Second, studying for a master's degree in library science and information science, if you are not prepared to work in libraries or related industries from the beginning, it is a kind of speculation in itself. The "speculation" we are talking about here is not a moral criticism, but a sadness and depression from the perspective of the industry. Those who study history should be computers, those who study computers should be physics and those who study physics should be librarians. None of them will change easily (yes, even the last one). In the master's stage, they are training specialized talents, not doing liberal arts education-besides, liberal arts are mainly high schools and undergraduate courses.
After these two problems are clarified. We can roughly refine the subject's question as "what is the cross-disciplinary employment situation with strong information knowledge", and why do you say "roughly"? Because the "information management" mentioned by the subject is not for training talents for civil servants and libraries, for example, whether it is biased towards information management depends on the direction, and the direction is different, which is very different. If the direction of information management does not pay attention to specific technologies such as front-end and data mining, there is not much advantage in employment at present.