I have some experience coding. I've built some fairly complex macros in Excel to interact with our project management database, and I'm writing/maintaining the vb.net code for a validation piece that plugs into our project management front end. I'm also leading a project that is using a middleware to sync costs and budgets between our PM and accounting databases. My BS is in Construction Science, so I have a bit of a background in accounting, project controls, scheduling, and how they all connect. I'm not a straight business or stats guy, but I'm not trying to make a switch from something like history or communications either.
I haven't been to any info sessions yet. I've just been kicking this idea astound in my head for a little while and wanted some outside perspective before going further.
My company will pay, but our limit is $1500 annually. Not much when you consider the A&M program is $50k over 2 years or so, but I suppose I could try to negotiate more on exchange for pledging to stick around once I graduate. I'm looking at UTSA right now (sacrilege, I know) because it's close to home and seems to be much more affordable, but I'm not sure if a grad degree is a grad degree or if it truly matters what program I try to enter. Their program is pretty new, so I'm not sure what it would mean in a future job search should I ever feel like leaving (I don't).