Is it Possible to Age Yourself Out of a Job? 225
An anonymous reader asks: "I'm a programmer with more than twelve years of experience. In all that time, I've never been a 'senior' developer. I'm competent and I work hard, but I don't think I am quite a senior developer in terms of technical or people skills. More and more I feel that I'm aging myself out a job. By this time, employers expect someone with my experience to have advanced some, and they may not be willing to even talk to me now, thinking that my pay requirements have grown while I have not. Even if I did get hired someplace new, my peers would likely be much younger than me. What do you do when you have an applicant like that? Are my fears legitimate?"
Re:Learn some new staff (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Learn some new staff (Score:3, Funny)
Is it Possible to Age Yourself Out of a Job? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Learn some new staff (Score:2, Funny)
Actually, that sounds like a quick way to begin a new career where you could charge customers $20 a month to download content from a website...
Re:Their reason for hiring someone younger might n (Score:5, Funny)
Life's not fair - deal with it. Each profession has pros and cons. Quit whining and start learning something new. It's nothing to do with unions, and I've never found it abusive. At least, I don't take any crap. You need to try working in a few places until you find something you like - perhaps contracting.
Wow. What great advice! I almost wish I'd said something about "going back to school to do something more rewarding with my life, probably major in mathematics and then either teach or maybe try engineering" in my original post! You know, assuming you don't have Asperger's Syndrome [wikipedia.org], I think you'd be terrific management material [flickr.com]. Again, thanks for the wonderful advice! Cheers.
Do you work at.. (Score:4, Funny)
Disclaimer: I only read the article title. Please mod me down!
Re:learn (Score:2, Funny)