SW15
Master Don Juan
- Joined
- May 31, 2020
- Messages
- 15,432
- Reaction score
- 12,527
Rollo made that chart/assertion around 2013-2014. We were well into the social media and smartphone era when Rollo made that assertion.I think this might have been the case in the days before social media and smartphone apps. Plus, men were in more powerful positions back in the day and now you have more women in upper management/higher paying jobs.
Women have been in upper management/high paying jobs in pretty high numbers since at least 2000.
You're correct on my MBA graduation time. Undergrad was 2001-2005. When I talk about my college sex experience, I tend to focus more about the 2001-2005 undergrad period. Graduate school is a bit different even when you're sharing the campus with undergrads.I remember you saying you graduated right at 2008 or such, but things must have changed after the economy recovered. I would imagine it is much worse now post pandemic. GPA became much more important for first jobs, and you needed a certain gpa to qualify for internships. Some jobs like my GF's company for example have a GPA 3.0 requirement and won't even interview you unless you can prove it with a transcript. If you didn't have a GPA above a 3.0 then you were stuck finding work in East Jabib locations like I did, working a non-degree job until something came up later in life, or taking a gimmicky sales job such as Life Insurance, logistics broker, and etc.
In my job searches coming out of both undergrad and grad school, I was rarely asked anything about GPA. Maybe 1 company each time had interest in my GPA. That's why I have had the perspective of not caring about academics and GPA and caring more about having fun while getting the degree. Building real life social skills has value in the working world. Approaching and seduction involve social skills.
Plenty of STEM majors get jobs despite lackluster social skills. These STEM majors with STEM jobs often can't get laid either in college or post-college due to a lack of social skills.
Avoid gimmicky sales jobs that require cold calls. Cold calling has been discredited since at least the 1990s.

