11-15-2023, 09:01 AM
(11-15-2023, 08:51 AM)Kalas Wrote: On the tech side of things it is VERY light. You'll get introduced to basic SQL queries, a little data analysis, community management (i.e. being the douche corporate stooge on a Discord server, forum, etc.), data cleaning, using customers' data to more effectively extract money from them in the future, standing out on the web, ETL, stuff like that. If you come in with no knowledge you'll learn a little bit about each topic not covered in the MBA, but not enough to be employable in any of the technical areas it touches. As with all ENEB programs, how much you get out of it is determined by how much effort you put into finding additional resources to fill in the gaps. Technical know-how is essentially non-existent.
In a way it's similar to Eastern University's Data Science MS. It's accessible so people with no prior knowledge can complete it, but you're not going to have more detailed knowledge that would come from a program that assumes you already know the basics. As I said in the big ENEB thread, it falls into a weird middle ground where none of the business stuff goes into enough depth for it to be a business degree and the technical stuff isn't technical enough for it to pass for a tech degree. You won't be worse off for having it, but you'd have to be beyond delusional to think it would get into a data career.
Not even Python/R basics or even Data visualization ? That's a shame


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