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Despite the popularity of the area, some of the best marketing people in the business never acquired a formal marketing qualification. If this is "just what you were thinking", forget it. Those days are gone, mate. In today's employment market, it is very difficult (unless you've got over ten years practical experience) to get a decent marketing job without a marketing qualification.
The joke is that three-quarters of what you learn on a marketing course at college is never used by most marketers in the real world. If you can, try and find a course that is delivered by lecturers with current or recent marketing experience 'on the outside'. You won't learn much from someone who has been teaching out of the same gin-stained book for the last decade. Neither will you benefit enormously from some wet-behind-the-ears-but-awfully-keen lecturer who knows all the marketing theory but carries no war wounds.
Another important course element to uncover is the level of applied content in your course: relevant case histories, project work, colourful examples, group work and course assessments. Be assertive. These guys are selling you courses in a competitive market.
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