On Thu, 24 Mar 2005 13:42:34 -0800, White, Bruce
<[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> Now I am not discounting the programs identified; I am sure they are all
> good. But my belief is that for our profession to be taken seriously
> (especially in the U.S.), we need a true degree in records management,
> either at the undergraduate or graduate level.
I would prefer to see such a degree at the MBA level. At the
undergraduate level a student can take courses in business management,
economics, IT, whatever. things that will provide them with a solid
grounding.
> I deal with accountants, lawyers, IT specialist, HR, project managers, etc.
> on a daily basis.
you too? amazing I meet the same group of folks all the time. Which is
one reason why I love RM, it truly crosses all silos.
> Most of them ask the same question - how does someone
> learn records management. When I tell them through on-the-job training,
> most of them look at me with surprise. Maybe some day I can tell them that
> you can actually earn a degree in records management.
I'm still amazed at what I've learned during my career, and what I
still continue to learn. not a dull day ever. Where else can one do
project management, contract management, business process analysis,
quality management, legal research, teach, source products, develop
policy and procedures -- all with no staff. ;-)
seriously I find the profession exciting and the salaries are starting
to climb. I just posted a position on the ICRM-L list that is in the
$80-100K range
> As PK would say, just my rambling thoughts...
you betcha!
--
Peter Kurilecz
Richmond, Va
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