Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I honestly can’t tell from news. From my own applying it’s not good, but I’m old (50) so maybe that is my issue.
Are you high? You are born 1973. You are not yet at prime of career. Retirement age is 67 and then a few board roles and adjunct professor gigs. You are 20-30 years from full retirement
Now you know as well as I do that this just isn’t true. Stop these lies!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it’s not great in a lot of fields right now. I know some MBA grads who had delayed starts. A few friends lost their jobs, mostly in tech and sales. Friends in industrial engineering and biotechnology are worried about getting laid off. I truly think for young men and young women who can hack it, there’s more demand for trades than the average white collar job. Only people I know who aren’t a bit worried are those in government (though worried about shutdown) and in civil engineering.
Everybody looks at trades as a panacea. But the reality is that the number of plumbers needed is not some kind of vast amount. Plus it wears out your body.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I honestly can’t tell from news. From my own applying it’s not good, but I’m old (50) so maybe that is my issue.
Are you high? You are born 1973. You are not yet at prime of career. Retirement age is 67 and then a few board roles and adjunct professor gigs. You are 20-30 years from full retirement
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:its not good, i am hiring manager and we got over 500 applicants in a week for a software engineering job where as a year ago we'd get that much over 4 months
Well, I am looking for people with expertise in CyberSecurity and they are very hard to find. Jobs that paid 200K+ are still left unfilled.
Anonymous wrote:its not good, i am hiring manager and we got over 500 applicants in a week for a software engineering job where as a year ago we'd get that much over 4 months
Anonymous wrote:I think it’s not great in a lot of fields right now. I know some MBA grads who had delayed starts. A few friends lost their jobs, mostly in tech and sales. Friends in industrial engineering and biotechnology are worried about getting laid off. I truly think for young men and young women who can hack it, there’s more demand for trades than the average white collar job. Only people I know who aren’t a bit worried are those in government (though worried about shutdown) and in civil engineering.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I honestly can’t tell from news. From my own applying it’s not good, but I’m old (50) so maybe that is my issue.
Are you high? You are born 1973. You are not yet at prime of career. Retirement age is 67 and then a few board roles and adjunct professor gigs. You are 20-30 years from full retirement
I’m not an executive which at my age I think is a death knell
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I honestly can’t tell from news. From my own applying it’s not good, but I’m old (50) so maybe that is my issue.
Are you high? You are born 1973. You are not yet at prime of career. Retirement age is 67 and then a few board roles and adjunct professor gigs. You are 20-30 years from full retirement
I’m not an executive which at my age I think is a death knell
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I honestly can’t tell from news. From my own applying it’s not good, but I’m old (50) so maybe that is my issue.
Are you high? You are born 1973. You are not yet at prime of career. Retirement age is 67 and then a few board roles and adjunct professor gigs. You are 20-30 years from full retirement
Anonymous wrote:I honestly can’t tell from news. From my own applying it’s not good, but I’m old (50) so maybe that is my issue.