this post was submitted on 04 Feb 2024
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29M. I'm currently doing a PhD in AI in another European country. My ultimate goal is to relocate to Denmark and secure a job there. I stayed in Denmark for a month attending a Summer School, and also taking some time off with my partner, and I absolutely fell in love with your country!

The PhD is going fine, but is on a niche subject (nothing related to generative AI, Computer Vision, or Deep Learning). I still have two years left, and unfortunately, I have come to the conclusion that academia is not for me, and I would like to leave. I enjoy doing research, but I hate feeling trapped in an academic bubble of papers and conferences with no real-world ramifications (great respect for fellow researchers, but it's just not for me).

The consensus seems to be, "if you want to do a PhD for the money (my case), don't do it". But at the same time, I have seen people suggesting that the bar is rising, and that having a PhD can help for high-profile jobs.

What is not clear to me is how many doors I would close by quitting the PhD, and I also have no idea what the Data Science / AI / Machine Learning market looks like in Denmark. Realistically, it's now or never. I am afraid that if I change my mind in 2 or 3 years, I would be too old to start a PhD again. On the other hand, continuing is really stressful (I've had depressive episodes in the last year), and, financially, I'm barely breaking even. Moreover, the soon I start a "real job", the soon I could move (I could theoretically visiting a Danish university for some months, but realistically, my supervisors will want me to spend my final year in my home country).

(Unrelated, but the banner of this subreddit rocks! Slava Ukraini!)


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The original was posted on /r/denmark by /u/Al_Levin at 2024-02-04 05:14:09+00:00.

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[–] [email protected] 1 points 8 months ago (1 children)

Petoor at 2024-02-04 05:44:00+00:00 ID: koud7x1


Data scientist here. PhD does not matter. A master is just fine. What matter the most is relevant work experience (e.g. student jobs). If you land a job in a large enough company (for instance Mærsk or Novo Nordisk) you would find masters and phds are on a equal footing.

Masters MIGHT even be better off since the "wasted time" doing your PhD (from a company perspective) can be 3 years of work experience on your cv.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 8 months ago

Holiday-Hand-3611 at 2024-02-04 10:03:17+00:00 ID: kouzx0w


Then it means the PhD was useless. A good PhD lands you better jobs than a master. PhD model in Denmark is ba for that. They tend to be waste of time. 30ect redoing subjects you should have done on master. Six week vacation. One pubkication. Then you have PhD. Worthless. A PhD is 3-4 becomih worldwide expert on topic. Then you cash in next job. People don't understand that and cruise in PhD, later saying PhD is not worth.