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Statistician

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AVG. SALARY

$84,000

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EDUCATION

Master's degree

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JOB OUTLOOK

Increasing

Interviews

Insider Info

If you have the insatiable need to deal with raw data, hypothesize a statistical career.

Michael Soriano, a statistician for the U.S. Department of Energy, found his career completely by accident. "In college, I discovered I had an aptitude for mathematics. I wanted to find a field that required mathematical ability, but didn't require laboratory work!"

His professors gently steered him away from the Bunsen burners and towards statistics. Now he's happily working within the nuclear chemistry industry. "Statistical evaluation of measurement data can demonstrate beyond a reasonable certainty that nuclear weapon material hasn't been stolen by terrorists intent on making a nuclear bomb."

Of course, not every day is so intense. Some days, Soriano merely confirms that radioactive contamination wasn't released into the environment. His job is crucial to both his employer and the world -- and a master's in statistics made it happen.

"I see statisticians' involvement with computers intensifying," says Soriano. "More and more, statisticians will simply be interpreting the results of computer analyses and will spend less time performing the calculations themselves.

"A statistician's job is fun because we get to work with a variety of people working on a variety of problems. We help discover facts and demonstrate things that aren't obvious," says Soriano.

Prosper Hevi is a statistician for the Amherstberg Museums and Galleries. Hevi loves statistics -- they're like a mysterious case that he can crack. "It's fun because I love the subject. I love data manipulation and analysis. Data tells a lot of interesting stories when seen in the correct light."

Hevi transforms tourism raw data into easy-to-understand, clear conclusions. "The tourism industry needs to constantly assess trends, preferences, customer service problems. Numbers and their relationships have to be written up in words, graphs and reports. Most other people who aren't statisticians don't understand just by looking at the numbers. You have to precisely tell them what the numbers mean and why."

Not everyone thinks endless analysis is fun -- but Hevi offers encouragement for fellow enthusiasts. "It's more fun and rewarding than the bad rap about statistics and math you hear in high school and college. But you have to be determined, logical and open-minded, rather than judgmental. If you can first think of things and issues more as what they are rather than what you would want them to be, you're halfway there."

There's one hazard to a statistician's life -- numbers dominate everything. For some people, it's easy to leave work at the office and escape from data-crunching mode. But other folks may have problems, like naming their pet 7816x and their spouse Prime Set One.

"Some statisticians can't relate well to anyone other than other statisticians," says Debra Reece, a statistician in Arkansas. "We tend to reduce people to numbers, and in a health service organization like mine, we have to constantly remind ourselves that every admission is a person in need."

Reece says the future for statistics is strong. "The future trends look good for statisticians. Everyone is money-conscious. We want to save money and we want to sink money into projects that will work, benefit the public and will do what they are intended to do. [Statistics] are no longer something that only large corporations use."

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