic and I make 40k a year. I’m just getting into it. Not bad. I’ve been doing mechanic work on mowers since I was 13-14. I only did a little bit college. I had a basic 2010 ford ranger for 4 years and now because of this new job I bought a leased 2015 Silverado a few months ago with not much down and $395 month and I’m making it by pretty good. CDL Driver’s make a lot too. I’m working on getting my class A or B this spring.
@Nate: This video was ok. And that is because the title of your video says: 9 Highest Paying Jobs Without a college degree, but in this video, you mentioned some jobs that do require a college degree. The title of this video is misleading in a sense, because you made it seem as if you were going to provide 9 jobs (each of them) that a person can do without a college degree.