CSIS (information systems) vs Finance with CS minor?

<p>Hi. I'm a freshman at University of Vermont. I''m majoring in Business Administration, but am thinking about possible switch to CS field. Here are my two options:</p>

<ul>
<li><p>Stay in Business major and pursue a concentration in finance (4 finance classes in addition to my business core classes), as well as, in business analytics (information systems class + supply chain management class) with CS minor (6 classes of CS)</p></li>
<li><p>Switch to department of computer science, and pursue CSIS (Computer science and information systems). In CSIS I will still take business core classes and macro- micro- economics, and same math courses. The biggest difference would be in a number of CS classes. Instead of taking 6 classes as in 1st option I would take 14 CS courses. </p></li>
</ul>

<p>To be honest, I still don't know what I want to do in the future. I've been thinking about being a Business Analytic, which seems like a job connecting business and IT areas of business. It's very likely that at some point in my life (possibly after graduation) I will try to find job in Europe, since I'm dual US citizen that have spend whole my life out there and my family, friends are there. Which degree would give me better career options considering that I'm not attending top-ranked university? I've read a lot posts on this forum suggesting that you should only study finance if you attend one of these top universities, but is it 100% true? I'll take my first CS class this spring semester. Should I wait until summer to decide whether to switch major or not?</p>

<p>Can you do CSIS with a minor in finance? When people say don’t do finance unless you attend a top “target” school, they mean don’t do it if your goal is to work in investment banking or other high finance jobs on Wall Street. If you don’t care much about going into IB and/or Wall Street then finance isn’t a bad option.</p>