What to study: a method to decide without paralysis
Direct answer
There is no single answer to “what should I study”—you need a method. Filter by what you enjoy doing daily, validate employability and cost, and build a plan with revisable steps—not an impulsive choice.
When “what should I study” feels paralyzing, simple filters and a plan B help. This guide walks through practical criteria, red flags, and how to turn options into revisable steps with Seek.
Ready to take the next step?
Seek matches your profile to programs, scholarships, and a concrete career plan.
Three practical filters
1) Can you picture the day-to-day of that profession? 2) Is there accessible training (country, language, budget)? 3) Does employability match your income and lifestyle expectations?
If you do not have interest signals yet, complement with our guide on vocational tests before narrowing options.
From list to plan
Seek turns options into a stepped plan: programs, scholarships, and next actions. “What to study” becomes a revisable itinerary, not an abstract question.
Plan B: why you should always have one
Pick a primary degree and a viable alternative (same field or transferable skills). If grades, budget, or the market shift, you do not start from zero. Seek makes it easier to compare parallel paths without wasting time.