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Ask HN: How to make up for lack of CS degree in software engineering?

3 pointsby zabanaover 7 years ago
If you are self taught, how did you get your foot in the door in the industry ?

1 comment

Artemixover 7 years ago
To answer the question put in the body, I simply contacted companies with my portfolio and my Gitlab profile link and quickly got answers.<p>At least here (country is France), most new and small companies don&#x27;t care about how much you spent on tuition and studies, but care more about who you actually are and what you can provide.<p>It&#x27;s following a mindset of &quot;people are not tools&quot;, unlike a lot of very big corporates and companies, which generally requires CS or &quot;big&quot; degrees to get interested.<p>I&#x27;d not ask about getting my foot in the door of the industry, but rather a small subset of it: Where and in which work categories do you want to work ?<p>Corps. and big companies ? Small but stable companies ? Startups ? Associations ?<p>You&#x27;d really need to target what you are seeking.<p>As I&#x27;ve been able to see here, corps. are generally more for very stable but not evolving jobs, in which you generally don&#x27;t have a big place for responsibilities and decisions. So more of an easy job than an &quot;interesting&quot; or dynamic one.<p>Startups are the opposite: they move very fast, everyone have something to say that may change how the society works but it&#x27;s a really quick movement: the society may spawn and work a few months, or even days, before dying out. You have a very dynamic environment but must be ready for potential crashes.<p>The &quot;small society&quot; have been the best balance I&#x27;ve found so far. They generally target dynamic developers (devs. who have a lot of projects - even ridiculously small - in a variety of domains). They are more stable than startups but you also get more &quot;power&quot; than an entry-job in a big corp.<p>Another thing we can notice is that young people generally target start-ups and small companies, with the hopes to find interesting, fast and new projects, without really thinking about the actual future of the society: it kinda follows the open-source contribution logic ; you come and contribute to the growth of the society, but are ready to move out and go on another projects later.<p>Older people in this industry can mostly be seen working in &quot;small&quot; or big corps, as mainly seeking stable jobs that can provide a steady and guaranteed income.