Skip to main content

Home / Career tests / Stanford

Career test for Stanford students

See which careers fit your traits — based on what 637+ Stanford alumni actually went on to do.

Private research universityCalifornia
Take the free Career Match test

What Stanford grads actually do

Based on 637 notable Stanford alumni with Wikipedia pages. Data: Wikidata (CC0).

university teacher
106
writer
67
politician
54
businessperson
52
computer scientist
52
engineer
46
journalist
37
American football player
37
lawyer
36
physicist
27
novelist
25
actor
24

Notable Stanford alumni

Albert White
Albert White
basketball player · competitive diver
Heiko von der Leyen
Heiko von der Leyen
physician · cardiologist
Dennis Oppenheim
Dennis Oppenheim
photographer · draftsperson
Andre Braugher
Andre Braugher
stage actor · film actor
Scott Turow
Scott Turow
poet lawyer · lawyer
Q460578
Q460578
actor · writer
Patrick Cramer
Patrick Cramer
scientist · biochemist
Mitt Romney
Mitt Romney
business executive · non-fiction writer

Salary outlook for top Stanford career paths

National median annual wage (BLS Occupational Employment Statistics).

writer
10th–90th percentile: $40,900$148,240
$73,690
median / yr
politician
10th–90th percentile: $21,010$129,510
$47,290
median / yr
businessperson
10th–90th percentile: $80,000$239,200
$206,680
median / yr
computer scientist
10th–90th percentile: $81,450$233,110
$145,080
median / yr
engineer
10th–90th percentile: $62,130$177,020
$111,970
median / yr
journalist
10th–90th percentile: $31,550$160,360
$57,500
median / yr

Find your fit in 2 minutes

Take the Career Match test — RIASEC framework used by 60,000+ students. See which careers from this Stanford alumni list match your traits.

Take the free Career Match test

Big Five and MBTI also available from your dashboard.

About Stanford

Leland Stanford Junior University, commonly referred to as Stanford University, is a private research university in Stanford, California, United States. It was founded in 1885 by railroad magnate Leland Stanford (the eighth governor of and then-incumbent United States senator representing California) and his wife, Jane, in memory of their only child, Leland Jr. The university admitted its first students in 1891, opening as a coeducational and non-denominational institution. It struggled financially after Leland died in 1893 and again after much of the campus was damaged by the 1906 San Francisco earthquake. Following World War II, university provost Frederick Terman inspired an entrepreneurial culture to build a self-sufficient local industry (later Silicon Valley). In 1951, Stanford Research Park was established in Palo Alto as the world's first university research park. By 2021, the university had 2,288 tenure-line faculty, senior fellows, center fellows, and medical faculty on staff. The university is organized around seven schools of study on an 8,180-acre (3,310-hectare) campus, one of the largest in the nation. It houses the Hoover Institution, a public policy think tank, and is classified among "R1: Doctoral Universities – Very high research activity". Students compete in 36 varsity sports, and the university is one of eight private institutions in the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC). Stanford has won 136 NCAA team championships, and was awarded the NACDA Directors' Cup for 25 consecutive years, beginning in 1994. Students and alumni have won 302 Olympic medals (including 153 gold). The university is associated with 94 billionaires, 58 Nobel laureates, 33 MacArthur Fellows, 29 Turing Award winners, 7 Wolf Foundation Prize recipients, 2 United States Supreme Court justices, and 4 Pulitzer Prize winners. Additionally, its alumni include the presidents of six countries, the prime ministers of five countries, and four United States Supreme Court justices, as well as many Fulbright Scholars, Marshall Scholars, Gates Cambridge Scholars, Rhodes Scholars, and members of the United States Congress.

Source: Wikipedia · Licensed under CC-BY-SA 4.0.

Career tests for other top universities