
85 Percent Indian Graduates Prefer Industry Certifications for Better Jobs and Higher Income – CFA Institute Graduate Outlook Survey 2025
Business Wire India
87 percent of Indian graduates are confident about their career prospects, with finance and certifications seen as key drivers of success
68 percent believe certifications are more valuable than postgraduate degrees for career growth
38 percent of Indian graduates rank finance as their top career choice, ahead of IT and education
CFA Institute, the global association of investment professionals, released new insights from a survey of over 9,000 university students and recent graduates across India and 10 other global markets on their career confidence, sector preferences, and the growing role of professional certifications in shaping future-ready finance careers. The survey explores evolving attitudes toward career choices, education pathways, and employer expectations amid a dynamic job market.
Certifications Outpace Postgraduate Degrees in Career Value
85 percent of Indian graduates say certifications have directly improved their employability or earnings, while 68 percent believe certifications offer better career progression than a postgraduate degree. These insights reflect a clear shift toward flexible, outcome-driven learning aligning with CFA Institute mission to provide rigorous, practice-oriented finance education.
'The insights clearly show a generation that is not only confident but also deliberate in the way they approach career growth,' commented Arati Porwal, Senior Country Head, CFA Institute, India. 'The consistently growing preference for finance and the trust placed in certifications highlight a skills-first mindset among Indian graduates. As expectations from employers evolve, we remain committed to equipping future professionals with the tools, values, and global perspective needed to lead with integrity in the financial world.'
Finance: The Sector of Choice for Indian Graduates
The survey reveals that finance tops the list of career preferences among Indian graduates, with 38 percent expressing the most confidence in this sector, followed by IT (32 percent) and education (21 percent). This strong preference reflects the sector's perceived stability, growth potential, and global relevance in India's expanding economy. With increasing demand for skilled finance professionals, those equipped with globally recognized certifications are well-positioned to thrive .
India's Emerging Workforce Is AI-Confident and Career-Driven
92 percent feeling confident about using AI tools in the workplace and more than half actively seeking employers that offer AI training, the cohort is embracing technological change as a career enabler. Interest in AI careers has also seen a steady rise growing from 59 percent in 2024 to 63 percent this year, while enthusiasm for roles in digital marketing and web development has waned.
This reflects a decisive pivot towards more future-aligned fields, driven by both awareness and adaptability. When asked what matters most in securing jobs today, graduates cited soft skills (64 percent) and AI skills (56 percent) as more valuable than academic grades or institutional reputation.
Global Exposure, Local Commitment
While nearly two-thirds of Indian graduates are still considering studying abroad, a notable 67 percent say they would prefer to return to India for employment, with 87 percent showing strong confidence in their career prospects. This signals a growing desire to blend global learning with domestic opportunity, a trend that reflects rising confidence in India's economic and professional landscape.
Digital Platforms Redefining Career Exploration
Indian graduates are increasingly embracing digital platforms to navigate their career journeys. Nearly half use social media to explore real-life career paths (46 percent) and build their professional presence (46 percent), while 37 percent leverage it for networking opportunities. Trust in digital guidance is also rising—83 percent feel confident relying on AI assistants for financial advice, and 74 percent trust insights from social media influencers, highlighting a growing reliance on tech-driven support.
Trusted human advisors remain the preferred choice, but other options are also highly valued in India
The findings also emphasize crucial implications for financial service providers seeking to engage effectively with the next generation in India, specifically the continued importance of trust in financial guidance. An overwhelming majority of Indian graduates (91 percent) place the highest trust in human financial advisors for sound financial advice.
Indian graduates also show substantial reliance on other resources. Friends and family are highly trusted (83 percent), as are AI assistants like ChatGPT (83 percent). Online financial education resources are also significantly relied upon (75 percent). Robo-advisors and social media, influencers, or creators trail slightly behind, trusted by 74 percent and 71 percent of Indian graduates, respectively.
'Over the last few years, we have seen increased interest in finance as a career choice,' said Margaret Franklin, CFA, President and CEO, CFA Institute. 'That is reassuring. At CFA Institute, we believe finance serves an essential role in society and needs more committed young people to enter the field to help address the many societal challenges we face. That 93 percent of graduates globally express a desire to pursue a career that positively impacts society is inspiring and gives me hope for the future of the profession.'
More information on the 2025 Graduate Outlook Survey results can be found here .
Disclaimer: The above press release comes to you under an arrangement with Business Wire India. Business Upturn take no editorial responsibility for the same.
Ahmedabad Plane Crash

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
5 hours ago
- Yahoo
‘Deeply concerned' over India press censorship, says X as accounts blocked
X says it is 'deeply concerned about ongoing press censorship in India' after New Delhi ordered the social media platform to block more than 2,300 accounts, including two Reuters news agency handles. X restored the Reuters News account in India on Sunday, a day after it said it was asked by the Indian government to suspend it, citing a legal demand. Many other blocked accounts were also restored, with New Delhi denying its role in the takedown. In a post on Tuesday, X, promoted by billionaire Elon Musk, said the Indian government on July 3 ordered it to block 2,355 accounts in India under Section 69A of the Information Technology (IT) Act. 'Non-compliance risked criminal liability. The Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology demanded immediate action – within one hour – without providing justification, and required the accounts to remain blocked until further notice,' X said. 'After public outcry, the government requested X to unblock @Reuters and @ReutersWorld.' A spokesperson for India's Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology said the government did not issue 'any fresh blocking order' on July 3 and had 'no intention to block any prominent international news channels', including Reuters and Reuters World, according to a post on X by ANI news agency, Reuters' partner in India. 'The moment Reuters and Reuters World were blocked on X platform in India, immediately the government wrote to X to unblock them,' the post said. 'The government continuously engaged and vigorously pursued with X from the late night of July 5, 2025.' The spokesperson said X had 'unnecessarily exploited technicalities involved around the process and didn't unblock' the accounts. India's IT law, passed in 2000, allows designated government officials to demand the takedown of content from social media platforms they deem to violate local laws, including on the grounds of national security or if a post threatens public order. X, formerly known as Twitter, has long been at odds with India's government over content-removal requests. In March, the company sued the federal government over a new government website the company says expands takedown powers to 'countless' government officials. The case is continuing. India, the world's biggest democracy, regularly ranks among the top five countries for the number of requests made by a government to remove social media content. Rights groups say freedom of expression and free press is under threat in India since Hindu nationalist Prime Minister Narendra Modi took office in 2014. New Delhi has regularly imposed blanket internet shutdowns during periods of unrest. In April, the government launched a sweeping crackdown on social media, banning more than a dozen Pakistani YouTube channels for allegedly spreading 'provocative' content following an attack in Indian-administered Kashmir. Many of those have been restored. New Delhi has also imposed intermittent internet outages in the northeastern state of Manipur since 2023 in the wake of ethnic violence. The government has justified internet and social media bans as ways to curb disinformation in a country where hundreds of millions have access to some of the cheapest mobile internet rates in the world. In its post on Tuesday, X said it was exploring all legal options available over censorship, but added that it was 'restricted by Indian law in its ability to bring legal challenges'. 'We urge affected users to pursue legal remedies through the courts,' it said.


New York Post
6 hours ago
- New York Post
Silicon Valley venture capitalist Shaun Maguire remains defiant after calling out Mamdani for pursuing 'Islamist agenda'
A prominent Silicon Valley venture capitalist doubled down Tuesday in the face of growing backlash for saying Muslim-born Zohran Mamdani, the socialist Democratic mayoral candidate in New York City, is pursuing 'his Islamist agenda.' Shaun Maguire, a partner at venture capital giant Sequoia Capital and vocal supporter of President Donald Trump, called out Mamdani — who was born in Uganda to Indian parents — for listing that he was both 'Asian' and 'Black/African American' when applying to Columbia University in 2009. Mamdani 'comes from a culture that lies about everything' and is pursuing 'his Islamist agenda,' Maguire posted on X last Friday. The post, which has 5.4 million views as of Tuesday, drew sharp condemnation from the left-leaning tech world, including CEOs who were backed by Sequoia. 4 Shaun Maguire is a partner at venture capital giant Sequoia Capital and vocal supporter of President Donald Trump. AFP via Getty Images Nearly 900 people have signed an open letter addressed to leaders at Sequoia, slamming Maguire for his 'deliberate, inflammatory attack.' The signatories are demanding that the firm publicly condemn Maguire's remarks, issue an apology to Mamdani and Muslim founders and authorize an independent investigation into Maguire's conduct over the past two years. On Tuesday, Maguire remained defiant. 'You can try everything you want to silence me, but it will just embolden me,' the former Google executive posted on X. In another post, Maguire declared: 'Let's unpack what's actually happening here. There are groups that hate me: Marxists, because I'm pro Capitalism; The Pro-Palestine crowd, because I'm Pro-Israel; Leftists, because I'm Pro-Trump. All of these groups want me cancelled because I'm a loud and effective voice.' He added: 'To the Haters and Losers, You cannot imagine how much Love and Support I've received over the last 48 hours. We have cancelled cancel culture. Your Hate and Ignorance only fuels me.' The open letter to Sequoia demands the firm publish a 'zero-tolerance policy on hate speech and religious bigotry.' Among the signatories are several prominent figures in the tech sector, including Mudassir Sheikha, CEO of ride-hailing platform Careem; Amr Awadallah, CEO of AI startup Vectara; Abubakar Abid, a machine learning engineer at Hugging Face, a company backed by Sequoia; and Ahmed Sabbah, CEO of the fintech company Telda, which received investment from Sequoia in 2020. At least three founders from Y Combinator's accelerator program have also signed the letter. The group expects a response from Sequoia by July 14. If it fails to respond by that deadline, the signers say they will 'proceed with broader public disclosure, media outreach and mobilizing our networks to ensure accountability.' The Post has sought comment from Sequoia Capital, Maguire and Mamdani. Maguire has denied that he was targeting Mamdani because he is Muslim, writing on X: 'People have lost the plot.' Maguire noted that Mamdani is 'a man who started' a chapter of Students for Justice in Palestine and 'defended Anwar al-Alawki' — an American-born Islamic cleric of Yemeni descent who was the first US citizen to be targeted and killed by a US drone strike in Yemen in 2011. 4 Maguire sparked outrage over the weekend after posting on X that Zohran Mamdani, the Democratic nominee for New York City mayor, 'comes from a culture that lies about everything' and is pursuing 'his Islamist agenda.' AP Mamdani has also refused to condemn the anitsemitic phrase 'globalize the intifada.' His socialist agenda includes a pledge to freeze rent at regulated units, free buses and city-run groceries. Maguire, whose portfolio includes investments in Elon Musk's SpaceX and X, as well as the artificial intelligence startup Safe Superintelligence, has frequently voiced his political views. In a post on X last year, he said, 'Just donated $300k to President Trump.' 4 Prominent figures in Silicon Valley signed an open letter denouncing the X post by Maguire. @shaunmmaguire/X The controversy adds to a broader political divide at Sequoia. Doug Leone, who led the firm until 2022 and remains a partner, is a longtime Republican donor and supported Trump in the 2024 election. Following Trump's victory, Leone posted on X, 'To all Trump voters: you no longer have to hide in the shadows…..you're the majority!!' 4 Sequoia Capital is known for being one of Silicon Valley's most influential venture capital firms, backing and nurturing tech firms such as Apple, Google, Airbnb and WhatsApp. Leone's predecessor, Mike Moritz, has taken the opposite stance. A Democratic megadonor, Moritz criticized Trump in an August opinion piece for the Financial Times, calling out tech leaders who supported the president. 'I doubt whether any of them would want him as part of an investment syndicate that they organised,' Moritz wrote. 'Why then do they dismiss his recent criminal conviction as nothing more than a politically inspired witch-hunt over a simple book-keeping error?' The Post has sought comment from Leone and Moritz. Roelof Botha, who currently leads Sequoia, has sought to remain politically neutral. Speaking at an event last July, Botha said the firm 'doesn't take a political point of view,' and added, 'I'm not a registered member of either party.' He also said he was 'proud of the fact that we've enabled many of our partners to express their respected individual views along the way, and given them that freedom.'


Business Journals
8 hours ago
- Business Journals
South Charlotte property anchored by Publix trades for $30M
Blue & Lentil Property Holdings acquired Clear Creek Crossing from Florida-based Equinox Development for $30.3 million. Blue & Lentil is a limited liability company associated with Claudia Alhassan, president and CEO of Indian Land-based homebuilder J & J Homes.