Recommendations For Noob In Data Degree |
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Recommendations For Noob in Data Degree
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I appreciate the feedback. I generally am loving the field. Even if I have to change jobs later in life, I think it’s ok. Lots of ppl have to do that. I cannot imagine any college major right now that will keep you in the same field for 30 years giving how fast tech is advancing. Some ppl were asking ‘what are you looking for?’. >> job security is ofc desirable. >> I kinda just want a job that won’t keep me in poverty. My first degree unfortunately was one of those ‘meme’, ‘basket weaving’, ones I did for passion when I was 18 and told to pick what I liked. Plans: >>I hope to get internships or something before graduation to get pragmatic insights into what is needed of me. I appreciate I have a learning curve changing fields, but I am up to the challenge, Someone mentioned taking applied calc. I will look to do that next term. Ty! Oh and I’m not just going to ‘drop out’ like someone seems to be suggesting. I qualified for a full ride due to my GPA and extracurricular stuff, but it requires I work for my university at the same time. Fortunately, it is in-field (kinda). At least I’m getting excel practice. So I would have to pay the tuition all back if left half way through. It’s cheaper for me just to finish lol. I do want to say further that my uni has been incredibly supportive of me on my endeavor and I am debating going the PHD route too. I genuinely enjoy research.
Sylph.Kalmado said: » Not that I disagree with learning skills on your own being important and what not, however I am in the middle of a career change (sales/service to cyber security) and so far I've been told that having at least *some* formal education is borderline necessary to get your foot in the door to majority of places. Now to be up front I haven't done much job searching so far, but from what I have seen most places what either a number of certificates, degree(s), or something showing you have an idea of what you're doing to be able to get the job. To be candid I'm a bit scared of interviewing in the field of cyber security because it's so new to me and also I'm only in month 3 of the 10 month boot camp I signed up for (University of Michigan via Thrive DX). For those with experience, how is interviewing for things like cyber security? Or even IT help desk and what not? I'm kind of mentally preparing to be in a beginner role for awhile while gaining experience in order to get the higher paying gigs. That is completely and utter BS, and I'm going to explain how this works. When I want to expand my headcount by one or replace someone who just left, I need to write a hiring requisition. This is a document that explains the position what I am trying to hire, the business need for the position, the requirements and pay range for that position. I can get the Senior Vice President / Executive Directory approval on most anything by just being good with management speak, but getting a decent salary range approved by HR quickly turns into a challenge. HR has a standard set of criteria I need to fill out, two important ones being education and years of experience. That is then followed by list of "skills" that end up turning into key word searches. Now if I put "High School" or "Some College" under the Education field, they will immediately code the position to a junior salary band. I will then have to enter into a ridiculously annoying fight having to ultimately spend political capital to get the HR Directory to make an exception, and I would have to do this for every single hire. So what I do instead is put "4 Year Degree or equivalent work experience", I then set the years of experience according to the seniority level I need. Taken together these two allow me to set a competitive salary band for the position. The side effect is that you get really weird stuff like positions asking for 10 years experience in a technology that is two years old. The important part here is that bolded part, it allows me to substitute one year of experience for one year of education. A four year degree counts for +4 years of experience when it comes to me negotiating pay bands with HR. Otherwise that degree means absolutely nothing to anyone in the hiring process. We do not care, it's a nice piece of paper you can hang behind your desk and make watercooler talk about. What we care about is technical competence and proven work experience. We are paying you money, that could of gone to someone else, to accomplish tasks and provide some sort of work that we've identified a need for. We do not have unlimited budget and have to fight with every other department for head count, this makes us heavily incentivized to try to get the person who can accomplish the most. If you are wanting to know about how to get into a field, ask hiring managers or technical interviewers what they look for. If you are in one career field and want to switch, you need to find a way to get documented work experience as that is the first and more prominent thing people are gonna look for. @Saevel
Thank you for the reply. Part of my boot camp is resume reviewing/writing, getting set up on Linked In (I have an account there but never used it), and I believe some interview prep. I'm hoping they prep us more on the interviewing part and what not so I can build some confidence in that regard. I'm really excited to finally switch into something tech related as I've been burned out from Sales for quite awhile. It's great to read everyone's banter here and to soak up what I can. Thanks! Sylph.Kalmado said: » Pantafernando said: » IDK how is interviewing in cybersecurity, but that field have some certifications that should give you the standard in the industry. I would grab one or two of those CompTIA etc before trying a job. Maybe marathon some Udemy course and trying to pass the test. CompTia is like the "basic" level if your going with certs, it's basically "I know the correct words in the correct order". Snagging A/Net/Security just requires a little studying if you don't already have the experience. Some of the basic security ones might help the resume a bit but it's really going to be years of applicable experience and your ability to navigate an interview. Certifications used to be all the rage, but then people started figuring out that people were just collecting em like pokemon and didn't actually know the material behind them. It's where the whole CE credit system came from, but that's a different discussion. Sylph.Kalmado said: » @Saevel Thank you for the reply. Part of my boot camp is resume reviewing/writing, getting set up on Linked In (I have an account there but never used it), and I believe some interview prep. I'm hoping they prep us more on the interviewing part and what not so I can build some confidence in that regard. I'm really excited to finally switch into something tech related as I've been burned out from Sales for quite awhile. It's great to read everyone's banter here and to soak up what I can. Thanks! Practicing interviewing yourself in front of a mirror, it helps a bit. I can't overstate how important building some sort of experience value is though. Even if you have to resort to volunteer working for some school or charity on your spare time. Here are a few of the generic questions I'll toss at candidates. *) Since technology is constantly changing, tell us about a time you were in a position that required you learn something new and the results of that journey. *) Explain to us a situation where you made a mistake, what was the mistake and how did you resolve the situation. Those aren't trick questions, everyone who has done any amount of real world work has "war stories" from insane stuff they've had to do. We've all made mistakes and had to adapt, those are the important skills not that a person knows X Y or Z. While you do have a good point, recruitment process changes from company to company, and even from country to country.
In my ccuntry/company, im pretty sure the best starting poinnt are estate company, that promote a public selection based in a general test, that will cover from basic knowledge like language and general stuff, till specific things. Plus for jobs that require higher education, a certificate from a certified education institute is required. Btw, next sunday i will undertake that general test to work for a estate bank for a data science camp. Starting salary is like 4k a month (with bonuses, probably 60k a year) for a 7h day work, with very high stability. Asura.Saevel said: » Sylph.Kalmado said: » @Saevel Thank you for the reply. Part of my boot camp is resume reviewing/writing, getting set up on Linked In (I have an account there but never used it), and I believe some interview prep. I'm hoping they prep us more on the interviewing part and what not so I can build some confidence in that regard. I'm really excited to finally switch into something tech related as I've been burned out from Sales for quite awhile. It's great to read everyone's banter here and to soak up what I can. Thanks! Practicing interviewing yourself in front of a mirror, it helps a bit. I can't overstate how important building some sort of experience value is though. Even if you have to resort to volunteer working for some school or charity on your spare time. Here are a few of the generic questions I'll toss at candidates. *) Since technology is constantly changing, tell us about a time you were in a position that required you learn something new and the results of that journey. *) Explain to us a situation where you made a mistake, what was the mistake and how did you resolve the situation. Those aren't trick questions, everyone who has done any amount of real world work has "war stories" from insane stuff they've had to do. We've all made mistakes and had to adapt, those are the important skills not that a person knows X Y or Z. Bahamut.Senaki said: » Oh and I’m not just going to ‘drop out’ like someone seems to be suggesting. I qualified for a full ride due to my GPA and extracurricular stuff, but it requires I work for my university at the same time. Fortunately, it is in-field (kinda). At least I’m getting excel practice. So I would have to pay the tuition all back if left half way through. It’s cheaper for me just to finish lol. Very important that you be able to translate that work experience. "I did my paper on blah" or "my Thesis was in applied meh" only matters to academic positions, the rest of us file it into the "good for you, now what can you do for me" bucket. In the private sector we don't hire based on "oh you went to this or that university and had this amazing GPA", but "how can you provide value to this company" and "is that value worth the money you are asking or can we get something better elsewhere". Pantafernando said: » While you do have a good point, recruitment process changes from company to company, and even from country to country. In my ccuntry/company, im pretty sure the best starting poinnt are estate company, that promote a public selection based in a general test, that will cover from basic knowledge like language and general stuff, till specific things. Plus for jobs that require higher education, a certificate from a certified education institute is required. Btw, next sunday i will undertake that general test to work for a estate bank for a data science camp. Starting salary is like 4k a month (with bonuses, probably 60k a year) for a 7h day work, with very high stability. I'm speaking for IT in general as I've been doing this for a couple decades now. Country and companies will have their own nuance and people have to learn to the play the game. Asura.Saevel said: » Sylph.Kalmado said: » Not that I disagree with learning skills on your own being important and what not, however I am in the middle of a career change (sales/service to cyber security) and so far I've been told that having at least *some* formal education is borderline necessary to get your foot in the door to majority of places. Now to be up front I haven't done much job searching so far, but from what I have seen most places what either a number of certificates, degree(s), or something showing you have an idea of what you're doing to be able to get the job. To be candid I'm a bit scared of interviewing in the field of cyber security because it's so new to me and also I'm only in month 3 of the 10 month boot camp I signed up for (University of Michigan via Thrive DX). For those with experience, how is interviewing for things like cyber security? Or even IT help desk and what not? I'm kind of mentally preparing to be in a beginner role for awhile while gaining experience in order to get the higher paying gigs. That is completely and utter BS, and I'm going to explain how this works. ... We do not care, it's a nice piece of paper you can hang behind your desk and make watercooler talk about. What we care about is technical competence and proven work experience. We are paying you money, that could of gone to someone else, to accomplish tasks and provide some sort of work that we've identified a need for.... I'll second this and I've worked in cybersecurity for a long time, and done many many interviews. Once you get past HR to engineering, no one cares. In over two decades and multiple interviews, some in research labs, my degree came up ONCE in an interview. The only reason it came up there was because it was in a lab attached to a university, they had salary brackets that were tied to your degree level. If you didn't have a masters then they wouldn't approve a salary above xyz until you got one. They offered me the job but I declined because I had no desire to deal with that *** and it was 50% of the closest offer I got. No one cares. It might be a subject of curiosity if you are otherwise competent and got a degree in gardening or something, but degree is the last thing I look at and most folks are same way. In fact it isn't even listed on my resume, I just put that I got a degree and where I went on the bottom of the second page, that's it. Some of the worst candidates I had in were CS PhDs This does work differently in academia, though. I'd strongly suggest just avoiding that entirely. It's worth remembering that most people are massively incompetent or don't care. If you care and show the ability to learn new things, that's 80% of the interview. Not being a *** is somewhere in that range too and you'd be surprised how many people fail at that. Admitting when you don't know something and trying to BS it is another major failing point in most interviews I've done. People who are competent in this field are able to switch tasks effectively and learn new things quickly without having to be hand held, sometimes in uncomfortable or awkward situations. This applies to most jobs, so just showing you care, having a basic good mentality, not being a ***, admitting what you know and don't, then showing you can figure it out and being honest is the bulk of most interviews I have done. I will add this: If you can show up with some kind of work sample or something, it goes a long way but what this looks like varies significantly depending on the job and company. I'll add this too:
If someone cares a lot about your degree and/or certifications in this field: you probably don't want to work for or with them anyway. The amount of bloated egos I've seen due to this from people who are completely inept is staggering and they are usually a pain in the *** to work with. As another anecdote, I was told all through college that my GPA would follow me everywhere and it's all employers cared about. The only time it came up was my first interview, we laughed about how bad it was and they hired me anyway. I'm not saying flunk out or do bad in school, but it never comes up despite what you may be told. It can impact your prospects for grad school, though, if that's something you want to do for some reason. Relevant to discussion.
This is just general advice I give everyone:
The vast majority of cybersecurity is not heavily CS based. Like I said earlier, a lot of the technical side is running tools, interpreting and reporting results for most places. It's not great in a lot of cases but it is what it is. The parts that are CS heavy are often things you wouldn't get from a degree program anyway and everyone learned on their own even if they had a degree. It can be an advantage or a crutch, but there is nothing stopping you from figuring it out on your own except your own motivation. Asura.Iamaman said: » Don't bring up your sex life. Bahamut.Senaki said: » You would think that, but nowadays some people like to lead with themselves being non-straight. Asura.Saevel said: » Bahamut.Senaki said: » You would think that, but nowadays some people like to lead with themselves being non-straight. I’ve seen people introducing themselves using their preferred pronouns before. But not sexual identities. That’s a new one for me. Edit: I once tried to tell women on a dating app that I had a R15 Ukon. They were not impressed. :( Try saying you like Titzona or Buttgang
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Bahamut.Senaki said: » I generally am loving the field. Even if I have to change jobs later in life, I think it’s ok. Lots of ppl have to do that. I cannot imagine any college major right now that will keep you in the same field for 30 years giving how fast tech is advancing. Some ppl were asking ‘what are you looking for?’. >> job security is ofc desirable. >> I kinda just want a job that won’t keep me in poverty. My first degree unfortunately was one of those ‘meme’, ‘basket weaving’, ones I did for passion when I was 18 and told to pick what I liked. Hi, I would like to provide another pov on this. I can understand why you have anxiety with your degree, because I've experienced the same thing when I graduated as a non-STEM student. However as I get older I slowly see things from bigger picture pov and imo, social science is very useful when it comes to making money. It is not meme. Just FYI, Trump has a bachelor in economics, so does Elon musk. Both of them are far from being poor. The difference is that they didn't pick a 30k salary job after they graduate and stick with that forever. They look at things from a much higher angle and seize their opportunity to make money with their knowledge. What I like about social science is that it teaches people how to analyze why society (money) works this way. And in return, it helps people improve their decision making when it comes to making money. It's been 2 years since I started study social science (mostly economics and politics), and I can give you a real example happened on this forum. About an year ago somebody posted something about "economy collapse" because of bank run in the US. Many YouTube channels were fear mongering. Bank stock prices were dropping like crazy. I used my knowledge in social science, and draw the conclusion that the crisis will be over soon. So I entered the market, bought those bank stocks at low price. 2 months later stock price bounced back and I walked away with 30% gain. In conclusion, although social science jobs probably paid less than STEM jobs, it is still a useful set of skill to make money irl because people's wealth doesn't need to come from their job salary entirely. Again, see Trump and Elon Musk. If one day all jobs are replaced by AI including STEM jobs, I bet people that understand inner workings of society can still make money in this world. They don't need jobs to pay them, they create demands in this world, which makes money for them. This kind of knowledge, imo, is the real income security in this world. That being said, I think getting STEM jobs for higher beginning salary and use social science knowledge to help your decision making quality to improve income from all sources is a great combo. Your social science investment isn't wasted, that's for sure. Oh, no.
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Afania said: » Bahamut.Senaki said: » I generally am loving the field. Even if I have to change jobs later in life, I think it’s ok. Lots of ppl have to do that. I cannot imagine any college major right now that will keep you in the same field for 30 years giving how fast tech is advancing. Some ppl were asking ‘what are you looking for?’. >> job security is ofc desirable. >> I kinda just want a job that won’t keep me in poverty. My first degree unfortunately was one of those ‘meme’, ‘basket weaving’, ones I did for passion when I was 18 and told to pick what I liked. Hi, I would like to provide another pov on this. I can understand why you have anxiety with your degree, because I've experienced the same thing when I graduated as a non-STEM student. However as I get older I slowly see things from bigger picture pov and imo, social science is very useful when it comes to making money. It is not meme. Just FYI, Trump has a bachelor in economics, so does Elon musk. Both of them are far from being poor. The difference is that they didn't pick a 30k salary job after they graduate and stick with that forever. They look at things from a much higher angle and seize their opportunity to make money with their knowledge. What I like about social science is that it teaches people how to analyze why society (money) works this way. And in return, it helps people improve their decision making when it comes to making money. It's been 2 years since I started study social science (mostly economics and politics), and I can give you a real example happened on this forum. About an year ago somebody posted something about "economy collapse" because of bank run in the US. Many YouTube channels were fear mongering. Bank stock prices were dropping like crazy. I used my knowledge in social science, and draw the conclusion that the crisis will be over soon. So I entered the market, bought those bank stocks at low price. 2 months later stock price bounced back and I walked away with 30% gain. In conclusion, although social science jobs probably paid less than STEM jobs, it is still a useful set of skill to make money irl because people's wealth doesn't need to come from their job salary entirely. Again, see Trump and Elon Musk. If one day all jobs are replaced by AI including STEM jobs, I bet people that understand inner workings of society can still make money in this world. They don't need jobs to pay them, they create demands in this world, which makes money for them. This kind of knowledge, imo, is the real income security in this world. That being said, I think getting STEM jobs for higher beginning salary and use social science knowledge to help your decision making quality to improve income from all sources is a great combo. Your social science investment isn't wasted, that's for sure. I appreciate your input! As is, the way I think about the world through the MS is with the Social Science lens. I’ve been trained to approach critical thinking issues in one way, and by golly it is easiest for me to continue doing so. Almost all of my school-projects have been this way so far. In some ways, this is making me stand out among my peers. I had a nice email from a classmate a few days ago thanking me for my social sci approach to class topics because it helped them understand the theory better. I also have found a few career paths that might combine the two degrees. Ex: Think Tanks. •Ex project I’ve done in school: Using ML Algorithms to determine the influence of religiosity on the ‘stability’ of democratic institutions. (Useless? Prob. lol). Offline
I think it's ok to lie about abilities in an interview as long as you're certain you could pick up the ability easy and quick enough.
Its like saying its ok to rob if youare not caughr.
Because its a frigging huge red flag hiring someone that think lying is ok Personally i think it can score more points by saying you dont have certain skill but its willing to learn it if it helps the said job.
Because having a skill is just average while finding people invested in something seems more valuable If you say "I can do x" in an interview, the next thing you are getting questions about is x. If you lie, you are about to get caught, and that is a huge "I don't want to work with this person" issue among many others.
Ive just reported K123 office saying he has been giving morally questionable advices in FFXIAH.
The guy said me K123 will be fired the next monday. Not because of the morally questionable advice, but because he is a FFXIAH user, and everyone knows only weirdos are FFXIAH users.
K123 said: » I think it's ok to lie about abilities in an interview as long as you're certain you could pick up the ability easy and quick enough. ... Guys nobody do this, seriously do not do this. You will get caught during the technical interview and that's a one way trip to the dumpster bin. We are very good at catching people who lie on resumes because with every skill comes practical real world experience around that skill and it's very easy to sniff BS out. It is much better to plainly state you do not know something but know how to find out, then describe how you would research and figure out the problem. |
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