@op did you do any side projects to help with your resume or was it all from experience? trynna bounce jobs in the upcoming year and I have work experience in a data field, but we mainly used excel. I have some Python experience but I would need to polish it up for future jobs
@op I dm you
save your money not every start up makes it
I don’t work at a startup. It’s a public company but I agree
Nice man, I’m currently 25, senior a***yst at an airline making 1/3 of you, did you get your current job thru networking and did you negotiate a substantially higher offer from what they gave you?
So honestly I’ve always heard a ton about networking and I truly think that’s the best way to get a job (it’s how I got my first a***yst job)
But with this job I honestly just straight up applied. I think I got the look because I found a job that looked for experience that I had, tailored my resume, and applied during a low application time
Also I negotiated a bit and got a boost but not much
Yeah so I went to college for a bit then dropped out to work on a small startup with friends. It didn’t really work out at all so I needed something. I researched a lot and found a really small startup doing cool things. They had an entry level support position open that paid like 15 an hour. I took it and became lead of the team in 1.5 years.
Then I took a risk and did an internship (lost benefits and had to move). Internship was in the data field. Then I leveraged that internship to get an entry level a***yst job. Became a senior a***yst in a year and then leveraged that to get the product management job. Studied for like 100 hours because I had never been a product manager before.
Sound like you're willing to take risks and know how to talk to people. Essential skills in the modern worlking world. Well done to you fr
As someone who been sitting at home rn with two degrees not even trying to find a job, seeing this was honestly inspiration
Sound like you're willing to take risks and know how to talk to people. Essential skills in the modern worlking world. Well done to you fr
As someone who been sitting at home rn with two degrees not even trying to find a job, seeing this was honestly inspiration
Love that man. That’s what it’s all about! Let me know here or via dms if there’s anything I can help with or answer
1.5 years working in entry support roles
.5 years running support team
2 years in a***yst / sr a***yst /product owner role
Oh yea. That’s a good amount. In tech really it’s just salary going up every next job you get with more experience.
Start up are taxing though, a lot of work.
Inspiring, congratulations. Any online Data A***yst courses you would prefer?
Honestly, I am a fan of the Udacity courses. Have you heard of their nanodegree program?
And I think it depends on why you're taking the course. The big three reasons that come to mind to me are:
1. Credentials
2. Portfolio
3. Skills
I think you should make sure you know which of those buckets you're trying to prioritize. Any thoughts there?
Yeah so I went to college for a bit then dropped out to work on a small startup with friends. It didn’t really work out at all so I needed something. I researched a lot and found a really small startup doing cool things. They had an entry level support position open that paid like 15 an hour. I took it and became lead of the team in 1.5 years.
Then I took a risk and did an internship (lost benefits and had to move). Internship was in the data field. Then I leveraged that internship to get an entry level a***yst job. Became a senior a***yst in a year and then leveraged that to get the product management job. Studied for like 100 hours because I had never been a product manager before.
F***ing genius . You def put in the work but you didn’t waste energy on bullshit fr . Important
Yeah so I went to college for a bit then dropped out to work on a small startup with friends. It didn’t really work out at all so I needed something. I researched a lot and found a really small startup doing cool things. They had an entry level support position open that paid like 15 an hour. I took it and became lead of the team in 1.5 years.
Then I took a risk and did an internship (lost benefits and had to move). Internship was in the data field. Then I leveraged that internship to get an entry level a***yst job. Became a senior a***yst in a year and then leveraged that to get the product management job. Studied for like 100 hours because I had never been a product manager before.
Which formations did you take? Where did you take them? Online? Show me if you don’t mind
Yeah so I went to college for a bit then dropped out to work on a small startup with friends. It didn’t really work out at all so I needed something. I researched a lot and found a really small startup doing cool things. They had an entry level support position open that paid like 15 an hour. I took it and became lead of the team in 1.5 years.
Then I took a risk and did an internship (lost benefits and had to move). Internship was in the data field. Then I leveraged that internship to get an entry level a***yst job. Became a senior a***yst in a year and then leveraged that to get the product management job. Studied for like 100 hours because I had never been a product manager before.
W.
Congrats OP, keep that grind on.
Which formations did you take? Where did you take them? Online? Show me if you don’t mind
what do you mean by formation?
what do you mean by formation?
i mean your internships, where did you take them, do you have any site?
Yeah so I went to college for a bit then dropped out to work on a small startup with friends. It didn’t really work out at all so I needed something. I researched a lot and found a really small startup doing cool things. They had an entry level support position open that paid like 15 an hour. I took it and became lead of the team in 1.5 years.
Then I took a risk and did an internship (lost benefits and had to move). Internship was in the data field. Then I leveraged that internship to get an entry level a***yst job. Became a senior a***yst in a year and then leveraged that to get the product management job. Studied for like 100 hours because I had never been a product manager before.
How strong were your coding skills when you took that entry level support position?
How strong were your coding skills when you took that entry level support position?
did you just bump a 2 year old f***ing thread? F***. You.
Title is it. Just started a new job and wanting to share learnings and tips. AMA
I’ll start.
I have a hot girlfriend with a bangin’ personality. I hold a high position inside of a company all of you love and respect, with a CEO every single one of you know and respect. I also run a small business in which I help men dress better that is doing incredibly well for its first year in business. I am also definitely the wealthiest user on this forum by a long shot (not even flexing, I’m 34 and driven af so it’d be weird if I wasn’t).
Been working on a lot of projects since moving to Vegas 2 years ago so my social circle is in the gutter and could definitely use some work tbh, but I know that’ll change when the time is right.
Opinions:
1. Yeezus
2. MBDTF
3. 808’s
JIK is a great album.
Yeah so I went to college for a bit then dropped out to work on a small startup with friends. It didn’t really work out at all so I needed something. I researched a lot and found a really small startup doing cool things. They had an entry level support position open that paid like 15 an hour. I took it and became lead of the team in 1.5 years.
Then I took a risk and did an internship (lost benefits and had to move). Internship was in the data field. Then I leveraged that internship to get an entry level a***yst job. Became a senior a***yst in a year and then leveraged that to get the product management job. Studied for like 100 hours because I had never been a product manager before.
do u know what a conditional random field is