Mark Herschberg, author of The Career Toolkit
https://www.thecareertoolkitbook.com/
SCWCD 1.4<br />---------------------<br />Ability is what you're capable of. <br />Motivation determines what you do. <br />Attitude determines how well you do it.<br />---------------------
In the US, a resume should be 1-2 pages, not 5, or 6, or 7. I
Originally posted by Rashmi Tambe:
I sometimes dont understand how can one put 5-6+ yrs. of exp. in 1-2 pages? I just understand how?![]()
We are looking for mid to senior Java guys, roughly 5-10 years in experience.
Mike Gershman
SCJP 1.4, SCWCD in process
Mark Herschberg, author of The Career Toolkit
https://www.thecareertoolkitbook.com/
Originally posted by Mike Gershman:
Now, forty years later, with countless improvements in programming languages, software tools, and college curriculums, it takes five years for a CS graduate to become a mid-level programmer?
42
Eric LEMAITRE
CNAM IT Engineer, MS/CS (RHCE, RHCX, SCJA, SCJP, SCJD, SCWCD, SCBCD, SCEA, Net+)
Free Online Tutorials: http://www.free-tutorials-online.net/
a large group of people who would in the past qualify for senior jobs now don't because there already is a large pool of more experienced people to fill those positions.
Mike Gershman
SCJP 1.4, SCWCD in process
Originally posted by Mike Gershman:
That does not explain Mark's assumption that programmers with less than five years' experience are not worth even interviewing for mid-level programming jobs.
Originally posted by Mike Gershman:
Of course, the interviewer has to be capable of identifying the skilled programmer versus the experienced programmer. In my experience, technical knowledge is a necessary but not sufficient condition for an effective technical interview.
42
- I don't need to know every technology you used on each and every project. When working in Java, I certainly don't care that you used a computer with a Pentium III processor!
Originally posted by Mike Gershman:
That does not explain Mark's assumption that programmers with less than five years' experience are not worth even interviewing for mid-level programming jobs.
Originally posted by Eric Lemaitre:
I am afraid it is totally logical if you cannot find anyone with such standards. According to the numerous opinions I gathered from relevant employees and employers, it really looks like the only IT people readily available in US are "cheap average 3 years experience" indians or chinese hired through now completely boggus H1B system.
Originally posted by Rob Aught:
This goes counter to what every recruiter I have ever talked to has said.
Originally posted by Rob Aught:
do you think a similar problem is occurring? Is there still a mentality that employers should be beating a path to the technologist's door and/or are technologists still just really horrible at selling themselves to prospective employers?
Originally posted by Homer Phillips:
Let me remind you. You are a manager at some privately owned start-up. Your funding just got turned on and you need people who think parachuting onto a burning building and picking up a hose is exiciting. You have no published financial data like earnings per share or even sales. You have no sales. You can neither offer your candidates security nor stock options.
Your budget is lean. Your deadlines are impossible. Your infrastructure is wobbly and B-grade. You are looking hard at offshoring. Your system needs to be state-of-the-art.
Originally posted by Homer Phillips:
As a job applicant you cannot read the minds of employers and say these two pages are what this company wants. One tries to put down what one has done and hope that it matches what the employer wants.
A long resume is an indicator of a long career. A person who throws out long resumes indicates experience is a negative. A long career indicates an advanced age. Intentional or unintended, age discrimination is a crime and you are a criminal, Mark.
Mark Herschberg, author of The Career Toolkit
https://www.thecareertoolkitbook.com/
Would you hire a guy with no experience as an architect? as a director of engineering? as a CEO of a Fortune 500 company? How about with 1 year experience? 2?
juniors will spend years doing what in the past was done by typists, typing in the designs made by others without much thinking of their own
Mike Gershman
SCJP 1.4, SCWCD in process
Originally posted by Rob Aught:
As for the controversial experience number, I think Mike kind of pointed out that it is for "mid to senior" level positions. That actually sounds about right as not all fifth year developers are necessarily "senior". I personally tend to think of mid-level as 2 to 7 years experience. I really didn't hit a senior title until my current (6th) year.
I'm still curious why 5 years is such a magic number for employers though.
Mark Herschberg, author of The Career Toolkit
https://www.thecareertoolkitbook.com/
Java is also relatively new.
Originally posted by Mark Herschberg:
This has always bothered me. At some point during the boom we got title inflation.
Originally posted by Henry Wong:
Over here, the classic example is Wall Street. Many developers have the title of Vice President, not because they have direct reports, not because they have executive responsibility, but because that title was mandated to get the required salary. And that existed way before the dot com boom.
Mark Herschberg, author of The Career Toolkit
https://www.thecareertoolkitbook.com/
Originally posted by Mark Herschberg:
...To be fair, there will never be total uniformity. A VP at 50 person startup company is different than a VP at a large MNC like GE...
Mark Herschberg, author of The Career Toolkit
https://www.thecareertoolkitbook.com/
Originally posted by Mark Herschberg:
(Although I I honestly think very few people would go out of their way if they don't already have one; still, it can't hurt.)
Originally posted by Mark Herschberg:
The popular term to put on a resume these days is [/i]Software Development Lifecycle (SDLC)[/i] or some variant.
Originally posted by Mark Herschberg:
Still, ask yourself where you want to be and who you want to work for. As an example of how I'm falliable myself, years ago some recruiters suggested I list MS Word, Excel, etc on my resume. A friend pointed out that I still had it and said "do you think at your level they care if you list it?" If a company is hiring someone at my level and sees my background and isn't sure if I can handle MS Office products, something is seriously wrong. I removed it.
Originally posted by Mark Herschberg:
I think of it as similar to the adaptive ETS tests. For those not familiar, instead of asking everyone the same 50 questions and seeing their net score, it adapts in an online test.
Originally posted by Mark Herschberg:
In any case, do you really want to work for a guy who needs everything spelled out for him? As for the recruiters, most of these recruiters, as I've said before, don't know their ass from their elebow (I also note there are exceptions). I still get a request a day from a recruiter, picking up my 3 month old resume saying, "I see you know J2ME (note: it's listed only once or twice on my resume) we need a J2ME contactor in NC for $30/hr, please answer the following ten questions for me...." Do I want to work for manager who uses such a recriuter?
Originally posted by Don Stadler:
BTW, have you had a think about the 'Kathy's blog - hire different' thread? I think there may be something in it for you...
Mark Herschberg, author of The Career Toolkit
https://www.thecareertoolkitbook.com/
Homer, you have no clue what I'm doing, so please don't make statement like that. We're a 5-year old private company with long term growing revenue streams. We didn't just get funding yesterday, nothing is burning, but we are trying to ramp up development. Like all private companies, we have no published data (and I'm not going to discuss our finances here). We do have strong sales and marquee clients, we offer security, great benefits (better than many large firms I've seen) and stock options. The budget and deadlines are fine, as well as our infrastructure (and I know you haven't seen those so please don't speculate). I'm not looking hard at offshoring, we've been doing it for a while and it's working well.
Originally posted by Don Stadler:
Homer, please give the man a break. Mark is a decent chap and offshoring is a fact of life we all live with.
An old PM of mine now spends significant time overseeing an offshored project in Pune. When asked his opinion he recommended they 'reshore' and backed it up with data obtained through his experiences.
Pounding at a thick stone wall won't move it, sometimes, you need to step back to see the way around.
Pounding at a thick stone wall won't move it, sometimes, you need to step back to see the way around.
Eric LEMAITRE
CNAM IT Engineer, MS/CS (RHCE, RHCX, SCJA, SCJP, SCJD, SCWCD, SCBCD, SCEA, Net+)
Free Online Tutorials: http://www.free-tutorials-online.net/
Originally posted by Mark Herschberg:
I posted two job listings on Monster, Dice, and Craig's List. After 7 days I had a whopping 12 resumes. (A year ago in Boston posting on Craig's List I would get 100 resumes in 48 hours.)
We are looking for mid to senior Java guys, roughly 5-10 years in experience. (For those who claim age discriminiation, I would gladly take those with more experience, but it's about 1% of the candidates with more than 12 years of experience.)
Originally posted by Mark Herschberg:
If you are a competant developer, I can't imagine not being able to find a job in NYC if you're willing to pound the pavement.
Originally posted by Mark Herschberg:
- At least have a vague idea of what the company does, or refer to things on the website which was unclear. Show me some effort.
- Be confident in your answers. Confidence goes a long way.
Originally posted by Mark Herschberg:
- Know basic Java. I can't believe the guys and girls who can't even answer simple questions! Sure top people will miss some things, even a basic thing they may just forget, but many candidates with 5+ years can't even answer one of a multitude of basic questions.
- Never be quiet for long periods of time. If given a brain teaser or design problem, think out loud. It's not the answer I want, I want to see how you think.
- If this is a system you claim to be working on, or worked on recently, be able to get down into the details if I ask, otherwise I start to wonder if you're really on the project.
- Be proactive in the interview, ask me questions. Don't sit there under interrogation waiting for it to be over.
- Distinguish yourself. Every candidates says "I'm smart/hard working/dedicated/know Java well/know some other technology well/like challenges." I can't distinguish you that way. You can say things like that, but only if you tie it into the specific role at the specific company, otherwise you just sound like everyone else and don't stand out.
- Find a way to stand out. Make a joke, be quirky, be whatever, just be unique.
Originally posted by Mark Herschberg:
These are just some late night gripes after many, many fruitless hours of searching, and disappointing candidates. I can't speak for the whole country, but in NYC, there is a definate lack of quality candidates.
Mark, I suspect that you are searching too narrowly.
In practice it will take that long for someone to have gained access to enough experience gaining work (rather than brainkilling boilerplate work) to be experienced enough.
Ever more juniors will spend years doing what in the past was done by typists, typing in the designs made by others without much thinking of their own.
Mark, I suspect that you are searching too narrowly.
Mike Gershman
SCJP 1.4, SCWCD in process
This tiny ad is suggesting that maybe she should go play in traffic.
The Low Tech Laboratory Movie Kickstarter is LIVE NOW!
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/paulwheaton/low-tech
|