Bloody hell I make long posts. Sorry about this; skip to the bottom if you want my final opinion
bscienceboi said:
Furniture may just be an easy way out of uni but it doesnt have to begin or end there.
From my interpretation of your post, Nashie, bscienceboi has a good point; furniture seems to be something that you've jumped on because you've got a headstart in, and it's there and ready for you to take up; it's the easy option. Similarly, as RanyofuBrogan says, uni's not the only direction; it's just one that you could take. I personally don't see why you've gotta choose one or the other. I don't mean to sound patronising, but there's more to the world than uni at one extreme, and retail/furniture at the other.
My opinion is you should work out where you want to be - not where you feel you <i>could</i>, but where you'd like to be in your dreams. Once you've got that plotted, look at what you'd need to get there, and work out a rough path. Maybe working out a career path from scratch is hard, but given time it should come. All I'm saying is don't limit yourself to the two options...
From the wording of your post I get the impression you're swaying toward staying in retail and avoiding uni, possibly becuase you've got a bit of a headstart. However, people are very selective in their thought processes... Just to play devil's advocate;
Nashie said:
The industry is an interesting one to work in and I have the bonus of being fairly involved ...
...but in the end for a majority of the population, everything eventually becomes just a job. What is 'interesting' about retail? I'm about to spend my 3rd year in an electronics store, and in the end even for a technogeek like myself, selling technology wore thin about 2 years ago. Granted, maybe you have a complete fascination with furniture, but I'd argue that maybe your path would be a little clearer if you were.
Nashie said:
...but I know I can work my way up and I do know at least one guy who was earning at least 150 thousand a year by the time he was 30, without a degree
How old is he? Increasingly, the world is becoming more specialised and knowldege-based... while I don't think that uni really teaches you much more than some general ideas and a way of thinking, it gives you further specialised knowledge. At Dick Smith, we have people who are 40+, and working in retail on about $38k/year.. they're skilled (ie one's a photographer/framer, and another has just finished his PhD in agriculture), but work for $38k/pa... The manager of this store -- one of the busiest in NSW, depending on the week -- gets $47k... for the stress and hassle, in my opinion, that's not worth the money.
If you choose the base retail path (ie, being conservative; store manager -- given a few years and a promotion -- or below in a chain), in my opinion you're just lining someone elses' pocket. If your 'retail' path is further than that, in my opinion a little education can't hurt at all... If you want to become an area manager, or middle manager, or in upper management, some education will not hurt.
Most importantly, I assume at the current point in time you've got the security of being supported, while in 10+ years time you might have other responsibilities preventing you from studying... kids, house/mortgage, cars, bills.
Directly useful or not, study now while you've got the option