Should You Job Hop for Your Career in IT - SAMIT Video
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@wrx7m said in Should You Job Hop for Your Career in IT - SAMIT Video:
@scottalanmiller said in Should You Job Hop for Your Career in IT - SAMIT Video:
An issue I have with company-provided training, in general cases for broad skills, is that companies tend to provide this via expensive, wasteful processes like degrees and boot camp classes. Things that cost a lot to provide but provide little educational value. But if the employee was to learn on their own, they might do so for almost no cost and learn a lot by doing their education well.
Company provided training almost always means high cost, low return. And is often focused on what is good for the company, not the employee.
Because of this, employees will often get locked to a company for skills that may be of little to no value to the employee. And their value to the company is generally determined by the company after the fact, so the employee often sees little to no benefit from having done so and staying.
Company provided training is way too often a tool to trap employees rather than to provide benefits to them.
While I have worked for a couple of companies that said that they would pay for courses (friends have even had tuition for degrees) that pertained to their job roles, I can't see that as being a bad thing if you are already in your career. It would be strange for someone to think that the company would want to pay them to study underwater basket weaving when they could be learning about business or IT.
It's a bad thing if it puts your career on hold to do it. I know lots of people who have done it, and they have always suffered for it. In theory, if it was purely free, then yes. But I don't know anywhere where it is free. It is always one of two conditions:
- Learning something that is useless outside of the context of the business. Businesses have to pay for this kind of education and there is nothing wrong with it at all, but it doesn't really benefit the employee.
- Learning something that is valuable to the employee in the general job market. This always comes with strings attached that almost always make the employee 'pay' more than the education is worth.
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@wrx7m said in Should You Job Hop for Your Career in IT - SAMIT Video:
@scottalanmiller - Also, I am having a hard time picturing what company-provided training wouldn't benefit the employee.
Most of it, actually. Learning company specific processes and tools almost never apply to another company. I've learned so many things in my career, none of which were ever useful again. Even things that you'd be certain would be useful, they really aren't.
I learned Symphony clustering for high performance computing while at the bank. Does that go on my resume? No. Does anyone care? No. Did it help my career? No. Why not? Because it's a random, useless skill that is so specific that I'll never encounter the need for it again.
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@scottalanmiller said in Should You Job Hop for Your Career in IT - SAMIT Video:
@wrx7m said in Should You Job Hop for Your Career in IT - SAMIT Video:
@scottalanmiller said in Should You Job Hop for Your Career in IT - SAMIT Video:
An issue I have with company-provided training, in general cases for broad skills, is that companies tend to provide this via expensive, wasteful processes like degrees and boot camp classes. Things that cost a lot to provide but provide little educational value. But if the employee was to learn on their own, they might do so for almost no cost and learn a lot by doing their education well.
Company provided training almost always means high cost, low return. And is often focused on what is good for the company, not the employee.
Because of this, employees will often get locked to a company for skills that may be of little to no value to the employee. And their value to the company is generally determined by the company after the fact, so the employee often sees little to no benefit from having done so and staying.
Company provided training is way too often a tool to trap employees rather than to provide benefits to them.
While I have worked for a couple of companies that said that they would pay for courses (friends have even had tuition for degrees) that pertained to their job roles, I can't see that as being a bad thing if you are already in your career. It would be strange for someone to think that the company would want to pay them to study underwater basket weaving when they could be learning about business or IT.
It's a bad thing if it puts your career on hold to do it. I know lots of people who have done it, and they have always suffered for it. In theory, if it was purely free, then yes. But I don't know anywhere where it is free. It is always one of two conditions:
- Learning something that is useless outside of the context of the business. Businesses have to pay for this kind of education and there is nothing wrong with it at all, but it doesn't really benefit the employee.
- Learning something that is valuable to the employee in the general job market. This always comes with strings attached that almost always make the employee 'pay' more than the education is worth.
Wouldn't putting your career on hold mean quitting and learning full time? Some people do that but people who go to school that didn't do it out of high school (or other training) do it mid-career, no?
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@wrx7m said in Should You Job Hop for Your Career in IT - SAMIT Video:
@scottalanmiller said in Should You Job Hop for Your Career in IT - SAMIT Video:
@wrx7m said in Should You Job Hop for Your Career in IT - SAMIT Video:
@scottalanmiller said in Should You Job Hop for Your Career in IT - SAMIT Video:
An issue I have with company-provided training, in general cases for broad skills, is that companies tend to provide this via expensive, wasteful processes like degrees and boot camp classes. Things that cost a lot to provide but provide little educational value. But if the employee was to learn on their own, they might do so for almost no cost and learn a lot by doing their education well.
Company provided training almost always means high cost, low return. And is often focused on what is good for the company, not the employee.
Because of this, employees will often get locked to a company for skills that may be of little to no value to the employee. And their value to the company is generally determined by the company after the fact, so the employee often sees little to no benefit from having done so and staying.
Company provided training is way too often a tool to trap employees rather than to provide benefits to them.
While I have worked for a couple of companies that said that they would pay for courses (friends have even had tuition for degrees) that pertained to their job roles, I can't see that as being a bad thing if you are already in your career. It would be strange for someone to think that the company would want to pay them to study underwater basket weaving when they could be learning about business or IT.
It's a bad thing if it puts your career on hold to do it. I know lots of people who have done it, and they have always suffered for it. In theory, if it was purely free, then yes. But I don't know anywhere where it is free. It is always one of two conditions:
- Learning something that is useless outside of the context of the business. Businesses have to pay for this kind of education and there is nothing wrong with it at all, but it doesn't really benefit the employee.
- Learning something that is valuable to the employee in the general job market. This always comes with strings attached that almost always make the employee 'pay' more than the education is worth.
Wouldn't putting your career on hold mean quitting and learning full time? Some people do that but people who go to school or other training do it mid-career, no?
That would certainly be putting your career on hold. But I'm talking about avoiding moving up and stagnating because you become indentured in exchange for the education. The point of the conversation was how job hopping moves you forward in your career much more quickly than staying put, in nearly all cases (always exceptions for individuals.) If you are forced to give up one of your most powerful career advancement tools in exchange for some training, you are putting your career on hold for the company's benefit.
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@scottalanmiller I don't think it is as one-sided as you are stating. Delayed gratification/realization is not all bad.
I also think that this depends on types of careers. From someone that didn't go to college for more than a handful of classes and thinks most people are wasting time and money when going, I can still associate some value depending on career types.
For IT, getting a degree mid-career would be more of something that most people would consider a personal achievement; something that they wanted to do to say they did it. In other fields, say an SMB accounting department, getting a related degree would almost certainly be a decent career booster.
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@wrx7m said in Should You Job Hop for Your Career in IT - SAMIT Video:
@scottalanmiller I don't think it is as one-sided as you are stating. Delayed gratification/realization is not all bad.
It is in your career terms. Delayed gratification is less gratification. Holding someone back from climbing the ladder lowers how high on the ladder they get to go.
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@wrx7m said in Should You Job Hop for Your Career in IT - SAMIT Video:
I also think that this depends on types of careers. From someone that didn't go to college for more than a handful of classes and thinks most people are wasting time and money when going, I can still associate some value depending on career types.
But are you comparing that against the value of lost opportunity?
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@wrx7m said in Should You Job Hop for Your Career in IT - SAMIT Video:
For IT, getting a degree mid-career would be more of something that most people would consider a personal achievement; something that they wanted to do to say they did it. In other fields, say an SMB accounting department, getting a related degree would almost certainly be a decent career booster.
Not according to the statistics. Stopping your career advancement to get a degree hurts in a lot of ways. We have covered how college isn't useful for career advancement and is a negative in nearly all cases elsewhere. But here we are talking about the far more dramatically bad scenario where you lose your ability to move up the ladder in order to get a degree by sacrificing your freedom to accept a better job while getting or in the time close to after getting the degree.
You say that degrees seem like they would be helpful, but that's not the question. The question is are they helpful compared to the career advancements you turned down because of them?
And the answer is generally, no. If you were moving up the ladder instead of spending time in classes and getting locked in where you are, you normally can turn that ambition in to much more career advancement in other ways. That's the entire point.
I've seen it first hand, loads of people stagnating in their careers because they went for master's degrees on the company's dime. The company got a low cost way to lock those people in, while the people not taking classes did more work, got more recognition, built stronger resumes, got promotions, and job hopped to bigger and better opportunities leaving the "company educated" peers in the dust.
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@scottalanmiller said in Should You Job Hop for Your Career in IT - SAMIT Video:
@wrx7m said in Should You Job Hop for Your Career in IT - SAMIT Video:
For IT, getting a degree mid-career would be more of something that most people would consider a personal achievement; something that they wanted to do to say they did it. In other fields, say an SMB accounting department, getting a related degree would almost certainly be a decent career booster.
Not according to the statistics. Stopping your career advancement to get a degree hurts in a lot of ways. We have covered how college isn't useful for career advancement and is a negative in nearly all cases elsewhere. But here we are talking about the far more dramatically bad scenario where you lose your ability to move up the ladder in order to get a degree by sacrificing your freedom to accept a better job while getting or in the time close to after getting the degree.
You say that degrees seem like they would be helpful, but that's not the question. The question is are they helpful compared to the career advancements you turned down because of them?
And the answer is generally, no. If you were moving up the ladder instead of spending time in classes and getting locked in where you are, you normally can turn that ambition in to much more career advancement in other ways. That's the entire point.
I've seen it first hand, loads of people stagnating in their careers because they went for master's degrees on the company's dime. The company got a low cost way to lock those people in, while the people not taking classes did more work, got more recognition, built stronger resumes, got promotions, and job hopped to bigger and better opportunities leaving the "company educated" peers in the dust.
VERY interesting. I am glad i didn't do it .
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It's not that college is always bad, it just comes with negatives that have to be weighed against the positives. The standard approach is to assume that instead of going to college (whether at 18 or mid-career) is to assume that the person will do absolutely nothing productive with their free time, accept the same stagnation and all other negatives that come with the educational process, and that they will then compete toe to toe after the one has completed college and the other has just waited for them to finish.
But in the real world, someone ambitious enough to have gone to college for career reasons is also ambitious enough to work harder at their jobs, done a side job, gotten certs, learned on their own, moved on to another job, or so forth. Those are the more realistic actions of the other person that had the option of college. So when making the comparison, you have to look at those opportunities and look at the opportunities from the degree process and weight them in that fashion.