<p>Hi,</p>
<p>I was wondering what are the types of jobs people with applied math degrees can get? I have an interest in business, and I knows that one route a lot of people pursue is actuarial work, but I have an interest in operations/supply chain management and all that, so is that possible with a math degree, or would it be better to just get the supply chain degree at my school and take a good amount of math classes to supplement my education.</p>
<p>But aside from ops and operations research, what other jobs do applied math people get?</p>
<p>You can be one of these:
•Teacher
•actuary, mathematician, statistician
•Marketing, research or financial analyst
•marketplace: buyer, sales representative and purchasing agent</p>
<p>You get get a job at these places:
•in well-known companies – IBM, AT&T Bell Laboratories, and American Airlines; </p>
<p>•in some surprising places – FedEx Corporation, L.L. Bean, and Perdue Farms; </p>
<p>•in government agencies – Bureau of the Census, Department of Agriculture, and NASA Goodard Space Center; </p>
<p>•in the arts – sculpture, music, and television; </p>
<p>•in the professions – law and medicine; and </p>
<p>•in education – elementary, secondary, college and university</p>
<p>For more visit: [Careers</a> in Applied Mathematics](<a href=“http://www.hpu.edu/index.cfm?contentID=2917&siteID=1]Careers”>http://www.hpu.edu/index.cfm?contentID=2917&siteID=1)</p>
<p>It’s refreshing to read one of these “Where math majors can get jobs” things without is saying “Math majors are more qualified for CS jobs than CS majors!”.</p>
<p>My compliments to the author.</p>