06-02-2015, 11:45 AM
Is there a demographic term for someone who fits the Young Professional age range, but who doesn't have the same type of employment?
From Wikipedia: "The term young professional generally refers to young people in their 20s and 30s who are employed in a profession or white-collar occupation. The meaning may be ambiguous and has evolved from its original narrow meaning of a young person in a professional field."
Is Waterloo planning to go from a student ghetto to a white collar ghetto aimed at a narrow demographic of people? If you work in a trade, or in the service industry, or on some form of defined income (a retirement pension perhaps), then you need not apply to live here?
From Wikipedia: "The term young professional generally refers to young people in their 20s and 30s who are employed in a profession or white-collar occupation. The meaning may be ambiguous and has evolved from its original narrow meaning of a young person in a professional field."
Is Waterloo planning to go from a student ghetto to a white collar ghetto aimed at a narrow demographic of people? If you work in a trade, or in the service industry, or on some form of defined income (a retirement pension perhaps), then you need not apply to live here?