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Landing a "Regular Job"? 157

sfe_software asks: "I'm an out-of-work programmer and systems administrator. I've reached a point where I have to find a job - any job - and I am finding this quite difficult. I'm apparently 'over-qualified' for everything from flipping burgers to fixing PCs at the local CompUSA. Noone wants to hire you at $6-$12/hour when you were making $45-$75/hour on previous jobs, yet, I'm not finding the high-paying work any more and need *something*. As a contractor, I've always kept a savings, but at this point that river is quickly running dry. What are other out-of-work techies doing? How do you convince a hiring manager that you aren't simply using them as a temporary stepping stone (even if this is true)?"
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Landing a "Regular Job"?

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  • Lie (Score:5, Insightful)

    by seigniory ( 89942 ) <bigfriggin&me,com> on Thursday May 16, 2002 @05:05PM (#3532688)
    If you really *want* a lower-class job...

    Instead of over-stating your resume, understate it. Problem solved.
    • by vipw ( 228 )
      understating is fine, but lying isn't.

      lying to get hired is fraud, and you can go to jail for that, as well as having to pay back any wages plus damages, even if they seem earned to you. lying for money is a very bad plan.
      • lying to get hired is fraud

        Unless you're a politician, in which case it's necessary.

      • Re:Lie (Score:2, Interesting)

        by xonker ( 29382 )
        Can you back this up? I've never heard of an employer getting back wages from someone who lied on an application. Can you get fired for it? Sure. Is it fraud? Maybe, but I've never heard of anyone having to give up past wages and I've certainly never heard of anyone going to jail for such a thing. If you can show some evidence of this claim, I'd really like to see it.
        • by vipw ( 228 )
          actually, i don't, i could just be full of shit. but it seems like it could be treated like any other fraud case to me. i wouldn't expect charges to be pressed because of how embarassing it would be, though.
          • If you do the work, it would be very, very difficult for a company to justify having a former employee return the wages paid. It may violate wage laws, although the termination from fraud would be perfectly legit.
      • Unfortunately this is wrong, since you are under no obligation to provide your entire work history. If you're UNDERSTATING, there's no problem. It shouldn't even come up in an interview.
      • "Roberts, I want to see you in the office in back of the kitchen at once"

        "Yes, sir"

        [walking, door closes]

        "Roberts, I've just received some information that's rather disturbing to me, to say the least"

        "May I ask what, sir?"

        "It looks like you lied to us on your resume..."

        [silence]

        "There are several omissions that you've made... I was talking to an old friend and discovered he was a former employer of yours at IBM. We expect our pizza delivery drivers to have the highest degree of integrity. Now, I'm going to ask you a few questions to see if these things I've heard are true."

        "All right, sir."

        "Now, is it true that rather than managing an Avis Rent-a-car desk for the last two years, you were actually managing an IBM project to develop a complex XML-Java based reservation tracking system that would have been deployed throughout Avis?"

        "Well, yes sir, it is."

        "And I also understand you were not a branch manager for McDonalds the two years previous -- you actually spearheaded the content management system development for their website."

        "Yes, sir, that's also true, but I didn't actually lie about that, I just said I supervised a small production team at McDonalds."

        "Yes, well, your omission in the education department is perhaps more disturbing. You have a B.S. in Operations Research from MIT"

        "It didn't seem relevant to the job sir, I just left it out."

        "My friend informed me that while there you volunteered to work on a team that built a solar car to be entered in nationwide a race."

        "Well, automobile engineering's always been sortof a hobby for me, and..."

        "Roberts, this sort of thing just can't be tolerated. How do I know what else you're lying about? Integrity is an important part of our commitment to Quality. I'm not sure we can let you continue to be a Domino's driver. Go home. I'll call you back."

    • Or alternatively you could start giving people computer lessons in their home or doing repairs/ upgrades for people. It's low pay but it's regular money. Just put an advert in your Post Office. If you want a bit more money start building computers.
      • Any evidence that this would actually work?

        I didn't think so. In that case, a meaningless assertion. Starting one's own business takes time and money (a great deal of both), and is unlikely to handle what appears to be this man's need for a steady income. It's no different from the contracting he's already trying to do.

        In other words, you're wrong. Try again.

        • Yes. I personally gave someone computer lessons once a week for about six months and my friends have built computers - charging a markup of between £100 and £250 a time. I didn't suggest he start a business I just suggested something he could do to earn money while he's out of work and looking for a job.
  • Cool! (Score:2, Insightful)

    by jayed_99 ( 267003 )
    Another techie running out of $$! It's great to know that I'm not alone, bud. My advice is to lie on your resume.

    When you put in that application to WalMart, *don't* tell them that you made $68 an hour. Tell them you made $7.15 an hour.

    That way they'll think that you might stay if they pay you $8.00 an hour.

    Good luck!
    • Wal-Mart? If you tell them you used to make $7.15 an hour, they'll offer $6.50.
    • Re:Cool! (Score:3, Interesting)

      by nolife ( 233813 )
      Funny thing...
      I did the same exact thing for the job I am at now.. I softened the resume and started getting calls. My last job paid below average for what I was doing and the one I have now pays above average so in the end I'm not really making that much less. Of course now I deal with end users which I thought I'd never have to do again. Bottom line, it pays the bills and I am not under any pressure. I want to eventually move around again and I hope this job will not be a negative in the future, I'm trying to stay in the loop. I actually have fun calling the system administrator and telling him that the mail/file/backup/etc server is all jacked up again. Then I add a "maybe you should just reboot it again" ;)
  • by hackwrench ( 573697 ) <hackwrench@hotmail.com> on Thursday May 16, 2002 @05:13PM (#3532734) Homepage Journal
    or other educational facilities. Also look into tutoring for classes. Also government jobs. Also, many colleges have job listings for other places in the community. Mentioning that you saw their ad in the college listings may make a difference.
  • Lie.... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by jsimon12 ( 207119 ) on Thursday May 16, 2002 @05:13PM (#3532737) Homepage
    I know this has been said before, but just lie. Just tone down your resume a bit, say you were a field tech for a small and now defunct company and only made 15 bucks an hour. If you want send me your resume and I will help you curtail it for a retail job (before I was an engineer I managed a retail software store (damn that sucked).
    • Re:Lie.... (Score:2, Flamebait)

      by saintlupus ( 227599 )
      "I ain't gonna have no more babies if the gobenment ain't gonna give me no more subsidy" Liqueesha Johnson

      Holy shit, that's incredibly offensive.

      Have you ever even met someone receiving government assistance? Or are you just another of the Randroid motherfuckers who seem to frequent Slashdot, speaking from a position of privelege mom and dad earned once upon a time?

      Just curious.

      --saint
      • Re:Lie.... (Score:1, Offtopic)

        by jsimon12 ( 207119 )
        Have you ever even met someone receiving government assistance? Or are you just another of the Randroid motherfuckers who seem to frequent. Slashdot, speaking from a position of privelege mom and dad earned once upon a time?

        Yes, my mother and I were when I was little, after my father left us, but she worked her ass off get us off it and to get a degree so she could be something. So as for your accusation of me being unknowing you can kiss my ass. As for my posistion I have worked my ass off, paid to put myself through college, and have worked my ass off for everything I have.

        As for that phrase I actually heard someone say that, and it infuriated me, that someone would have children for the purpose of getting more welfare. People who are on subsidy cause they want handouts and don't are worthless to society and shouldn't be popping out kids like pez for more money. Kids that for the most part they don't even raise. If you support that kinda of crap you are an idiot.

        So suffice to say, the only moron is the one accusing someone of something that is completely unfounded
      • > Have you ever even met someone receiving government assistance?

        Lived across the hall from one. Found out she was on welfare because she went "out" at 10pm, and her 3yo sprog got spooked, somehow managed to open the door, and was wandering the halls shrieking in horror/fear at being abandoned.

        Roommate went to investigate a possible injury, and found the door open and an infant asleep in a cradle.

        After herding 3yo back into the apartment, we basically kept watch outside the apartment (to make sure nothing else went wrong - now aware of what was going on, it would have been criminally negligent of us to walk away) for about half an hour until "mom" came back with groceries.

        (I guess "mom" couldn't leave 'em while they were awake, and she "thought" they'd stay asleep, for values of "mom" and "think" approaching epsilon.)

        "Mom" was also pregnant with #3. "Dad", of course, didn't live there.

        We considered the issue closed - a sad way to live, but in this particular instance, no immediate harm, no signs of abuse or malnutrition, so no foul. (And since calling the authorities wouldn't solve the long-term harm their lifestyle is doing to their sprog, no point.)

        Our landlord must have received complaints from other tenants, though, because "mom" decided to pack up her brood and move to another apartment a few weeks later. One day, out of the blue, he said "Section 8. I can't do anything about it. But thanks for doing what you could."

        Welfare is slavery - not just for the taxpayer, but for the recipient - and it must end.

  • by eugene ts wong ( 231154 ) on Thursday May 16, 2002 @05:16PM (#3532767) Homepage Journal
    I totally understand the difficult situation that you are in. In fact, I ended up giving up the IT career that I had and went into the retail market.

    I think that employers want to know how long you want to work for them. When you go in and hand in your resume, do you explain to them that the IT market is not good right now? If you just go in and ask for a job, how will anybody know that you will still be around 3 months from now? How do *you* know that you will stay with the company 3 months from now?

    Anyways, my story is that I moved to another city and planned on finding a simple retail job to get me settled in for a year. After that, I intended to find computer work. The reason that I wanted to wait a year, was because finding computer work is hard.

    I would ask to speak to the manager, and when I saw him, I would say, "Hi. My name is Eugene, and I am new in town. I'm just looking for some work right now to help me get settled in for about a year. After that, I'd like to get some computer work. Have you got anything available?". This got a me a job the first day that I tried it. In fact, I got 3 interviews and 2 job offers. One was with Grand & Toy [stationary company] and the other was with McDonald's as an assistant manager.

    People understand that the .com bubble has burst. Don't afraid to be honest with them, but you have to be honest with yourself.

    If a job offer for an IT job comes your way at $50K/year, are you honestly going to stay around flipping burgers or running a cash register? If not, then you can't make promises to them.
  • Oh my wealthyness (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday May 16, 2002 @05:17PM (#3532773)
    No offense, but I think that if you were raking in an amount near 75$/hour (150k a year) you could have certainly put away enough savings or other investments to wait out an economic downturn.

    Isn't it a rule of thumb that the more you make, the longer it will take you to find a similar job in a competitive labor market?

    If you are really hard up why don't you just lie or refuse to disclose your previous salaries? You do have this option, no matter how hard HR leans on you- I say this from experience. You can also say that you're retiring early and need something to do, or say that you're staying home to help with a toddler or going back to school for a couple years and want a part-time job. There's lots of reasonable excuses for looking for a "not great but puts money on the table" job.

    You could also try doing some freelance consulting to pass the time. There's always people who will need your help if you take the time to find them and negotiate a price they can afford.

    And then there's the time-honored tradition of hitting up all your ex-coworkers for possible opportunities. Hopefully you weren't a BOFH!

    Unemployment will get you at least a 6 months buffer in any humane US state as well.
    • Re:Oh my wealthyness (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Evro ( 18923 ) <evandhoffman.gmail@com> on Thursday May 16, 2002 @07:47PM (#3533535) Homepage Journal
      Unemployment will get you at least a 6 months buffer in any humane US state as well.

      I was making $65,000 / year at my previous job, and when my employment there ended [slashdot.org], I applied for unemployment. I was denied unemployment because I made too much money. Apparently, if you gross over $600 / week in New York State, you are ineligible for unemployment. I listed my position as "programmer" and they denied me because "executive, administrative and professional employees earning over $600 a week are exempt from the wage payment provisions of the labor law." I'm curious: does that mean I didn't pay into the unemployment system, since I had no hope of getting anything out?
      • I would call the NYS Department of Labor and appeal your unemployment determination (which you have a right to do). I was the CTO of a web services company and grossed significantly more than $600/week and was still eligible for Unemployment. In fact, every one of our programmers made 60k+ a year and they all got unemployment as well. If you are an executive, you need to show that you didn't get a massive golden parachute or such upon leaving, but other than that you are disqualified. That being said, the benefits top out pretty quickly (the max is $405/week if you earned >45,000+/yr).
        • If you are an executive, you need to show that you didn't get a massive golden parachute or such upon leaving, but other than that you are disqualified.

          sorry, meant to say "...other than that you aren't disqualified."

      • by Tackhead ( 54550 ) on Friday May 17, 2002 @12:46PM (#3537928)
        > I'm curious: does that mean I didn't pay into the unemployment system, since I had no hope of getting anything out?

        No, it means you did pay into the unemployment system, even though you have no hope of getting anything out. UI, as presently structured, is glorified welfare, but it doesn't have to be.

        While welfare can't be privatized (there's no money to be made), genuine, risk-based, unemployment "insurance" can, and IMHO, should be privatized.

        At present - and as you've found out - UI isn't insurance, it's merely a tax. Most people pay more premiums, but are ineligible to collect. (And guess how much of the UI "premiums" collected actually get paid out to the few workers poor enough to collect, as opposed to skimmed off into the sinkhole of general tax revenue?)

        But UI could be privatized. The cyclical conditions that precipitate payouts (high unemployment) coincide with cyclical conditions in the economy (recession) that coincide with cyclical movements in interest rates (Greenspan :-)

        This means that a private insurer could anticipate periods when payouts are likely to be high or low, and adjust an investment portfolio to take advantage of anticipated interest rate movements.

        The portfolio would be funded from premiums. Just as medical insurance costs more for smokers, unemployment insurance would be more expensive for seasonal workers like fishermen (who, on the East Coast, are likely to be unemployed in winter), and less expensive for workers in fields in high demand.

        The beauty is that (unlike the current system, based on coercion - everyone pays a tax, by force of law, but not everyone can claim) participation in a genuine unemployment insurance plan would be optional.

        Are you a really good fisherman? Skip UI, and use the money to improve your gear, allowing you to catch more fish, to tide you over during the winter freeze.

        Are you a really lazy fisherman? Pay for the deluxe UI package. Work 10 weeks a year, get paid 52. (The cost of this package would probably exceed what you can catch in your 10 weeks. That's your problem, though.)

        Are you a really lazy programmer? In a hot industry, but think the good times might end? Worried about them H-1Bs takin' your job away? Buy a fat UI policy - just in case. Pay 5% of your salary in premiums, and in the 1-in-10 chance that your employer shows up on FuckedCompany next week, collect 50% of your salary until you find another employer with a foosball table and Aeron chairs at every cube.

        Are you a really good programmer? Think you'll never be out of work? Skip UI altogether. Save the money for a rainy day, just in case you're wrong, or go buy a Ti4600 and hope you're right.

        A privatized UI company would be incredibly motivated to get its out-of-work insurance claimants back into the job market, because it would drastically cut its expenses. It would want you to get a good job, because having a good job reduces the probability that you'll need to claim against your UI policy in the future. You could get your MCSE or other industry-recognized certifications as part of UI. Your insurance company would gladly give you placement assistance.

        Contrast this with Government, who has zero motivation to get you back on the job (it's not their money), and every motivation to use their "back-to-work training" programs as ways to reward friends and campaign donors. ("You have my campaign $10000 last year. Here's a $1.5M contract to build a computer literacy center for UI recipients in our district. Sure, 386s running Win3.1 are fine. They're 'computers', aren't they? It's not it's any money out of either of our pockets if they ever work again.")

    • but I think that if you were raking in an amount near 75$/hour (150k a year) you could have certainly put away enough savings
      Actually, it's not that easy as an independent contractor to do well at just $75/hour. First of all, paying work is often not 40 hours/week. It takes a certain amount of legwork to round up interesting work, it takes some effort to get customers to pay, etc. Then take off 15 percent for self-employment tax. Then subtract health insurance for yourself and your family. Then subtract the cost of your phone line, internet connection, and the journals and books you buy to keep current in your field. In the end, if you're only contracting at $75/hour you're really just scraping along.

      It's nice to *think* that you're making $75 for each billable hour, but if you put that number down on your resume you're really stating gross, not net, income.

      • My rough rule of thumb is that I can bill about 50% of the hours I work; the rest is taken up in sales, research, training, conferences, and the various freebies that it's good karma to give. So a standard year at $75/hour would be circa $75k before expenses. And expenses can be substantial; I pay all my own medical, dental, vacation, training, bandwidth, software, and hardware costs.

        The reason to be an independent contractor isn't the money; sometimes you can clean up, and sometimes you don't. I do it for the freedom. There are few things sweeter than telling a client that because they're a pain, it will cost them 30% more. Except, perhaps, having them pay it!
    • Well, for one reason or another, they didn't save enough. Perhaps they were laid off over a year ago, and their savings buffer is gone. Perhaps they had an emergency expense. Perhaps they were just foolish. In any case, berating them isn't going to help anyone. The question they were asking is how to handle a certain type of job-seeking circumstance.
    • I beg to differ, (of course I might differ cause your still living with your mommy but thats a different story). I am stil employeed thankfully. I made just over 75K(took home less than half that after taxes, 401K, ESPP, etc) last year in my Technical Analyst Position, between my house mortgage, car payments, food, heat, and just the basics of living(I spend vitually no m oney on myself that doesn't absolutley need to be spent otther than my cable Modem, and the ocassional DVD). If I became unemployeed now I would last probably about 2 months at most without a paycheck, and that would be on the proceeds of selling my now worthless stock short. Perhaps this person is in a simlar situation. My outlook has always been to build for the future of being unemployeed when I retire, and not for being unemployeed when my company has a RIF.
      • I made just over 75K(took home less than half that after taxes, 401K, ESPP, etc) last year in my Technical Analyst Position, between my house mortgage, car payments, food, heat, and just the basics of living(I spend vitually no m oney on myself that doesn't absolutley need to be spent otther than my cable Modem, and the ocassional DVD). If I became unemployeed now I would last probably about 2 months at most without a paycheck, and that would be on the proceeds of selling my now worthless stock short.

        How does that work? I earn less than you, live in a desirable neighborhood in one of the most expensive and highest income-tax cities in the USA, eat out four nights a week, and take several 2, 3, or 4-week international vacations (Europe, Asia, Africa, etc.) a year. From a zero bank balance a few years ago, at this point if I lost my job I'd be able to coast for two years without having to move.

        Must be a lot of DVDs...

  • yay for the military (Score:3, Interesting)

    by ft silent ( 567019 ) on Thursday May 16, 2002 @05:18PM (#3532779)
    Myself, I always had an interest in submarines, action, and travel so I joined the military as a Fire Control Technician. Awesome job, I couldnt be happier...Im a computer junkie and was all self taught but they surprised me with 3 schools known as ISA, NSVT, and ANA. The first is fairly high level computer training, second is Network System Vulnerability Tech.(hacker school! sweet!!) and the third is Advanced Network Admin, which is godly. My self taught level covered me up to the last, and that one surprised me most, it covers EVERYTHING and then some. The guys that run that are extremely well paid in the civilian world(after the service) and work for almost every big tech firm in the country, except Micro$oft ;) I've been having a blast since day one. You probably have the option of being an officer, and on a submarine, my my thats nice pay.
    • Too bad some of us are too out of shape to get into the military even if we wanted to.

      o/~ i thought about the army.. o/~

    • Of course, then you've gotta deal with the fact that your job, should the need arise, is to kill people, or at least actively help others kill people. If you're cool with that, though, it's a good deal. :)
      • If you work for a non-expansionist regeime then your job is to stop people getting killed by intimidating potential killers.

        Downside is that capitalism is inherently expansionist.

        oh well, stick to raising money for taxes to give to people to run submarines.

        Bugger it's all so complicated. I wish I was 20 again. I knew all the answers then.
        • Bugger it's all so complicated. I wish I was 20 again. I knew all the answers then.
          Heh. No shit. *sigh* Ah, well. What was the old curse? "May you live in interesting times," I believe it went. Well, at least they're interesting. :)


      • "The government said i had a certain moral flexibility...."

    • by base3 ( 539820 )
      REACTOR SCRAM. Rig ship for reduced electrical.

      Toxic gas in the torpedo room. All hands don EABs.

      All hands turn to, COMMENCE FIELD DAY.

      'nuff said.

    • It's moderately amusing that others are accusing the "Yay for the military" poster of being a recruiter. Come on, guys - the military careers he's talking about are fine options if you're just out of high school and new to the world, but the pay is abysmal, the working conditions are admittedly potentially fatal, and you do not have a lot of ability to quit should you decide you don't like it. It is not, by any stretch of the imagination, the Regular Job the original poster was asking for.

      Now, working as a civilian employee of the government or for a defense contractor, *those* are potentially Regular Jobs.

  • At Banff, there are a lot of transients, and as a result, they have a high turn over of workers. One day, you may never find a job, and the next day, managers are desperate for someone to fill in. Do a google search on Banff, Alberta and you'll come up with something. Contact the hotels and see what kinds of living arrangements they may have.

    Some day, I expect to go there as well.
    • Another thing that I forgot to mention is that you can try to work for Revenue Canada. Entry level positions start at $36k/year. That is in Canadian dollars, obviously, but hey, it's still better than working for $8/hour, and after a year or so of service, you could transfer into other departments.
  • i am an out of work programmer. was laid of to months ago. unlike u i have no savings. so i just did'nt tell McDonalds that i was a qualified person. i am not saying you should lie, dont lie.

    but tell the full truth either. i mean after all, half the content of the resume is jack-shit. right?

  • oops... (Score:3, Funny)

    by anthony_dipierro ( 543308 ) on Thursday May 16, 2002 @05:23PM (#3532820) Journal

    How do you convince a hiring manager that you aren't simply using them as a temporary stepping stone (even if this is true)?

    Certainly not by admitting it on slashdot, Justin.

    • Re:oops... (Score:3, Insightful)

      by erasmus_ ( 119185 )
      Not to be stereotypical, but I don't think the hiring managers of the type of places where he is applying are huge Slashdot followers. On the other hand, perhaps he's hoping that many techie hiring persons are indeed such followers, and perhaps is using this "Ask Slashdot" as a great way to post his resume. In which case, more power to him, a man's gotta work :)
  • Pizza? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by bscott ( 460706 ) on Thursday May 16, 2002 @05:36PM (#3532904)
    I've been essentially unemployed for the past year - until last week, to be exact - and I got by on a combination of odd jobs (websites mostly), selling stuff on eBay, and credit fraud... but one thing I happened onto was pizza delivery. Perhaps I found an unusual place, but they were - and are to this day - pretty good for me. Not only are they the first non-computer job to hire me since I first began working (yes, I too have been turned down by gas stations, grocery stores and limo-driving jobs), but they are extremely flexible when it comes to hours. Plus, during peak times my income averages around $15/hr... not consulting-bucks, but a living wage if you're at least near to fulltime.


    Assuming you don't have a friendly pizza place hiring nearby, my other efforts - selling stuff on eBay, and networking your gluteus off to get website or consulting work (even if it's just upgrading an old P-120 for someone's Mom...) is a good way to bring in a few bucks while passing time in a quasi-productive way. You can also take time to learn new skills, from books or classes, that you never got around to while employed.

    The most important lesson I've learned is to keep my income sources diverse. I still deliver pizza one or two evenings a week, I still scan eBay for poorly-advertised stuff I can buy and resell at a profit, and I still do websites and upgrades for people whenever I get a chance. No one person, company or even industry can determine whether or not I earn money.

    • Re:Pizza? (Score:2, Interesting)

      by telbij ( 465356 )
      You got by on credit fraud? Are you sure you shouldn't post that one anonymously?

      Seriously though, it is good to have a practical skill outside of computers. In my case blowing glass pipes is good for a solid $20-$40 an hour, and if world governments collapse leaving us in a post-apocalyptic Mad Max world I have someone to fall back on.
      • Are you sure you're not simplifying the glassblowing scene a bit? I love it as a hobby when I can afford it, but I would hardly recommend it as a great career move.
        I've taken glassblowing classes at both community colleges and state universities (you'll find it in the chemistry dept.) and I love blowing glass. It's very therapeutic and a lot of fun, but a good way to make money? Hmm. I'm not so sure. I've spent a lot of time and money buying glass stock and building custom torches to get killer bends and making all kinds of various custom equipment for filling neon signs. I spent months as an apprentice in a small neon shop and hung out in bigger shops trying to get a feel for the trade. My feeling was, avoid the big shops. You'd be better off as an auto mechanic.
        As well as doing lampwork --ie making trinkets-- building chemistry lab equipment and even trying to supply paraphenalia to head shops. (The last two being an obviously risky combination.) I've tried quite a few angles on making glasswork into a paying proposition and everything I've seen in many years of amateur glassblowing and neon sign making suggests that it's difficult to make it profitable on your own even you hustle hard and if you work for someone else the pay sucks and the conditions are terrible. It's an awesome hobby and should be a requirement in school. But I'm skeptical that it pays the bills as easily as you're suggesting.
        Now if you're saying you can make ten --let's say tobacco-- pipes in an hour and sell them for four bucks a piece, I've got no problem with that, but that's not really the same thing as a steady job which is what someone who used to be a programmer is hoping for.
        In the end glassblowing is an art like sculpting and welding can go in the same category. That's great if you're looking to express yourself, but if you're talking about making cash bucks --you're just fucking around.
    • I've been out of work for awhile, and I'm not getting any consulting gigs. Can you give me some pointers on this "credit fraud" thing? ;)
  • by Lumpy ( 12016 ) on Thursday May 16, 2002 @05:42PM (#3532941) Homepage
    If you are shooting low, the people hiring for those positions are not smart enough to understand what you even put on your resume.. target it for the bottom-feeder IT jobs like compusa techs. HIDE advanded information, do not put down salaries from your last job, and even if you did they cant verify them it's illegal to release that information without your written consent and only for income verification ... employment is not eligeble for income verification.

    you need to downgrade your resume alot, and dumb down when you talk to compusa, remember these IT people at compusa barely operate let alone understand IT.
  • Teach! (Score:4, Interesting)

    by gmaestro ( 316742 ) <jason.guidry@gmai[ ]om ['l.c' in gap]> on Thursday May 16, 2002 @05:44PM (#3532956)
    Many school districts in the US are at critical need for Tech Teachers. In fact, a program in texas will pay for your college + extras if you promise to teach in Tech (among other things).

    If you find the right district (or private school gig) and you have the skills, they'll help you work around the certification thing while you work.

    it might also help to be flexible about location.

    • Hey, that sounds like a sweet deal could you elaborate a little, like specific colleges etc.?
      • The program I'm referring to is called Teach for Texas [collegefortexans.com]. You have to commit 5 years to teaching in a critical need area or subject, tech is one of them. I'm a college grad who's been teaching with no certification. Hopefully I will be attending UTSA [utsa.edu] this fall on this program to get my cert. The website says what colleges, subjects and areas are approved.
  • One of the secrets of getting hired is to write a custom resume for each job. A resume is supposed to show a selection of your qualifications, not be all encompassing. List your credentials for the particular job. Write a custom statement about what you want in a job, etc.

    The nature of the resume is a sample. You are under no obligation to list all of your experience nor do hiring managers want to see it all. So when applying for a programming job, you show programming experience, etc. Don't show exhaustive system administration or internetworking experience. Also, so that you don't get hit with the dreaded overqualifation tag, don't show 20 years worth. The last 5 years is fine.

    I suggest you get a copy of some of the books on job searching. Finding a (or the right) job is a full time job. "What Color is your Parachute [amazon.com]" is a good example is a good example of this genre.

  • by Anonymous Coward
    TEACH! In Dallas, Texas there are plenty of community colleges/commercial training places that will hire someone who *knows* what they're talking about(*know, being the key term there). Some will pay up to $50/hr (of course, only 6-8 hrs a week, which still isn't all that bad). It all depends on what you wanna do. Dallas needs some good Unix/Linux classes to take foot and start running....there are a few, but nothing really "everyone take this class" kind of setup.
  • Are times really that bad that people are actually leaving IT? Of Course I am not in the States but I would have thought after working in IT noone would want to go to some other field. Where else can u get decent wages even at the lowest levels for work in a nice office environment with coffee breaks whenever u want (Just say the comp is rebooting after a crash)

    But if u really have IT experience and dont mind doing anything why dont you teach? Kids are still willing to learn IT as by the time they are looking for jobs IT will be back and about.
    • by Anonymous Coward
      Where else can u get decent wages even at the lowest levels

      Starting wages in SoCal for basic tech are in the $9 an hour range. One can barely afford an apartment with a roommate at that pay here.

      for work in a nice office environment

      This applies to half of the jobs. The other half put you in your car (with mileage pay if you're lucky) maneuvering through traffic to small businesses who keep their computers in grungy little rooms that collect dust, heat, and insects.

      with coffee breaks whenever u want

      My last job was as senior help desk/desktop technician/general problem solver at a Fortune 500 company. I was lucky to be able to get through lunch without being told to pick up the phone or having to answer a page. I'm now at a company with a lower stress level and not as much general work, but I still have to take a cordless phone with me when I leave the desk.

      In order to teach in California, you have to find a school that will accept you and has the money to pay you. Unfortunately, I expect a huge series of cuts to the college system, meaning a decline in the number of IT-related side courses, especially in community colleges.

  • by psyconaut ( 228947 ) on Thursday May 16, 2002 @07:13PM (#3533397)
    (1) Change your first name to something suitable. For example: "Billy-Bob", "Little Paul", etc.

    (2) Start buying your clothes at K-Mart "end of season sales". Color co-ordination and size matching need not apply.

    (3) Marry someone you suspect, but not necessarily know, might be in the same bloodline as you. She should change her name to something like "Sue-Ann" or "Peggy-Sue".

    (4) Acquire a 1979 Ford F-150. Place two armchairs in the flatbed for when ma and pa need a ride.

    (5) Apply for job at K-Mart, gas filling station, fast food restaurant of your choice.

    And, et voila! You too will have no trouble living close to the poverty line.
  • by afabbro ( 33948 ) on Thursday May 16, 2002 @07:14PM (#3533401) Homepage
    If you are a programmer/sysadmin, then you can find work if you move. Network and job-board-scrounge like mad, search company web sites, use headhunters, etc., and at every turn say "yes, I'll relocate anywhere".

    Yes, relocation is a pain - just did it last year myself. This makes the 2nd time I've moved to places other than my first choice of living areas...been happy both times. When I was laid off last year, I looked in my large metropolitan home first...after three weeks, looked nationwide. I considered Nebraska, Mississippi, all sorts of places most people wouldn't pick as their first choice. Personally, I'd rather be working than unemployed or flipping burgers. And I'm too young (and so are you if you're under 50) to lock yourself down to one geography. If you want steady upward mobility, you have to RELOCATE SEVERAL TIMES IN YOUR CAREER.

    If you cast your net wide - the whole US, go anywhere, do anything - you will find work if your skills are in demand. If you don't find work, then your skills are not in demand or your experience isn't sufficient and you have to lower your sights or improve your skills or both.

    It's simple market mechanics. Brutal if you want to call it that, but simple nonetheless. If you're not finding work in your home market, then you need to look in other markets. You might end up in some place you don't like, have never heard of, or not your dream, but you'd be working.

    PS...I've never met anyone who was both a senior sysadmin AND a senior programmer. I've also never seen a truly senior admin/programmer who was out of work for long. I'd pick which one you like better and go gonzo on it.

    • Nice to meet you! I am both a Senior SysAdmin and a Senior programmer. After our last sysadmin got fired they asked me to fill the role. So I struggle to do both jobs at once.
    • If you cast your net wide - the whole US,

      NOOOO - the whole WORLD is a much better, and more fun, bet!

      Relocation sounds sucky, especially if you have a lot of baggage - kids, wife, girlfriend, big teevee. But it's actually more likely to be a positive experience the FURTHER you travel. Just picture yourself on the porch in your slippers when your 80 telling the grandkids "When I was 30 I spent a year in Mumbai leading the development of some cutting edge prOn distribution software - you should have seen the chickens out there! tasty tasty!"

      This is about LIFE, not WORK. Work to Live, not the other way round. If you REALLY HAVE TO HAVE a copy of the LOTR DVDs get a job flipping burgers. If you REALLY WANT SOME FUN IN LIFE relocate to any old place and drink it in!

      Germany is a HUGE laugh.
  • Ok What I did after losing my beautiful Motorola Contracting job was to kind of be depressed for about 2 weeks. I mean I didn't ahve it bad or anything, but I felt sorry for 2 of my co-workers who had pregnant wives. So yeah it sucked for them. And I just uh kinda slept.

    But After that I had 3 glorious months of over competition for every job out there. So I took myself out of the running for a corporate job, and applied at some small local ISP's. I got hired by one as a tech support worker for $10 per hour. Not enough to survive on my own with, but enough to share a house with 4 others.

    It's Loud, the Dialup support calls were hell, and the roommate were messy. But they bumped my a the secondary Unix admin after 3 months. (see as how that was my previous job) So may pay went up agood amount. And I still live with 4 loud roommates, and I save all of my money.

    I kinda hope to return to the corporate world eventually, but that's just for the money. I love my Small ISP, and it's employees, and my free SDSL access.
  • by BitGeek ( 19506 ) on Thursday May 16, 2002 @07:52PM (#3533553) Homepage

    My answer to this was to file for unemployment. If you haven't, you should. Its good money, and you *earned* it because whats being returned is money that was taken from you before. Unemployment is not welfare.

    Secondly, start a company. Anyone who's an unemployed geek in the Seattle area, drop me a line. I started a small business (runnable only by me so I can work during the day if I need to). I've found that I'm getting turned down for jobs in part because I put the business I started on the resume-- people think I'm not going to work for them full time.

    But that business returns positive cash flow, allowing me to spend money building another, bigger, business. (Which is why I'm looking for fellow entrepreneurial geeks) I've some ideas that will be really big, there isn't the competition there once was for staking out space in the industry-- most companies are shrinking or retreating. Now is the time to boldy go forward and start a .com. (Just don't take VC on bad terms and don't be stupid about your business plan.)

    Now is the perfect time to start a company- resources are cheap, from office space to engineers and the competition is not getting off of the ground because most of your would be competitors are going the VC route and finding VC funding hard to come by. (There's a simple solution to this if you need investment- some businesses inherently need investment- but I'm not going to reveal it here.)

    Anyway, its a good time to start a company and you should use unemployment to smooth things over.

    Plus you won't have a difficult to explain gap on your resume in a couple years.
    • "My answer to this was to file for unemployment. If you haven't, you should. Its good money, and you *earned* it because whats being returned is money that was taken from you before. Unemployment is not welfare."


      Except that if he was working as a consultant before, he can't file unemployment against the employer (client) because that would be a red flag to the IRS to reclassify him as an employee. The employer (client) would be liable for back taxes and penalties: not a good way to create strong customer relationships!

  • If your flipping burgers they don't exactly go over your background with a fine tooth comb. Fixing pc's at CompUsa just tell them you did something else at your previous employers it's not that hard to land a crappy gig to hold you over, if your not to honest that is.
  • by markwelch ( 553433 ) <markwelch@markwelch.com> on Thursday May 16, 2002 @09:15PM (#3533899) Homepage Journal
    I certainly understand your situation; being identified as "over-qualified" is one of the strangest non-hire excuses I can imagine. Shouldn't every company aspire to have all its employees not just qualified, but over-qualified?

    The solution, of course, is to alter your resume when applying for certain jobs.

    The simplest strategy is to simply offer no resume: for the burger flipping job, or many other minimum-wage positions, presenting a resume is probably a red flag all by itself.

    On job applications (or on your resume), do just the opposite of what most folks do: understate and deflate your experience.

    I suppose the worst problem is how to fill the blanks: if you were working at a dot-bomb company from 1997-2001, you can't just leave those years blank without raising concerns (though if you have young kids, you can report that "following the birth of my first child in 1996, I decided to spend more time at home" without actually lying (maybe you didn't ever manage to act on that decision, for example, until the company's Chapter 7 filing in 2001).

    Or just make some minor changes in the way you describe that job: if your resume now says, "Chief Technology Officer supervising 65 programmers and maintenance of 200 web servers from 1997-2001," try changing the title to something that sounds a lot less grandiose (like "Computer Operator" or "Equipment Manager").

    Let's face it, being "over-qualified" for a job you want right now, is a problem that most people only dream about.

    • Sometimes the feeling I get from these stories is that many managers won't hire people who are indeed "overqualified" for positions out of fear that they may take THEIR jobs when the upper brass finds out about this new, overqualified employee doing better work than any of the other people at the same level.

      Of course, I might be wrong.
    • RE: overqualification

      From my perspective, when hiring, it depends on the job. Am I going to find a programmer who is 'over-qualified' for a position? No, probably not--whatever experience they have that is over and above the requirements is cool, as long as they're willing to work the position for the pay that's offered.

      But there are positions where I really want just a total drone, too--the ones where if the employee starts thinking too much, it just causes trouble. I don't need a junior level tech support guy trying to re-engineer my network. If he used to be a senior sysadmin, that's almost certainly what's going to happen. This is IT--there is no one right way to do anything. Watch /. for some great examples of people vehemently arguing over completely trivial optimizations or techniques or tools. Fine for a discussion board; not something I want happening in my IT department between a sysadmin and a junior assistant underling phone monkey who used to be a sysadmin.
    • Let's face it, being "over-qualified" for a job you want right now, is a problem that most people only dream about.

      We're not talking about jobs that we WANT here, we're talking about jobs we'll settle for. And I don't know too many people who dream about not being able to get even a shitty job.

      At least, not fondly.

      • Given the choice between having skills and experience that make me over-qualified, and having no meaningful skills or experience, I'd prefer the former over the latter.

        People who have no meaningful skills or experience (especially those with limited education, limited language and math skills, and no specialized training) may not "share the pain" in being hired to flip burgers, but they surely suffer more in life, and would prefer to be in the shoes of someone with better education, skills, and experience, even if that meant having some trouble getting a burger-flipping job in hard times.

  • You're sick and tired of IT and are ready to change careers... (Hey, you can always change your mind, right?)
  • This is a general rule for all job application situations. It's none of their business what you used to make. The only thing they need to know is what you're willing to do the work for *now*. You should be making the decisions about how much yout time costs, not some egotistical HR manager.

    Also, apply at a temp agency... They won't turn you down.
  • I would say do NOT lie on your resume. Even if you lie by understatement it is still a lie. If you lie, you run the risk of being fired from the job at any time. Say you get hired at CompUSA and work there for a year. On your anniversery you get fired because some overacheiving assistant manager noticed a problem on your old application. Well then next month when you have to go and apply for a job how are you going to explain being fired? Or will you lie again? In that case, how will you explain not working for an entire year? Not to mention that lieing in any form shows poor character.

    I believe omitting glorious details would be the way to go. Simply restructure your resume not to include information that may hinder your chances. For example, do not not salary information. CompUSA probably does not care about your salary history anyway. You are required to tell them either. Instead of talking up your previous job like you normally would, talk it down. For example:

    "...where I was responsible for rebuilding the database from a Micorsoft Access db into 3rd normal form SQL based database. At that point I trained a team of programmers on 3NF and proceeded to become a certified Oracle Expert."
    Let's change that to:
    "...where I worked with an Access database to track our inventory."

    You're not lieing, but you are showing you have some abilities above most others. Remember, lieing (even if to make yourself look worse) is wrong and could cost you a any job.
  • I found myself in the same situation about 8 months ago, so what did I do you ask? Simple, I applied myself to a totally different field of work (granted impossible for some, but I find that the computer types tend to be fairly smart and flexable) I went to work for a car dealership as a salesperson, and get this, I actually suffered from a pay RAISE, now hows that for a good solution to a bad problem?
  • Truck Driving (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Judg3 ( 88435 ) <jeremy@pa[ ]ck.com ['vle' in gap]> on Friday May 17, 2002 @09:32AM (#3536556) Homepage Journal
    I'm in (well was) the same boat you were in. I used to do all the systems and application managment on one of the largest Windows 2000 datacenters int he country, over 2300 servers. I've written articles for Hewlett-Packard newsletters about OpenView, written a few articles for Windows 2000 magazine, even see me in a book or 2 here.

    Six months ago recession hit me. I lost a 65k/year job (Not to bad for Illinois) and the reserves started to go.

    What did I do? Well, after an exhaustive search I found and settled on (quite happily I must admit) Semi Truck driving cross country. The company I work for pays for all the training, gets me my CDL, and sends me out in a truck. Pay is low for the first year (no more then 36k or so) but within a few years you go up to 60-70k/year plus.

    Thing I dig about it, I only work 2 weeks a month. 2 weeks in a row mind you, but I have 2 weeks off. And Im getting paid for it. It's not as abnormal as I thought either, normal job stuff. Drive 8 hours, etc. Only thing is sleeping on the road thats odd.

    And on the upside I get to work on my OWN projects now. I'm working on a free game for fun, and talk about war driving. How about over 2000 sites on a trip from Illinois to Oregon and back. Hell, if anything it's sweet for geeks. A lot of toys I get to bring with me on runs. Plus I do IT stuff on the side.

    I used to work 15 hours a day. 3 hour round trip commute, plus 12 hours in the shop. Now I'm not so stressed, the money is good and you meet a lot of cool people.

    So give it a shot. I went through Schneider Trucking [schneider.com] but I see ads for a lot of other companies that do the same thing.
    And yes, they hire ANYONE. Literally anyone. During training I was with 5 other IT pro's, one with a MIS. There was a college professor, and a housewife too.
    • hmm...do they hire people with just a regular driving license ? or do you need a special license to apply for the job ?
      how long did it take you to get a truck license or did you have one already before you applied ?
      did they pay for training and stuff ? make you sign a long term contract ?
      • Re:Truck Driving (Score:3, Informative)

        by Judg3 ( 88435 )
        Ok, here's how it works.

        I didn't have a CDL license, they do it all.
        Let me give a run down of the training.

        They sent me to Green Bay, WI. Initial training was 11 days, non paid. But they pay for your hotel, transporation to and from training, and give you 2 meal tickets a day. So 100-200$ is all you need for that. Then there was an additional 5 days of advanced training at $250/week, then if you go to be a specialized driver, like me, I took another week in NC learning on hauling glass @ $350/week.
        Then you team up with a driver and do teams for 2-4 weeks @ $500/week (Time varies depending on how bad they need you and how well the other thinks you do)

        You have to pay for the CDL tests (round 100$) plus give the carrier 150$ for training (The pay the rest of the 3500$ class)its more to hold your seat then anything else, but non-refundable.

        So I went in with a regular license and 3 weeks later had a CDL and was driving a semi. It's a lot cooler then I had imagined too. So much free time, and it's a simple job, so the gears tick better when you put your mind to something. Instead of coding all day, coming home and crashing for 5 hours only to get up and do it all again, I feel awake when I come home.
    • "What did I do? Well, after an exhaustive search I found and settled on (quite happily I must admit) Semi Truck driving cross country. The company I work for pays for all the training, gets me my CDL, and sends me out in a truck. Pay is low for the first year (no more then 36k or so) but within a few years you go up to 60-70k/year plus."

      Having worked in the Government doing stuff related to current and future employment needs versus what the training/education sectors are producing, (I was a DBA person) I can say that in North America, there is currently a very large demand for long haul truckers. If you can take the necessary courses or get the company to pay for them, it should not be too hard to get a job.

    • Any geek working in long-haul trucking has got to get into ham radio, both the localish VHF/UHF stuff and long-distance HF. I know of several guys that have worked Japan and other DX sites (voice and code) while driving.
  • I'm a third year computer science students who is searching for work just for the summer, shit jobs do not even exist anymore with in a 2 hour radius of where I live (Madison, SD). Relocation is not much of an option as I will just be back here again in a few months. Being from the Minneapolis area originally you'd think that there would even be great opportunities there. unfortunately if you think that you soon find that you are wrong.
  • Stop Using A Resume. (Score:2, Interesting)

    by broody ( 171983 )
    Using a resume to apply for blue colar work is like searching the Infoworld classifieds for cashier openings at Giant. If you want one of these jobs, go in and fill out an application and track it all the way back through your work history. Make sure to include low paying jobs, do not buzzword them to death. Don't translate salary to $/hour, simply list salaried. If you cannot get your head around the application, talk to a friend doing that kind of work.

    Emphasize you are going back to school or strongly considering it and don't light up like a Xmas tree when computers come up. Almost anyone will hire you despite sky high figures if think you want to do something while educating yourself.

    All you are doing is saying, "I want to do the work, I can do the work, and I need the work".

    That said if you cannot find any techie work chances are you are not really looking hard enough. How many employers a day do you contact? Do you customize your resume for each one? I know it is hard, I had a three month lull lately. It was my issue for not writing a proper resume for the PEs. Try 'What Color is Your Parachute' and 'Break the Rules'; success seems to be somewhere in the middle.

    Also, appeal that unemployment claim. You are getting screwed.

    Good Luck.
  • by scott1853 ( 194884 ) on Friday May 17, 2002 @02:17PM (#3538682)

    Need honest person to infiltrate telemarketing lair and mark all potential customers as "do not call". Must be able to find your own way out of a 3,000 square foot cubicle maze.
  • It's not clear from your comment whether you want to be a regular full-time employee because you prefer it, or just because your savings is running dry.

    If you prefer being a consultant, but you're not getting contracts, you need to up your marketing and sales. Some excellent advice is in the Contract Employees Handbook [cehandbook.com], especially the appendix on resources. Another good place to check is Janet Ruhl's site, Real Rates [realrates.com] which tells what recent contracts have gone for by specialty.

    (A great tip I heard is to bypass HR altogether and ask the switchboard for "procurement" or "vendor relations". You are, after all, a business offering a product, not a worker offering to become an employee.)

    On the other hand, if you prefer to be an employee, dig out your trusty copy of What Color Is Your Parachute. Do the exercises, then go after companies who do what it is you want to do.

    Either way, it has to start with what YOU want to do. You might take something else as an interim measure, but always keep your focus.
  • I started a business in college, and work it part-time. Upon graduation, I had no debt, but I also didn't have a job. The business helped keep my head above water until I could find stable employment where I could pay my bills and sink additional money into my business in the hope of being self-employed full-time. Among the other skills I've acquired: operation of manufacturing equipment, selling, washing dishes in a nursing home, and the most important of all...networking.
  • I went to college right out of High School, and managed to flunk out within a year and a half, then I realized larger companies with good benefits look for employees that have a college degree. Think of it as a test of self-discipline, the employer feels that if you had the perseverance to complete college you would be better prepared to deal with situations on a job. If you want to make good money and have a good benefits package working as a Network Admin in a large system like a Hospital or Retail outfit then college is the way you want to go. I was able to expand my choices to include companies that would only interview college graduates and as a result, I am now an IT Director for a Non-Profit Assoc.

    Certifications are good and useful, but if the other guy has a degree, you are probably less likely to be called back for a second interview.
  • I am in the same boat.

    My favorite rejection is...

    You'll leave as soon as the economy gets better...

    Meanwhile my resume shows me staying at least 3 years at every company.

    And when is the economy going to get better...

    I also like when the HH says, "You won't be fufilled in this position..."

    Lady my fucking 2800USD mortgage is going to be fufilled if I don't get a job soon.Looks like

    I'll be driving a Forklift again real soon!
  • They hire new people every week. And believe it or not, half the people they hire will be gone in less than a month. The turnover is horrible. And anyone with half a clue will have the opportunity to get promoted into management in a few months or less. They don't care very much if you're "over" qualified, as long as you can pick up a box and show up to work everyday. If you do have potential beyond the typical grunt worker, they have an almost endless supply of opportunities, even tech related jobs.

    They go out of their way to find and keep competant workers. They won't hold too much experience against you. And if you're worried that they will, just tell them you're there to take advantage of the college refund program. Even if you're not, that will at least tell them you plan to stay several months. And in the summer months (especially in Texas), they simply cannot get enough people. Its not possible.

    Although, I'm not sure what its like in other states. There are hubs in certain states that only hire new people when they lose someone, and the only time they lose people is when one someone retires after 25-30 years. Local economy
    might make a difference.

    Good luck in any event.

    -Restil

    -Rstil

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