Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This will be hard. Ageism is fierce.
I would post and read up on hacker news.
A 2nd tier startup actually may give you a shot b/c they often need gravitas and most premier programmers know it’s a raw deal unless you are founder. But it’s good resume building.
Otherwise, Fed contracting weighs heavily towards years of experience, not necessarily recent years. So they would be in your favor as well as degrees. NASA especially is good for greybeards.
Cloud is hot, so take some certs, but definitely look for your skills in postings. Open a GitHub and make a portfolio of work there.
By Fed contracting do you mean jobs at Booz, Mitre, etc?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you kept up on new IT tools (AWS, Azure, K8s, etc...)? if not, I would start there.
I have not kept up. Should I focus on AWS or Azure? It looks like I need to pick at least one of the cloud providers.
Anonymous wrote:This will be hard. Ageism is fierce.
I would post and read up on hacker news.
A 2nd tier startup actually may give you a shot b/c they often need gravitas and most premier programmers know it’s a raw deal unless you are founder. But it’s good resume building.
Otherwise, Fed contracting weighs heavily towards years of experience, not necessarily recent years. So they would be in your favor as well as degrees. NASA especially is good for greybeards.
Cloud is hot, so take some certs, but definitely look for your skills in postings. Open a GitHub and make a portfolio of work there.
Anonymous wrote:There are still a lot of Java jobs out there... you have expertise there, go with what you know. It doesn't hurt to learn new things, but you won't have any proven experience in it. PM or engineering manager would be good fits for you.
I mean, look there are still plenty of C jobs around -- and if someone had taken 10-15 years off, their skill would still be relevant, because the language hasn't changed (much).
Explain your job gap like you did here -- makes perfect sense. I think in this day and age, most folks would accept that.
Can you ping any of your old contacts from 10 yrs ago? That may be a good place to start...
Anonymous wrote:Have you kept up on new IT tools (AWS, Azure, K8s, etc...)? if not, I would start there.
Anonymous wrote:My spouse is older and no issue getting a job. But, instead of focusing on SAHD, focus on what you have done, especially certifications and keeping up with new technology.
Anonymous wrote:Cloud stuff is hot right now. But, at least in my organization, a prerequisite for being hired as an IT project manager is "knows absolutely nothing about IT." So maybe work somewhere else or don't do the project-manager thing.