Career Awareness
Break through myths and misconceptions. Understand real career outcomes, not Instagram highlights.
Break through myths and misconceptions. Understand real career outcomes, not Instagram highlights.
Both paths can lead to success. The key is choosing based on your strengths, not trends.
Time-tested paths with established routes
5.5 years + specialization. NEET required. High investment, high respect.
4 years. JEE/State exams. Huge variance in outcomes based on college.
4-5 years. Very tough exams. Top CAs earn extremely well.
UPSC exam. Extremely competitive. Power and prestige, moderate salary.
5 years (after 12th) or 3 years (after graduation). CLAT for top colleges.
New opportunities with different entry paths
High demand. Requires strong math/programming. B.Tech/B.Sc + skills.
Creative + tech. Can start with any degree + portfolio.
Entry barrier low. Skills and results matter more than degrees.
YouTube, writing, podcasts. Unpredictable but growing.
High demand, fewer qualified people. Technical skills essential.
💡 Key Insight
"Emerging" doesn't mean better, and "traditional" doesn't mean outdated. The best career is one that matches YOUR interests, abilities, and circumstances.
What you see on LinkedIn and news headlines isn't the full picture.
🚩 Myth: All IITians get ₹1 Crore packages
Reality: Only the top 1-2% get international offers. Median IIT salary is ₹10-15 LPA. Most Tier 3 college engineers start at ₹3-5 LPA.
🚩 Myth: Doctors earn a lot from day one
Reality: Resident doctors earn ₹50-80K/month initially. It takes 10+ years to establish a high-earning practice.
🚩 Myth: Arts/Humanities = Poor career
Reality: Top lawyers earn ₹1+ Cr. UPSC officers have immense power. Psychologists, journalists, and designers can earn very well.
🚩 Myth: MBA = Instant high salary
Reality: Only IIMs and top 10-15 B-schools have genuine high placements. Tier 2-3 MBA often doesn't justify the cost.
Your starting salary depends more on which specific college and what skills you have than just the career path you choose. A Commerce graduate from SRCC may earn more than an engineer from a random private college.
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Many students pursue engineering or medicine because parents insisted. Years later, they're stuck in careers they hate. Parents mean well, but they don't know the job market of 2030.
Trends change. When everyone joins the same field, competition increases and salaries drop. What was "hot" in your Class 10 may be saturated by your graduation.
Many aspiring doctors don't know about 36-hour shifts. Many aspiring lawyers don't know about years of low-paying junior work. Research the day-to-day reality, not just the glamour.
Money matters, but spending 40+ years in a job you hate for money leads to burnout and health issues. Balance earning potential with genuine interest.
What movies show vs what actually happens in these professions.
Bollywood: Heroic surgeries, instant respect, comfortable life
Reality: 12+ years of education, 80-hour weeks, resident doctors earning less than some IT freshers, getting assaulted by patient relatives
Bollywood: Dramatic courtroom speeches, winning every case, instant fame
Reality: Years as a junior earning ₹10-15K/month, most cases are boring paperwork, actual court arguments are nothing like movies
Bollywood: Singham-style action, instant justice, feared by criminals
Reality: Bureaucratic pressures, political interference, transfers, heavy paperwork, dealing with ground realities
Bollywood: Rags to riches, genius idea = instant success
Reality: 90% startups fail, years of struggle, funding rejections, burnout, many "successful" founders took loans from family
✅ The Good News
None of this means these careers are bad — they're just different from the glossy image. Understanding reality helps you prepare better and set realistic expectations.
Share your situation with us. We'll help you think through your options without any bias.