T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1169.1 | Don't give up the ship! | FSOA::LSIGEL | My dog ate my briefcase | Wed Jun 05 1991 12:06 | 28 |
| It seems like every year the market gets more and more flooded with
college graduates, so employers have their pick and they can be very
selective. Even with the recession which makes it tough, more and more
kids every year graduate from college so this makes trying to get a job
tougher.
I graduated from Worcester State College in 1985 with a degree in
Media. I had three TV Production internships and was at the top of my
class in my major. I really thought once I got that diploma,
employers would be knocking my door down. It was not the case! (Well
the field that I went in is very tough to break into....but I do love
it!). I did have a job at a TV Station but it was 3rd shift, and I
bailed out.
My suggestion to all the grads is not to give up and send out resumes
to every possible company that is of interest and be super persistant.
That is how I got my first job in media.
With the economy so down, it seems like they will be taking anything
they can get just to earn a few bucks.
The job I am in now, the closest I get to my media major is making
slide transparencies on the system and going to the "Media Room" to
make copies ;->.
Lynne
|
1169.2 | What a rocky road it can be! | BTOVT::MANDILE_A | Spacely's Space Sprockets | Wed Jun 05 1991 12:22 | 38 |
|
When I graduated from college in 1982, things were really slow in the
electronics industry. Most companies had hiring freezes on, others
would put an add on the paper and get about 250 resumes for one
position. And then take somebody with a BS in engineering for a
technician job.
I was in Vermont at the time. All of my friends I graduated with (From
Devry in Columbus , ohio) were scaterred thru pennsylvania, ohio,
michigan, and indiana.....They were all experiencing the problems I
was.
What I did was stayed very hungry. Most of my fellow graduates went
back to the jobs they had in High School. I was determained not to do
that. So I moved down to Long Island, and started working in a small
company, as a tech for $3.50 an hour. I was peanuts for pay, but I was
in the industry and didnt really care, I got by. And my first company
was to a technician, what M*A*S*H was to a doctor, the battlefield. But
I got great experience, and worked in a couple of different electronics
companies before coming to DEC.
That first company has set the pace for the rest of my life. It was
definitely the bottom of the latter .When I started school they said My
first job would make me about 14k a year. I started at about 8k, but I
wasn't going to make Pizza after graduating from Devry.
My advice to the entry level worker is to stay *very* hungry for what
you want your career to be, you will always need to feed off of that
hunger when switching companies. And *DON'T* be afraid to leave your
hometown and your family, otherwise you'll be spinning Pizza.
Parents with sons and daughters with this problem should support them
if they want to move away to find work in there field, in another state.
I swear I could write a book about this subject, and what I have been
thru,
Albert
|
1169.3 | Keep on pushin..... | FSOA::LSIGEL | My dog ate my briefcase | Wed Jun 05 1991 12:47 | 18 |
| Re:2
You are right, it is a rocky road and they do start you off with
'peanuts for pay'. What I was making in my field was not much more
then you can make at McDonalds flipping burgers, and for this job you
had to be a college graduate! If you keep on pushing you will get what
you want. I am a temp and once the economy picks up I am going to
start pushing again, I am also going to take some art classes in the
fall, so I will have something else to fall back on if I dont get
anything in the media.
You are right, you have to take the initiate and be brave and move away
where the jobs are. Unfortunalty I am a wimp in that department ;-)!
Lynne
|
1169.4 | Start with the want-ads BEFORE college! | PENUTS::HNELSON | Resolved: 184# now, 175# July | Wed Jun 05 1991 16:38 | 46 |
| Forgive me if this is insufficiently sympathetic.
One solution is to study something (and acquire experience doing while
still in college) for which THERE IS DEMAND! Want to pick a college
major? Pick up the Sunday want-ads and do a count! If you find a single
two-line ad in the back which MAY be related to your proposed field of
study, pick a new field. A good field to pick is that for which you see
the most demand.
A related idea is pick a profession for which education presents a
barrier to entry. A "business degree" followed by an attempt at selling
real estate suffers because all your competing brokers need to qualify
for the job is a weekend-course and passing the broker's exam. Law
school is slightly better, because of the bar exam, but it's not TOO
much better because it's cheap and lucrative to set up a law school,
and law is the default "next choice" for all the NIKE's out there.
Engineering, computer science, architecture, and pharmacy are all
fields where a particular AND DIFFICULT undergraduate major is
necessary to practice the profession (well, computer science may be a
reach... but ever less so). "Difficult" means "barrier to entry" means
not everyone and their sibling is in the business, so someone might be
willing to pay you to do it!
No offense, -1, but taking art classes to have a backup is like
wearing a snorkel in case your parachute doesn't open. "Starving
artist" is redundant, right? If you want to be an artist, an actress, a
rock'n'roll star, and/or a novelist... then get a job that pays the
bills and pursue that other stuff in your spare time. My brother-in-law
is a petroleum engineer who fills his house with his oil/acrylic
paintings... and doesn't suffer the usual artist's dilemma: if you're
making art to meet the mortgage, pretty soon you're into mass
production and then it's no longer art.
I have a lot of energy around this topic because my eldest daughter is
convinced she will be the next Madonna. She has NONE of the
qualifications -- my daughter's singing voice is excellent :) -- but
nonetheless she's determined to spend a ridiculous amount of her
parent's money pursuing that goal in college. A total waste, IMO.
I suppose I'm also fired up because I *always* made decisions about
majors and courses and degrees based on employability. These people who
spend four years taking the fun stuff (literature, communications) are
shocked when they aren't handed a job? Get real.
- Hoyt
|
1169.5 | Be Happy in what you do.... | FSOA::LSIGEL | My dog ate my briefcase | Wed Jun 05 1991 17:56 | 20 |
| Re:4
I have always been very creative since I was a child. Teachers noticed
it and notified my parents many times to send me to special art
classes outside the public school system. If you are born with artistic
talents why not use them? Yes I heard of the term "Starving
Artist"......but I dont think the people that do graphics or other
artistic related jobs in DEC are starving.
When you are a high school kid you don't have the sense to pick up the
want ads and pick out the common field of interest. I kick myself in
the butt for not majoring in computer science where at the time I
graduated jobs were pretty abundant.
You have to pick a field that you are going to be happy with for the
rest of your life. Dont forget you are going to be doing it day after
day.....
|
1169.6 | | BTOVT::MANDILE_A | Spacely's Space Sprockets | Thu Jun 06 1991 08:31 | 12 |
|
RE:.4
Dude,
I choose electronics in high school, the field is obviously excellent
for employment, and I *still* had a hellava time breaking in. I my mind
if tyou dont have alot of drive *along* with common sense, you better
start praying you hit the lottery cause it can be a jungle out there!
Al
|
1169.7 | never stop looking... | KOBAL::BROWN | upcountry frolics | Thu Jun 06 1991 14:47 | 31 |
|
I got out of grad school with a MA in English right in the middle
of the 74-75 recession and moved to the Washington DC area. Mornings
were spent working at McDonald's and afternoons were spent peddling
resumes. While carrying some extra boxes out to someone's car, I
mentioned that I was on the lookout for a job. The person had a friend
who opened up an employment agency the week before. Although the
agency didn't find me a job, I met someone in the waiting room who
suggested I try a certain company. I sent them a resume, went to
an interview, and... the job got axed because of funding cuts.
But, I had enough of an interview to fix myself in the interviewer's
mind. (His favorite charity was a sheltered workshop -- I'd worked
at one two years before.) Another job came up and I got it.
The scribbling has been going on for 15 years.
What's the point? Never stop looking. A lot of the good leads for
first jobs come from conversations, questions, and personal
connections. Let's face it, all I had to sell was a personality
and a reasonably empty brain ready to soak up a profession... 8^)
As to demand, don't sell the non-technical disciplines short, just
find a way to use them in a high-demand field. As a writer, I have
a lot of flexibility -- technical writing is only part of the story.
In fact, during a full-blown computer industry recession, I probably
have more choices than a lot of the engineers I work with.
One friend of mine has an astonishing resume that includes writing
for a major Chicago hospital, a factory automation firm, an ad agency,
and a marketing cousulting firm. She's an energetic whirlwind with
a personality that could charm the spots off a leopard.
Ron
|
1169.8 | | OZROCK::TAYLOR | De essence of disillusion | Thu Jul 11 1991 04:15 | 18 |
|
The demand for people in electronics is dying off here (I did Electrical
Engineering, specifically in Digital Electronics). I applied for a couple of
jobs which were in electronics, but didn't get them/didn't really want them. I
didn't hesitate to take this job - software engineering - and I consider
myself somewhat lucky to have it.
I now live on the Gold Coast, Australia, 50m from the beach, own a car,
and live comfortably on a high-but-not-really-high (for my age) salary.
(The point being that this is a good place to live... I could demand a higher
salary if I was out in the middle of nowhere).
Recently one of my best friends asked me when I was going to stop drifting.
Are people born with drive? Or is it somewhere within me, where it will
surface when/if I need it? Sometimes I envy people who strive to achieve.
|
1169.9 | | XCUSME::HOGGE | Dragon Slaying...No Waiting! | Thu Jul 11 1991 09:41 | 9 |
| Those selfsame people who strive to achieve tend to get ulcers and have
a shorter life expectancy.
I've always felt that I only needed to strive hard enough to meet my
needs. So long as I can cover my expensess, pay my bills and sock away
a little for a rainy day... why do I need to push myself for a higher
paying higher tension filled job?
Skip
|