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How did you get your job? Any advice?
(lemmy.world)
submitted
1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)
by
PlanetOfOrd@lemmy.world
to
c/nostupidquestions@lemmy.world
I'm in tech; senior level. But I've been looking for work for over 3 years. I've been getting advice/tips/tricks from other people, but nothing has worked so far. These are things I've tried:
- Blindly applying for a job through the job form
- Working with a recruiter to get me a position.
- Asking to chat with someone on a team with an open position.
- Asking to chat with someone on a team with NO positions.
- Working to establish myself as an expert on social media.
- Asking friends if their company is hiring.
- "Slow networking" (not asking for a job directly, but trying VERY hard to be patient and get to know someone first)
- Fast networking...taking the direct "hey, you hiring?" approach.
- Lynchpin networking (connecting people w/ other people)
- Giving talks at conferences
- Guerrilla tech support (providing my 2 cents on a post even if no one was asking for it).
- open source contributions
- Temp agencies
- state jobs
- looking for "hiring" tags on social media.
- connecting with high-profile people and asking if they need help.
- developing a complete MVP that would help someone (yet I couldn't quite market effectively).
- Leveraging previous employers to see if they have anything new.
- Offering "low hanging fruit" gigs on social media.
- Putting my resume on job boards.
- Getting a role well below my pay grade and working my way up (if I try this I get automatically disqualified for being too overqualified).
- Providing free consultation to businesses.
- Hosting a podcast interview with someone from a company.
- Writing a guest post for an article (I've kind of done this, I think).
Edit:
- I've also had my resume, LinkedIn profile, and other social media, looked over by professionals and nonprofessionals alike. I've even gotten coaching. I've probably gotten more coaching than interviews at this point.
Another edit:
- The only think that's worked lately (as terrible as it sounds) is groveling and telling people the severity of my situation. And that's just gotten me very very small dead-end projects in someone's back pocket. I'm definitely trying to leverage these as best I can.
Any other strategies people have found that works? How did you get your job? I'm running out of ideas.
I'm a fairly high level software engineer at a massive tech company. I only graduated college less than 7 years ago. I climbed the ladder pretty fast at a startup, then moved over to a large corporation once my title was high enough.
I got the job I am currently at by literally just applying on their website. It took a couple of months for them to get back to me, but once I got that initial email, I had an interview within a day or two, and had a job offer after about a week.
That said, this was 2 years ago when companies were desperate to find engineers. Now the economy has taken a bad turn and many companies aren't hiring engineers. I know mine isn't right now. In fact, we laid some engineers off a few months back.
I was wondering if that was possible. I get ignored by startups at the same rate as corporate. I'm always told you have to be dragged through the mud for months of interviews before a company hires you, but I take it you didn't have to do that?
I actually got my current job on my first attempt when I decided I wanted a new job. But at the startup, I interviewed with 4 or 5 large corporations before deciding to settle on a startup. I got in because I knew someone there.
I have also interviewed with Google many times and could never get a job there. I even passed all their damn interviews one of those times and they "couldn't find a team that wanted me" so they said to try again next year, at which point I decided they can get fucked.
Maybe I just got extremely lucky with my current job. Who knows.
But yeah, I'm really glad I'm not looking for a job right now, because it's really rough right now.
The real problem.
No amount of résumé writing is going get anyone a job if no jobs are available for them to fill.