How much harder is it being in the working world than college?

Anonymous
Working sucks. College you can reasonably have 3-4 hours of actual work to do a day, 4 days a week.

I promise life is completely downhill after.
Anonymous
It depends. Professor here. My students who find jobs they like well enough, who can work from home a little bit, who are at companies that have cultures that are not soul sucking (meaning beyond checking occasional email they are off work when it's time to be off work), find it easier and better.

For these reasons, pay attention to the company culture and always interview the interviewer, if you are lucky enough to have multiple options.

If you're already an intern you have a good sense. You will be relieved to ditch your school projects for sure!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:A lot harder. You are away from home for eight hours a day. You have to dress up, usually. There are dynamics in the work place that have to be balanced that are more difficult than college.

Also, frankly, the first job is usually very unsatisfying.

I found the first few years after college when I was seeking and had my first job to be the most stressful of my life.


+100

Don't understand the people who are saying that work is easier. College IMO was way easier -- and I was a hard science major at an Ivy.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:A lot harder. You are away from home for eight hours a day. You have to dress up, usually. There are dynamics in the work place that have to be balanced that are more difficult than college.

Also, frankly, the first job is usually very unsatisfying.

I found the first few years after college when I was seeking and had my first job to be the most stressful of my life.


+100

Don't understand the people who are saying that work is easier. College IMO was way easier -- and I was a hard science major at an Ivy.


Hard science at Ivy doesn’t mean much. Try Cal Tech or CMU or MIT.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:A lot harder. You are away from home for eight hours a day. You have to dress up, usually. There are dynamics in the work place that have to be balanced that are more difficult than college.

Also, frankly, the first job is usually very unsatisfying.

I found the first few years after college when I was seeking and had my first job to be the most stressful of my life.


That’s for your advice from 1875. My daughter graduated last May as did all her friends. None have to go to office. None had to buy clothes. Set working times is a “guideline”

My wife asked my daughter when coming home Xmas and thanksgiving what days she can take off work. My daughter sounded confused. What does that mean? She can flip open laptop any time from anywhere.
Anonymous
College is much easier because you have control over success by studying more if you want. The corporate world sucks because you have to play politics that would make the cliques in HS pale in comparison. Unless you are someone who likes playing the game.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:College is much easier because you have control over success by studying more if you want. The corporate world sucks because you have to play politics that would make the cliques in HS pale in comparison. Unless you are someone who likes playing the game.


That is a lie.
Anonymous
My son graduated in January '22 and he is working remotely as a highly paid SWE for a financial institution. He has been living in Argentina since Feb '22 and having a great time there. According to him, working is so much easier than college.
Anonymous
I struggled in college. I've found work much easier and I'm far more successful at work than I was in school.
Anonymous
For me, the first few years after college were "intellectually" much easier than college. However, "mentally" they were WAY harder. Dealing with the day-in/day-out grind of fulltime office work.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I struggled in college. I've found work much easier and I'm far more successful at work than I was in school.


This.

College was too unstructured and I had too much time. Right when I became used to a schedule or class, it changed.

I do better with the monetary reward of working.
Anonymous
The work is easier or will become easier after 6 months. It is however incredibly boring, repetitive and stressful at the same time.

People will be stupider than in college and you will be surrounded by mostly low "C" kind of people.

The daily routine of getting up, self care, commute, laundry, cooking etc can be an adjustment

You will not be with people your age, people who are single, people who are fun and interesting - and that will be the biggest downer.

You will have less free time.

Working world is boring and soul sucking. But, it is a lot easier than college.

What should you do to make the best of everything?
- Have a routine of self care and stick to it.
- Exercise, eat well and sleep well. Say no to vaping, drugs, alcohol.
- Learn to pace yourself at work. Learn useful skills and get up to date with certifications and career progression. Observe and learn.
- Have a schedule for the routine work of adulting - laundry, cleaning, shopping, car servicing, cooking, making your lunch etc.
- Connect with your friends, and also meet people your age through meetups. This will keep your sanity intact. Organize parties, introduce your friends to each other. You will otherwise get depressed to go from college and dorm to the dead and gray world of the working adults.
- Explore new hobbies and activities like it is a job
- Save money and live below your means.
- Pay attention to your appearance - teeth, hair, skin, vision, weight, stamina, clothes etc.
- Lean in to family help. If you are living with parents etc. make use of this opportunity to save money.
- Carpool.
- Be open to interactions.
- Keep in touch with all your mentors and keep them appraised of what is happening with you and your career. Every single one of them who have ever given you a recommendation or had a connection with them. Send cards for Holidays and New Year.
- Get educated in Personal Finance. Maximize your savings. Invest in mutual funds. Learn how to become rich. Educate, educate, educate yourself.
- Think about having other income streams. How about starting a youtube or tiktok channel?

Anonymous
The biggest difference is that your feedback loop is totally different. There are no more tests and grades. Feedback may come informally, infrequently, or not at all since some managers just suck at saying anything more than “keep doing what you’re doing”. Work with your supervisor to make sure you understand what your objectives are and how you will be evaluated. Check in monthly or every 6 weeks and make sure you are on track. You may need to initiate performance discussions.

The other big change I see some new grads struggle with is the need to figure things out on their own. A key differentiator for me between entry level and the first promotion level is an employee’s ability to apply their experience and knowledge to a novel scenario. I don’t have a job aid or process for every possible situation. I need them to exercise judgement - and also to have the profession judgement when they should wing it and when they should ask for help.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:My experience: at first, it's exhausting and isolating to be away from the college situation where you have a built-in cohort of friends, and doing all the adulting you need to do outside of work—managing your own household—is more tiring than work per se.

My niece (23) has done it right by moving in with three roommates who were on a team with her in college, and finds that having four of them to cook and eat together and loop in new friends from their four very different new jobs makes live better for all of them, especially after they were separated from friends for a chunk of college by the pandemic.

Unless you go into teaching. Teaching is waaaaay harder than anything in college. Worth it, but omg.


+ 1

Rooming with ex-collegemates is a good strategy for sharing the workload of running a household, having security, and having a built in social circle that keeps expanding. Of course, it works only if everyone gets along and there is no other drama happening.
Anonymous
Your first job is just a stepping stone in your career. Once you are comfortable with the work, carve out time to get more training (maybe on your own) and studying so that you can start looking for another job or internal promotion.
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