Ask HN: Am I hirable?
I'm writing this because I feel like I'm telling myself a story that I'm not currently hirable. I read job requirements, and I feel like most startups or tech companies would choose someone with a computer science degree or more legitimate programming skills. I tell myself that I can't get a job as a counselor since I don't have a Masters degree. I also feel like my limited references (having worked for myself the last 3 years) will hold me back from getting any position that pays over 40k a year.
The frustration here is that I am extremely valuable to many companies, but without a strong résumé, I figure I'll be glossed over for a stronger on-paper candidate. I'm a fast learner, very resourceful, and I'm great with optimization. I love improving methods and systems to produce greater efficiency and effectiveness.
I can also move to anywhere in the USA, and I currently have enough money saved up to relocate immediately.
Any thoughts or suggestions are appreciated.
4 comments
[ 2.7 ms ] story [ 30.5 ms ] threadLarge companies often times get many resumes, and have to go through a weeding process. Normally that's degree/years of experience thing. But smaller startups (especially less popular ones) may give you a shot. Start there, get some experience and re-valuate.
You may also want to consider trying to angle for a management track. I'm not sure you can jump straight there, but if you can find something a little bit larger than a 5-person startup, and can find something growing, you may be able to work you way up that path; put a bit of that under your belt and you'll probably be in pretty decent shape.
Perhaps some people who have gone that path could offer some insight?
But, upshot, with some hustle you seem hireable to me based on the given info. You just definitely aren't in a position where the job will hop into your lap right now.
Writing skill is a big plus, even if many people (including HR people) don't realize that immediately.
Psychology can be valuable, as well, especially if you find a tech field to "dock on". Maybe some user experience stuff or so? Security (social engineering)? I don't know, but it would be a shame to totally abandon that amount of knowledge.
The problem is, as you have realized, that it takes effort on the hiring manager's part to correctly evaluate your potential value to the company.
Write your resume more in the direction of cross-disciplinary projects, show the (very different) things you've done of your own accord.
And (although this may be very tricky to do, depending on your personality) don't go into it as a supplicant competing with recent university graduates. Paint yourself a career changer, a bit apart from the masses.
Still, hiring tends to be conservative, so I wouldn't want to give you high hopes of immediate success.
Depending on the time frame you're contemplating, maybe use your writing skills and curiosity, paired with technical skills, to impress people.
Julia Evans (http://jvns.ca/), for example, is much admired here on HN. I don't know her backstory, from my point of view she simply showed up one day with an interesting blog post, then another, then another.
And while all of those blog posts are kind of basic, maybe even boring, to people who are deep in whatever she's writing about, she managed to write about lots of different subjects competently, gaining lots of respect and job offers, IIRC.