Liberal arts and retun on investment

The cover of time magazine featuring members of Generation X.
The cover of Time Magazine during the summer of my discontent.

Being an entrepreneur during times like this isn't easy.  Each day, I see myself confronted with frustration and failure.  It gets old, and it sucks the enthusiasm out of you.  That is when I have had to rely on family and friends to pick me up and make sense of my crazy fate.  You see, I have always traveled the more unfamiliar path my entire life, and in spite of my choices, I have managed to earn a living and develop the skills necessary to create my own business.  I reflected on that this week when Payscale.com published its annual list of return on investment colleges and college majors.  Naturally, degrees from colleges near Silicon Valley with a significant focus on science and technology had the highest rankings.  This kicked off another round of articles about how a humanities education was a handicap in today’s global economy.  As someone from a humanities background, I can say that those articles are gross exaggerations.  This week on the blog, I will argue that a humanities background is an advantage in this mixed-up economy.

When I graduated from college in 1990, George Bush Sr. was president, and we were in the middle of a recession, which guaranteed that none of us graduating would find a job.  It wasn't very encouraging for someone who wanted to work in radio.  I found an internship that paid minimum wage and worked nights as a disk jockey at a nightclub.  It wasn't very good.  I was forced to live like a teenager with my parents, and I had enough money for gas.  I could not afford to rent my place or provide for myself.  Adding insult to injury was the cover of Time Magazine telling everyone that my failure to launch was due to laziness. As someone who said no to drugs, worked his nerdy butt off in high school and college, and sacrificed so much to become an academic and professional success; it was a bitter pill to swallow.

During this time, I felt the first rumbles of the internet.  I discovered the Prodigy data service and learned about this funny thing called Microsoft Windows and how it made life easier.  I did not know it yet, but a path in my life was revealing itself to me.  It would be almost eight years from college graduation to my first technology job but I think my liberal arts background made it possible.  I had to learn strange languages.  A course in symbolic logic I took as part of my philosophy minor made it easier to understand decision trees and algorithms.  My years working in print media and radio helped me bridge the gap between old media and the new-fangled media of the web.  Without a communications degree, I would not have the skills to collaborate with customers and users.  Liberal Arts and humanities have served me well.

As I earned my MBA, the study skills I learned as an undergraduate came in handy.  I was more prepared than my fellow students, understood the turn of a phrase, and could take complicated things and make them easy to understand.  I doubt I would have learned those skills in a computer science course.  Now that I have an MBA and have founded my own business, I see that I have been able to merge my experience with technology with my liberal arts background.

I also want to hire a mix of liberal arts and technical professionals as my business grows.  I have terrible spelling, so I have to rely on others to proofread, which means that English majors are going to receive preferential hiring treatment from the HR department.  For every developer who understands monads and SOLID programming, I will hire a few people to know how to conjugate a verb and understand what Gottfried Leibniz meant by monads.  I feel this way because a diverse group can better solve customers' problems.

So, looking at the news that a liberal arts background may not provide the most return on investment for a professional, I politely ignore it.  I have been surviving and thriving as a professional because of my liberal arts background instead of despite it.  I have learned to ride the wave of the internet as it picked up steam, and I have founded my own business, hoping to help others take advantage of those trends.

If you would like to know more about my business and how we can help you improve your profits and bottom line please give us a call.

Being an entrepreneur is frustrating, but I would instead follow this path rather than the well-traveled one.  I hope you get the chance to wander with me.

Until next time.

Edward J Wisniowski

Edward J Wisniowski

Ed Wisniowski is a software development veteran. He specializes in improving organization product ownership, helping developers become better artisans, and attempting to scale agile in organizations.
Sugar Grove, IL