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Every role below opens onto real-world challenges drawn from the work people in that role actually do. Solve them, ship them, walk away with a verified credential.
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Sustainability, ESG & Impact
Sustainability Consultant
US$96,697median
Translates climate science into something a CFO can act on. A sustainability consultant moves between regulatory frameworks (GHG Protocol scopes, IPCC scenarios) and the spreadsheets where carbon abatement decisions actually get made. The work ranges from auditing a client's Scope 3 emissions to modeling a marginal abatement cost curve that informs where they spend the next ten million on decarbonization. Strong consultants resist greenwashing without alienating the operations leader they need as an ally. Tools like Python and Excel carry most of the modeling; tools like Claude help draft the deliverable. Students drawn to this path usually combine environmental conviction with comfort in finance or engineering. Growth comes from real engagements where the numbers — and the relationships — both have to hold up.
6 challenges available →Sustainability, ESG & Impact
ESG Analyst
US$84,770median
Capital flows toward the companies investors trust, and ESG analysts shape that trust by examining what businesses actually do beyond their financials. The work means measuring carbon footprints under the GHG Protocol, reading sustainability disclosures critically, running climate-scenario analyses, and assessing whether a company's stated commitments hold up against its operating reality. Students who care about climate and social outcomes, and who also enjoy reading dense regulatory text, tend to thrive here. A strong analyst writes the kind of report a portfolio manager can defend in front of regulators. You grow into the role through accounting and finance fundamentals, climate science literacy, and SQL skills for pulling ESG data at scale. The field is becoming central to how capital gets allocated.
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Industry teams can shape briefs around the skills they hire for, then evaluate students on rubric-scored deliverables — not resumes.