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Ask HN: Folks who left tech later in their career, where did you go?

21 pointsby johnnycarcinover 3 years ago
After 20+ years, I&#x27;ve recently come to the conclusion that I don&#x27;t want to be in &quot;IT&quot; anymore. It is all I&#x27;ve ever done (sysadmin, dev, security), but I just don&#x27;t enjoy it anymore. I&#x27;ve started to look around at other options, but as you would expect, the pay for non-tech roles is way lower than what I have grown accustomed to. I am looking to pay off all my debt before switching careers, but I still have a family to support, so unfortunately, pay rate still matters.<p>I&#x27;m curious to hear what other folks have done in similar situations. Were you able to find something comparable? Do I just need to accept that I&#x27;ll never make near what I currently make outside of tech? Do you feel you made the right choice?<p>TIA

2 comments

high_byteover 3 years ago
I was in a similar situation. wanted to leave the cyber security field, also the daily habits were difficult - sitting for endless hours, working with machines, chasing your own tail trying to keep up with newest tech...<p>I quit my job and some time afterwards lockdowns started. I found new passions in 3D &amp; VR (blender, unity, quest 2)<p>I knew I will always love tech &amp; science, just didn&#x27;t know what to do for a living. after over a year of soul searching &amp; job searching I nearly came to terms with my faith, as everybody told me: do what you&#x27;re good at. so even though I wanted to freshen up, I was considered hobbyist (eg. 3d, ai, ds, basically anything remotely interesting to me that isn&#x27;t cyber) and was difficult to find opportunities which were enjoyable. (lots of these are cool to study but job offers were boring because money easily corrupts...)<p>finally about a day before closing a contract (&amp; dreading to do so) I found a Blockchain company. changed some habits, work out regularly &amp; found good place socially &amp; educationally &amp; satisfying.<p>moral of my post is you just have to keep pushing forward, you can find new (or old) passions even with tech, or not tech, but you can.<p>good luck!
Pick-A-Hill2019over 3 years ago
Wow, so much to pack in and respond to so I will start with a TLDR of a +1 annectoda of ‘it can be done’.<p>Did I make the right choice? Yes and No. Did it work out ok&#x2F;well? Yes... And No.<p>Would I do the same again? Yes.<p>Note: I considered posting under a Temp&#x2F;Throwaway nick but figured meh, to hell with it.<p>The following is just a +1 anecdotal &quot;can be done&quot; rambling of some internet stranger so take it with as many pinches of salt as you wish :)<p>I am &#x27;semi-retired&#x27; from the IT game, rode the Y2K and Dot-com boom and bust and semi-retired&#x2F; &#x27;left&#x27; the industry back in late 2012. At that time I had reached a level where I could pick and choose and&#x2F;or name a price without worry, secure in the knowledge that within a day or two my phone would ring with someone else on the end desperate to have a problem fixed. {Will list my reasons for getting out of the IT game at the end of this comment}.<p>I branched out in to a non-IT related field (but was still a very technical and hands-on field). We are who&#x2F;what we are and I just have this itch to &#x27;fix&#x27; stuff.<p>My pay at first was a LOT less than I was earning previously (roughly 1&#x2F;10th) but within two years it was on par and within 5 years it was about 3x what I was earning in IT so yes, it can be done.<p>The thing to ask yourself is this (I&#x27;m assuming here that you have considered all possible different roles within the industry and found that none of them would suit you. If you haven&#x27;t done that yet then do so with haste. Often it&#x27;s better the devil you know).<p>Also consider this - Wherever you go, You always take the Weather with you. In other words - If you haven&#x27;t identified the underlying cause of your dissatisfaction then even if you do decide to trade fields you will find yourself asking the exact same question on a different technical forum within a few years ;)<p>If still convinced that a change of career is the right thing to do (hint – the fact that you haven’t reached the point where you go Fuck it – anything is better than doing this even if it means going back to Ramen Noodle Days suggests that you aren’t at that point) then consider doing a good old fashioned “likes and dislikes” and a SWOT analysis ( <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;SWOT_analysis" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;SWOT_analysis</a> ) to identify where&#x2F;what to do next.<p>Those same strengths that brought me to that point in my IT career of where I could chose who to pick up the phone to also served me well in my ‘new’ choice of career. How did I identify the new field I chose to get in to? By trawling through a lot of Job sites (with pay filtering turned off) and just clicked&#x2F;viewed the vacancies that sounded of interest. This gave me a really good idea of what interested me and if something was of interest then a quick Google&#x2F;Glass-door search for roles within that industry showed the max potential earnings). As an example – “Street Sweeper” ticked a lot of my ‘boxes’ except that even the best of street sweepers could never hope to come close to what I would like to earn. But doing that gave me the criteria to narrow down on what aspects ARE essential for me in any role.<p>{Reasons for leaving IT} During the 2000’s the amount of pure greed, the countless ‘chancers’ (aka “cowboys”) in the field left me sickened and disgusted.<p>What ever you decide - Good luck and I hope you find happiness&#x2F;contentment.
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