Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're being paranoid. You're also putting the cart before the horse since it's highly unlikely you'll get an offer.
OP here, why do you say that? I imagine it’s a competitive place but is there something I should know about applying there?
The last couple of years I’ve been working on credit risk models, and prior that did a ton of consumer research work for the federal government. And like I said I just finished my MBA program from a top 10 school. Statistics, python, SQL, project management, supervisory work all check for me. Oh my BA was in economics.
Saying the above not as a humble brag but to get feedback on whether me applying there is a pointless venture.
If willing to work you'll be fine. They are less secure than Fed, so you need to be competitive and way more savvy about politics than a standard GS15. But you make twice that salary so probably worth a try.
OP again
Willing to work = not quiet quitting? Or are they known for working long hours?
Less secure than Fed — all I know is the private sector where there’s no security. Can you give me a baseline to compare? And you mean the generic federal government right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You speak as though you’ve been offered the job. Apply and see what happens first.
OP here, apologies if it comes across that way. Just trying to think a few years ahead.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're being paranoid. You're also putting the cart before the horse since it's highly unlikely you'll get an offer.
OP here, why do you say that? I imagine it’s a competitive place but is there something I should know about applying there?
The last couple of years I’ve been working on credit risk models, and prior that did a ton of consumer research work for the federal government. And like I said I just finished my MBA program from a top 10 school. Statistics, python, SQL, project management, supervisory work all check for me. Oh my BA was in economics.
Saying the above not as a humble brag but to get feedback on whether me applying there is a pointless venture.
Anonymous wrote:You speak as though you’ve been offered the job. Apply and see what happens first.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're being paranoid. You're also putting the cart before the horse since it's highly unlikely you'll get an offer.
OP here, why do you say that? I imagine it’s a competitive place but is there something I should know about applying there?
The last couple of years I’ve been working on credit risk models, and prior that did a ton of consumer research work for the federal government. And like I said I just finished my MBA program from a top 10 school. Statistics, python, SQL, project management, supervisory work all check for me. Oh my BA was in economics.
Saying the above not as a humble brag but to get feedback on whether me applying there is a pointless venture.
If willing to work you'll be fine. They are less secure than Fed, so you need to be competitive and way more savvy about politics than a standard GS15. But you make twice that salary so probably worth a try.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're being paranoid. You're also putting the cart before the horse since it's highly unlikely you'll get an offer.
OP here, why do you say that? I imagine it’s a competitive place but is there something I should know about applying there?
The last couple of years I’ve been working on credit risk models, and prior that did a ton of consumer research work for the federal government. And like I said I just finished my MBA program from a top 10 school. Statistics, python, SQL, project management, supervisory work all check for me. Oh my BA was in economics.
Saying the above not as a humble brag but to get feedback on whether me applying there is a pointless venture.
Anonymous wrote:You're being paranoid. You're also putting the cart before the horse since it's highly unlikely you'll get an offer.