In fact, more than 50% of people are not professional, but they still perform well at work. Major is not important. The key to a university is learning ability and basic literacy. You know everything (most college students know little about this major when they graduate now, so their working ability is not strong). Other majors can learn by analogy. Don't care too much about professional counterparts. Often interdisciplinary, it is easier to achieve results. The key is to study your major thoroughly. Any major is a systematic project.
Professionals can't work independently when they go out to work, nor can they graduate from graduate school, let alone undergraduates. So it is more important to go to a good school (University of Science and Technology Beijing is still very good, and I am also an MBA at University of Science and Technology Beijing) and improve my own quality. Profession is really not very important.
I am an IT person, and I am also engaged in data communication. When I recruit fresh graduates, the major is just a reference. It is more important to look at the graduation school, the practicality of graduation design and the quality of students themselves.