Breaking into media can be exciting… and honestly, it can be humbling.

If you’re thinking about enrolling and imagining the first job will be a big title, a big salary, and a big break, here’s the straight truth:

Most media careers don’t start that way.

They start with entry-level roles, early gigs, learning on the fly, building a reel, meeting people, taking feedback, showing up again, and proving you can do the work. That’s not a flaw in the system, it’s the way creative industries have always worked.

Let’s be clear about what CSB is (and what it isn’t)

At CSB Media Arts Center, our training is built for real-world, practical skills. We’re here to help you learn the tools, the workflow, the expectations, and the habits that make professionals employable.

But we’re also not here to sell a fantasy.

We don’t promise that a certificate automatically equals a dream job. We don’t promise you’ll skip the entry level. And we don’t promise that you won’t have to work hard to earn your place.

For more than 60+ years, CSB has trained students in the practical skills media employers expect. While no credential can guarantee a specific job outcome, CSB is a known training ground, and many employers recognize the hands-on preparation our graduates bring.

What we do promise is this: you’ll leave with skills you can use, a clearer understanding of how the industry works, and support to help you keep improving.

Entry-level is not an insult, it’s a starting line

In media, “entry-level” often means:

  • You’re learning the pace and standards of professional work
  • You’re gaining real credits, reps, and reliability
  • You’re building a network that will lead to your next opportunity
  • You’re creating portfolio pieces that actually get you hired

It’s not glamorous. Sometimes it’s not convenient. Sometimes it’s not local. Sometimes the pay is modest at first.

And still, it’s the door into the industry.

“You get out of it what you put into it” is true… but let’s expand it

This phrase gets tossed around a lot, so let’s make it real.

If you want the career, you need more than completion, you need momentum. Momentum comes from:

  • practice
  • repetition
  • feedback
  • consistency
  • resilience when a “no” shows up

Talent is great. Skills are better. Consistency beats both.

A story we see all the time: the pivot from frustration to forward motion

Sometimes a graduate expects the first opportunity to be bigger, faster, and closer to home.

Then reality hits:

  • entry-level jobs can be low paying at first
  • the good roles are competitive
  • you may have to travel or take odd hours
  • creativity sometimes starts with executing someone else’s vision

And that’s when an important fork appears:

You can stop… or you can build.

Many graduates build through:

  • freelance gigs
  • portfolio projects
  • small business clients
  • assistant roles
  • community partnerships
  • “yes” opportunities that become paid opportunities later

That’s not “settling.” That’s strategy.

The 3 paths most CSB grads take

There isn’t only one route to success. Most graduates fall into one (or a mix) of these paths:

Path 1: The Entry-Level Job Path

You take the starter job, learn how professionals operate, and level up fast.
Best for: people who want structure, mentorship, and steady experience.

Path 2: The Freelance + Portfolio Path

You build your reel one client and one project at a time.
Best for: self-starters who want flexibility and are willing to hustle.

Path 3: The Entrepreneur Path

You build a business, video production, photography, content creation, social media, podcasting, or a hybrid.
Best for: creative independence, client relationships, and long-term ownership.

All three are valid. All three can lead to strong careers.

What we want every graduate to know

Here’s what we hope students understand before graduation day:

  • You don’t need permission to begin.
  • The first job isn’t the finish line. It’s proof you’re in the game.
  • Careers are built through body of work, not a single moment.
  • If you keep creating, keep learning, and keep showing up, you will separate yourself.

And if you need support? We mean it when we say: you can come back for the life of the school. Our goal is not just to train you, it’s to help you grow.

If you’re serious about a media career, do these 5 things

This is the difference-maker list:

  1. Build a portfolio that shows range
    (Not everything you’ve ever done, your strongest work.)
  2. Get on a real shoot or project weekly
    Even if it’s a small role. Momentum matters.
  3. Treat feedback like fuel
    Take notes. Improve. Repeat.
  4. Network like a professional
    Relationships are currency in media.
  5. Stay in the game long enough to win
    Perseverance is not optional, it’s the strategy.

Final straight talk (with love)

If you want a creative career, the “start small” phase isn’t something to fear. It’s the phase that builds the person who can handle the bigger opportunities when they arrive.

CSB Media Arts Center is where media careers begin. We’ll give you the skills. What you build with them is where the story gets good.

Want to see what training looks like? Schedule a tour, or virtual information session.

financial costs

For decades, a four-year college degree was treated like the default “next step.” But across the country, families are starting to ask a different question:

Is this path worth the time and the cost—especially if it doesn’t lead to real job skills?

A recent national poll captured just how much the conversation has shifted. Nearly two-thirds of registered voters (63%) said a four-year degree is not worth the cost, largely because graduates often leave without specific job skills and with significant debt. Only 33% said it’s worth it for long-term earnings and opportunity. 

That doesn’t mean “college is bad.” It means families want options that feel practical, skill-based, and financially responsible.

And that’s exactly where CSB Media Arts Center fits in.

Why Families Are Rethinking the Traditional Route

Let’s be real: the goal hasn’t changed. Parents still want their kids to be stable, confident, employable, and proud of what they do.

What’s changing is the willingness to accept:

  • Big costs without clear outcomes
  • Four (or more) years before entering the workforce
  • Graduating without hands-on, job-ready skills

In separate research, Pew has also found major skepticism—especially when student loans are required. A relatively small share of adults say a four-year degree is “worth it” if it means taking on debt.

Families are essentially saying: “Show me the skills. Show me the path.”

successful career path

CSB Was Built for This Moment

CSB Media Arts Center, home to Connecticut School of Broadcasting, is designed around what people are asking for now:

1) Skills-first training (not theory-first learning)

At CSB, the focus is on building real, practical abilities, so students leave with marketable skills, not just completed credits.

2) Career-focused programs that don’t require “years and years”

Not everyone thrives in lecture halls and semesters. Many students learn best by doing, creating, producing, editing, writing, presenting, building.

CSB is made for hands-on learners who want momentum.

3) A smarter financial path

When families question ROI, they’re asking for a lower-risk way to move forward. CSB offers a path where students can train for a career in media without automatically signing up for the four-year price tag.

This Isn’t Anti-College. It’s Pro-Choice.

We’ll say it clearly:

College can be the right choice for some students and some careers.

But it’s no longer the only respected path, and it shouldn’t be treated like the only “successful” option.

For creative, driven students who want to work in media, storytelling, production, digital content, marketing, and broadcasting, the real question is:

What training gets you the skills, and the confidence, to start?

If Your Student Loves Media, This Is a Smart Next Step

If your teen is always filming, editing, posting, podcasting, performing, creating, or talking about media… they don’t need a “maybe someday” plan.

They need a real-world training environment that helps them turn passion into skill and skill into opportunity.

That’s why CSB exists.

Ready to Explore CSB?

If you’re a parent (or student) trying to make a smart decision in a changing world, we’d love to help you compare options clearly.

Schedule an information session / open house and learn what training at CSB looks like—and what pathways it can open.