Ads Sponsor
    
|

|
pk_volt
Senior Member
  
Posts: 740
Deleted: 7
Registered: 6-27-2006
Location: BC
Reputation: 1 Rate:
+
Points ($): 855
Member Is Offline
|
posted on 2-12-2015 at 01:18 AM |
|
|
Transitioning out of engineering/software development
Wish more of the legacy outie crowd was still around to offer insight on this one.
I've been in the engineering industry and recently switched to web development and have been doing it for a year or so now. Don't get me wrong, I
love it, and the technology I get to work with is fascinating to me. But the shear amount of long hours, stress, and non-deterministic results and
expectations is what's been hitting me hard lately.
What I really enjoy doing at work is person to person interaction. I also really like writing. I'm currently looking for alternative career to do
less technical work but still bridge off of my technical experience. So far, I've looked up possible careers in technical writing, business analyst
and operations management, but none really pay that well (unless you're a contractor) and the learning curve for Operations management seems pretty
steep.
Maybe project management might be ideal, and I have some experience in leadership roles and have been with a lot of companies to know what works and
what doesn't.
Any thoughts?
|
|
Azumi
Member
 
Posts: 163
Deleted: 3
Registered: 2-4-2008
Location: Tokyo, Japan
Reputation: 2 Rate:
+
Points ($): 1015
Member Is Offline
|
posted on 2-12-2015 at 02:47 AM |
|
|
Pk, i hear you...i have similar experience, started off working the IT Helpdesk, and moving up to more technical roles, and now a System Engineer. I
miss the people to people interaction as well. seems like talking to people less money, but more enjoyable....more money, more technical, less people
to talk to. My daily routine is coming in checking in on servers, nas, telephone lines, and anything that stopped working over the evening while I
was off...looking after the entire infrastructure basically.
To me Project Management is probably the best of both worlds. Lots of talking in the beginning to scope out the project objectives, and than using
your mad tech skills, and giving them something that meets their needs.
For me, I don't really care anymore, just give me the money, and give me a life to spend it....I mean whats the purpose of making mad cash, and doing
long hours....if you dont have the time to spend it.
|
|
ShogunGT
Posting Freak
   
Posts: 1689
Deleted: 5
Registered: 10-1-2007
Reputation: 4 Rate:
+
Points ($): 7549
Member Is Offline
|
posted on 2-13-2015 at 09:11 PM |
|
|
Tough break man. I started off doing dev for Ryerson as a student (so yea..nothing hardcore there), then got a job developing web stuff with a market
research company, so I was pissed as hell with the effort : pay ratio.
I'm now a contractor working with a bank (granted, I'm the cheapest contractor there because I lack any real banking knowledge) doing deployments
now. I can't say I'm uber happy now, because I really miss coding.
Don't get me wrong, my pay almost doubled now, and because benefits aren't as big a deal at our age now (I'm assuming you're between 25-35), but
let's be honest...spending my days doing deployment work and integration testing for a new software from a vendor that is more snarky than helpful
isn't great. Also, working with a team of people whose brilliance is proportional to their arrogance, and sometimes even proportional to their poor
luck in gambling, I can't help but say it hasn't gotten better. Of course their "gambling" is limited to gambling on the fact that the next
software release from the vendor is going to solve problems.
Maybe you'll have better luck, maybe a better project to work on? Who knows? I'm just a guy on the internet who posts on a dead forum. Let's
hope you'll fare better.
Dee-Jay Ta-Koo...JU-Rop it!
"If I have seen further than others, it is by standing upon the shoulders of giants." -
Sir Isaac Newton
"Whoever said the pen is mightier than the sword never saw a machine gun." -
General Douglas MacArthur

|
|
kittycatcat
Junior Member

Posts: 28
Deleted: 0
Registered: 10-11-2006
Reputation: 0 Rate:
+
Points ($): 120
Member Is Offline
|
posted on 2-15-2015 at 05:31 PM |
|
|
Which area are you in?
I was similar to you, started as mechanical engineer working for a software company, but I'm getting tire of the corporate world... There's no real
joy in working for the numbers...
I've started a part time business in the in the finance industry educating families about basic finance and help them plan, there's a lot of work to
do and we are looking to expand the distribution. If you are interested msg me.
|
|
claudewolfe
Senior Member
  
Posts: 1138
Deleted: 0
Registered: 5-4-2004
Reputation: 43  Rate:
+
Points ($): 2855
Member Is Offline
|
posted on 3-20-2015 at 12:38 AM |
|
|
I think all engineers go through the same thing. Technical work is so difficult. There's a glut of 20-somethings who are willing to be paid less
for the same work. When you get a mortgage and everything else, no amount of money is really enough. The work gets really dry and dull.
I would suggest a career trajectory that involves moving out technical work and into software/engineering project management. While working, save,
invest, get married, pop out a few kids, and take long vacations so that the monotony of engineering is broken once in a while.
|
|
-skyline-
Member
 
Posts: 302
Deleted: 1
Registered: 3-2-2004
Location: Montreal
Reputation: 0 Rate:
+
Points ($): 2125
Member Is Offline
|
posted on 3-21-2015 at 05:26 PM |
|
|
I saw such dilemma coming when I was studying physics and computer science as my undergraduate degree and began transitioning out of it immediately
after. It took me 8 years with much more schooling before I settled down with a career in law. During that time I explored some interesting
alternatives with decent pay that value people with technical backgrounds.
Hopefully the following can help you get the ball rolling:
Management consulting - Accenture (very IT driven), BCG, Bain etc...
Investment banks (trading / IT support) - JP Morgan, Morgan Stanley, Credit Suisse, Goldman Sachs etc.
If you like the idea of relocating every 2-5 years and doing new roles for the rest is your career, HSBC International Management. This is their
prized elite global programme which their CEO for each country comes from.
If you have the cash and 2 years of time in your stage in life.... Do a MBA at a proper well known university with a great alumni network. That would
open up even much more opportunities.
Good luck.
|
|
pk_volt
Senior Member
  
Posts: 740
Deleted: 7
Registered: 6-27-2006
Location: BC
Reputation: 1 Rate:
+
Points ($): 855
Member Is Offline
|
posted on 4-3-2015 at 02:21 AM |
|
|
Quote: | Originally posted by ShogunGT
Tough break man. I started off doing dev for Ryerson as a student (so yea..nothing hardcore there), then got a job developing web stuff with a market
research company, so I was pissed as hell with the effort : pay ratio.
I'm now a contractor working with a bank (granted, I'm the cheapest contractor there because I lack any real banking knowledge) doing deployments
now. I can't say I'm uber happy now, because I really miss coding.
Don't get me wrong, my pay almost doubled now, and because benefits aren't as big a deal at our age now (I'm assuming you're between 25-35), but
let's be honest...spending my days doing deployment work and integration testing for a new software from a vendor that is more snarky than helpful
isn't great. Also, working with a team of people whose brilliance is proportional to their arrogance, and sometimes even proportional to their poor
luck in gambling, I can't help but say it hasn't gotten better. Of course their "gambling" is limited to gambling on the fact that the next
software release from the vendor is going to solve problems.
Maybe you'll have better luck, maybe a better project to work on? Who knows? I'm just a guy on the internet who posts on a dead forum. Let's
hope you'll fare better. |
Hey guys, thanks for the info.
Can you tell me what your position is as a consultant at a bank?
Management consulting looks interesting and I think that's something I'd like to try. I've worked with quite a few companies and apparently,
software management in general is an issue.
I also enrolled in a business analyst part time certification program because I want to try more of an "operations/management" role, but I'm not
sure if this certificate will take me anywhere.
Can you guys offer some insight as to how I can enter the management consulting field, and whether this BA analyst part time certification program is
even worthwhile for me? I have < 7 days to withdraw and pay a 1400$ penalty
|
|
ShogunGT
Posting Freak
   
Posts: 1689
Deleted: 5
Registered: 10-1-2007
Reputation: 4 Rate:
+
Points ($): 7549
Member Is Offline
|
posted on 4-6-2015 at 06:19 PM |
|
|
Quote: | Originally posted by pk_volt
Quote: | Originally posted by ShogunGT
Tough break man. I started off doing dev for Ryerson as a student (so yea..nothing hardcore there), then got a job developing web stuff with a market
research company, so I was pissed as hell with the effort : pay ratio.
I'm now a contractor working with a bank (granted, I'm the cheapest contractor there because I lack any real banking knowledge) doing deployments
now. I can't say I'm uber happy now, because I really miss coding.
Don't get me wrong, my pay almost doubled now, and because benefits aren't as big a deal at our age now (I'm assuming you're between 25-35), but
let's be honest...spending my days doing deployment work and integration testing for a new software from a vendor that is more snarky than helpful
isn't great. Also, working with a team of people whose brilliance is proportional to their arrogance, and sometimes even proportional to their poor
luck in gambling, I can't help but say it hasn't gotten better. Of course their "gambling" is limited to gambling on the fact that the next
software release from the vendor is going to solve problems.
Maybe you'll have better luck, maybe a better project to work on? Who knows? I'm just a guy on the internet who posts on a dead forum. Let's
hope you'll fare better. |
Hey guys, thanks for the info.
Can you tell me what your position is as a consultant at a bank?
Management consulting looks interesting and I think that's something I'd like to try. I've worked with quite a few companies and apparently,
software management in general is an issue.
I also enrolled in a business analyst part time certification program because I want to try more of an "operations/management" role, but I'm not
sure if this certificate will take me anywhere.
Can you guys offer some insight as to how I can enter the management consulting field, and whether this BA analyst part time certification program is
even worthwhile for me? I have < 7 days to withdraw and pay a 1400$ penalty |
Oh nono...I'm not a business consultant...nothing serious at all. I'm just basically a gun for hire. I work with the implementation/performance
testing team. The main goal is to install our vendor's software into all of our environments (both for developers and QA). Once there is down time,
I'd do some work to test some of the defects raised before they go to QA for verification.
Sorry I can't be much help on the BA cert. However, I'll say do it anyway. Certifications can't hurt. They might not open all the doors you
want, but at least you can always tell people you have a key when people present you with a locked door. Having a useless key is better than no key
at all sometimes.
Dee-Jay Ta-Koo...JU-Rop it!
"If I have seen further than others, it is by standing upon the shoulders of giants." -
Sir Isaac Newton
"Whoever said the pen is mightier than the sword never saw a machine gun." -
General Douglas MacArthur

|
|
-skyline-
Member
 
Posts: 302
Deleted: 1
Registered: 3-2-2004
Location: Montreal
Reputation: 0 Rate:
+
Points ($): 2125
Member Is Offline
|
posted on 4-11-2015 at 07:04 PM |
|
|
I agree with ShogunGT. Do the cert. It will only open up more doors.
Regarding about getting in management consulting, start off with looking up the companies I mentioned above and apply. They give you all the
technical training necessary once you're in. I even know someone with a history degree that got in Accenture. The interview process is more about
seeing your critical thinking and problem solving (e.g. How many tennis balls can you fit in a Boeing 777? What is the angle in degrees between the
clock hands at 3:15? How many pay phones are there in London?).
|
|
|