Deleted member 2897
Guest
Sorry, but I am not into Koolaid. That number is patently ridiculous. Really. Every fifth grad is a millionaire but the mid-career average is only $112,000? As for the "average", then $90,000 starting and $30,000 starting will get you there. A whole bunch of graduates must be way below that so I am not sure that is a bragging right. Factor in every graduating class of the last 10 years or so where millionaires could be counted on one hand failing the miracle software program, and pretty soon you are at a tipping point that everybody already out has to be at that magic number. Pretty sure the 2,400 supposed to graduate this year won't be millionaires out of the gate, nor the class before them, or the one before that ... and the numbers get exponential. Sounds to me like a lot of alums are checking the big box.
Bro, do you even lift? Repeat after me: A salary is how much income you make per discrete period (like per year), your wealth is how much money you have in the bank. They are obviously related, but being a millionaire is just as much about how smart you are with your money as it is how much money you make. Georgia Tech grads excel at both.