YES
One would need a Bachelor's degree in business, finance, accounting, or statistics. Some companies prefer their research analysts have Master's degrees in finance or MBA.
You may not need a finance degree specifically to become a Controller, however you will need at least a bachelors degree in finance, economics, business administration or some other comparable degree. Many times companies will prefer to hire someone with an MBA in finance.
A Bachelor's degree is the minimum, although companies prefer additional education in the form of some type of graduate degree. A Master's degree in Business Administration is looked upon favorably so long as the central focus of the degree - and, therefore, the classes - is on information technology.
No, but (... and there is always a Butt) Successful completion of a post secondary program helps. The airline is looking for persons who are smart and able to think on their feet. The ability to complete post secondary eduction is a good indicator. The training for Flight attendant deals with everything you need to know to actually do the job.
With an HR degree you would be able to find a job for a company in Human Resources. Many companies prefer HR professionals have some sort of specialization in the field.
I prefer to work in big companies
geostationary
Most insurance companies in the United States now prefer their candidates to have either a four-year college program or at least a two year college degree.
Yes, but not too much of a backlog. If the backlog becomes too high, schedules break down and companies lose money, so they prefer a backlog of manageable size.
Record companies prefer anybody or bodies that's gonna make them a lot of money doesn't matter if it's a solo artist or a group of artists
Almost all larger companies prefer a minimum of a bachelor's degree in a related field, like communications, English literature or journalism to be a publisher; however, a combination of relevant work experience and education can be considered equivalent. So you need to be old enough to have a two-year degree.
Generally, yes. Unless a candidate is outstanding in other ways, having poor language skills will disadvantage him or her.