Jamb.Guide

CRE: career guide for Conventional / Realistic / Enterprising types

The CRE Holland code describes candidates who lean primarily Conventional with strong secondary Realistic and tertiary Enterprising traits. Below: what this means in plain English, the 8 Nigerian university courses that match the profile best, and how to use the code with your JAMB strategy.

What CRE means in plain English

People with a Conventional lead are typically organisers, structured, detail-oriented people. Add a strong realistic pull (the second letter) and a tertiary enterprising side (the third), and the CRE profile describes someone who blends those three orientations in roughly that order of strength.

Strengths. Attention to detail, organisation, comfort with rules and structure, preference for measurable outcomes. The realistic layer adds: practical skill, mechanical aptitude, comfort with tools and physical work, preference for tangible outcomes.

Common challenges. May find ambiguous, fast-changing work uncomfortable; benefits from clear structures and measurable goals. May find purely abstract roles or heavy bureaucratic environments draining without hands-on outlets.

Treat your three-letter code as a useful summary rather than an identity. Most undergraduates' profiles shift through university and the first few years of work; revisit the quiz in a year or two.

Top 8 Nigerian university courses for CRE

The courses below are ranked by RIASEC fit with the CRE profile. Each links to the course page with cut-off marks, requirements, careers and FAQ.

  1. #1
    CRI
    Quantity Surveying

    A five-year programme covering construction cost estimation, contract management and procurement.

    Demand: moderate
  2. #2
    CIE
    Land Economy

    A five-year programme covering land valuation, property law and rural economics.

    Demand: high
  3. #3
    CEI
    Accounting

    A four-year programme covering financial reporting, audit, tax and management accounting.

    Demand: high
  4. #4
    CEI
    Estate Management

    A five-year programme covering property valuation, real estate and land economics.

    Demand: high
  5. #5
    CES
    Real Estate

    A four-year programme covering property markets, real estate finance and management.

    Demand: high
  6. #6
    ICR
    Data Science

    A four-year programme covering data analytics, machine learning and statistical modelling.

    Demand: high
  7. #7
    ICR
    Statistics

    A four-year programme covering probability, inference, modelling and data analysis.

    Demand: moderate
  8. #8
    ICE
    Actuarial Science

    A four-year programme covering risk modelling, insurance mathematics and pensions.

    Demand: high

Career paths for CRE candidates

CRE candidates typically thrive in roles that combine the three orientations in the order shown. The dominant conventional layer points toward structured, data-oriented or administrative roles.

The realistic secondary layer reshapes those roles. For example, an SI profile (Social-Investigative) suits clinical medicine; an IS profile (Investigative-Social) suits research-driven healthcare like public health and epidemiology. Both involve health, but the day-to-day balance of patient contact versus analysis differs.

How to use your Holland code with JAMB

Use it as one of four signals. Combine the CRE interest profile with: your academic stream (science / arts / commercial), your JAMB readiness (UTME score and subject combination), and your practical preferences (region, fees, study duration). The /what-to-study quiz on this site blends all four and produces a shortlist of 5 courses with the universities that fit your score.

For JAMB candidates with a clear CRE profile but no decided course, start by treating the top 3 matches above as primary options. Use their course pages to confirm the UTME and O'level subject combinations, then plan your JAMB strategy around those subjects.

Find your top 5 with full reasoning

Take the free 8-minute quiz to combine your CRE profile with your JAMB readiness and preferences. You will see 5 ranked courses with explanations and the universities that fit your situation.

Take the quiz

Frequently asked questions

What does the CRE Holland code mean?

CRE stands for Conventional, Realistic, Enterprising. People with this profile tend to be organisers, structured, detail-oriented people, with secondary traits typical of the realistic type. Strengths: Attention to detail, organisation, comfort with rules and structure, preference for measurable outcomes.

What university courses fit CRE types in Nigeria?

Top course matches for the CRE profile in Nigeria include Quantity Surveying, Land Economy, Accounting, Estate Management, and other related programmes. The full list of 8 courses is on this page, ranked by RIASEC fit.

Is CRE a common Holland code?

Holland codes vary widely in the Nigerian student population. Profiles led by Enterprising or Conventional letters are common in business-focused candidates. The code itself is a starting point, not a label.

What careers suit CRE types?

CRE candidates typically find satisfaction in careers that combine conventional, realistic and enterprising elements. Specific sectors include Research institutes, Banks, Big Four, among others. The course pages linked above show the typical career pathways in detail.

What challenges should CRE candidates expect?

May find ambiguous, fast-changing work uncomfortable; benefits from clear structures and measurable goals. May find purely abstract roles or heavy bureaucratic environments draining without hands-on outlets.

Should I use my Holland code to pick my JAMB choice?

Use it as one signal, not the only signal. Combine your interest profile with your academic strengths, JAMB readiness, family finances and practical preferences. Our /what-to-study quiz blends all four signals into a course shortlist that includes the realistic universities for your score.

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