Hello all,
At Amherst College, roughly 31% of students go into finance/ consulting while only about 12% go into public service. Many other schools have similarly imbalanced post-graduation outcomes. A group of us at Amherst College are trying to change that, starting here. We want to create a public service pipeline akin to the finance/ consulting pipeline that already exists.
Issues we need to address:
- Public service opportunities are not as well known or advertised as finance or consulting jobs
- The finance and consulting timeframe is super early and takes advantage of college students' uncertainty
- Public service jobs are usually not seen as prestigious compared to finance/ consulting
These are just a few of the major issues that we need to address. I'll be happy to go more in depth in the comments or additional posts. We have some ideas to address them but I'd love to hear any ideas you have or you have seen work at your universities.
Thanks so much for your help!
"Public service" is obviously a huge and diverse category, but my strong impression is that many public interest jobs (including at the entry level) offer substantially better exit opportunities within public service than nearly any management consulting gig (and I think this is true to an even greater extent if the comparison is with entry-level roles at investment banks or hedge funds). The problem, I think, is that at least in the U.S., there are very few public interest jobs that are 1) entry-level, 2) open to generalists without prior experience in some very specific area, 3) involve the kind of "substantive" responsibilities that would make them comparable "learning opportunities" to the positions available in consulting and finance, and 4) are at least in the vicinity of moderately high-impact work (very broadly construed). And the positions that do exist that meet these criteria are, of course, extraordinarily hard to get. Basically, I don't think the issue is actually that trying to enter public service straight out of college is a bad career move. I think it's often quite a good career move, and I definitely think more people should do it, but I think a big part of the reason more people don't is that it's a very risky thing to commit to as an undergraduate (compared to the options available in the private sector). Conditional on, e.g., actually managing to land a position doing the kind of work you want to do within an executive agency, though, I think the public servant is probably better-positioned for impact (including over a multi-decade time horizon) than the management consultant or the investment banker.