A very interesting use of data. But there's something strange.
1) Looking a Psychology (my major) the "life time value" comes out exactly same ($794,...) whether I choose "doctorate" "bachelor" or "associate" degree. And... the results page does not indicate for which degree its data apply.
2) What does change depending on the degree for which I request data... is the other fields presented for comparison.
3) Requesting data on "doctorate / psychology" compares results for degrees in Real Estate and Cosmetology. Are there really enough people with doctorates in those fields to compute reliable stats? [Note that searching for "doctorate / real estate" does show numbers (albeit low) for Real Estate.
If allowed by the hiring company, can you explain what's going on better than the results pages does?
It seems like the "magic search" feature has plenty of glitches, but the data is there; for instance, Marketing didn't appear at first, but after clicking to the full list and then going back, it appeared just fine.
1) Looking a Psychology (my major) the "life time value" comes out exactly same ($794,...) whether I choose "doctorate" "bachelor" or "associate" degree. And... the results page does not indicate for which degree its data apply.
2) What does change depending on the degree for which I request data... is the other fields presented for comparison.
3) Requesting data on "doctorate / psychology" compares results for degrees in Real Estate and Cosmetology. Are there really enough people with doctorates in those fields to compute reliable stats? [Note that searching for "doctorate / real estate" does show numbers (albeit low) for Real Estate.
If allowed by the hiring company, can you explain what's going on better than the results pages does?