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Ask HN: Switching from finance to tech?

2 pointsby csdraneover 11 years ago
I work in finance in a nontechnical role. Since I graduated from college six years ago, I have felt like I am on the wrong career path. I really feel like I need to switch industries. My job is very demanding. My heart isn&#x27;t in my work and I feel like I&#x27;m underperforming as a result. I&#x27;ve also had a difficult time dealing with the stress of the job and the work culture.<p>One of my big regrets is that I never took much math in college. But I am a very independent person--a self-learner with a hacker&#x27;s mindset, and I try to fill in the gaps where I need to. I self-taught Python and enjoy working on personal coding projects. My idea of a good time is reading Gilbert Strang&#x27;s Introduction to Linear Algebra, Concrete Mathematics, etc.<p>In my spare time I&#x27;ve been taking the Coursera and EdX courses on machine learning. I&#x27;ve found this to be fascinating and it&#x27;s got me pondering data science as a potential career.<p>General Assembly in NYC offers an 11-week Data Science program. Students pick a research project and then present their projects at GA-hosted employer meet and greets after the course ends. The vast majority of students already have a technical background, although there also are some people in fields such as finance looking to make a career change. Admission is selective though, and there&#x27;s no guarantee that I&#x27;d even be accepted, let alone have traction with the job hunt that follows.<p>I feel very lost. I&#x27;ve been referred to a career psychologist (seriously.) by someone I trust and respect, so we&#x27;ll see how that goes.<p>Going back to school is always an option, but I don&#x27;t know what I would study. I suppose I could do an MS in Comp Sci or an MBA but I&#x27;m not sure either would be a good fit. The former, perhaps not being career oriented enough; the latter, I&#x27;m not interested in the types of doors it might open and I feel burnt out from business in general.<p>And so I turn to you, HN.

2 comments

noahcover 11 years ago
It seems like you&#x27;re trying to do finance -&gt; machine learning. When maybe a more appropriate (and faster) way of going to just do finance -&gt; programming. You&#x27;re in NYC so finding a job shouldn&#x27;t be a problem, but <a href="http://careers.stackoverflow.com/jobs?searchTerm=python&amp;allowsremote=true" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;careers.stackoverflow.com&#x2F;jobs?searchTerm=python&amp;allo...</a> might be useful.<p>Why aren&#x27;t you applying for jobs right now? (and working on getting better at work).<p>As far as acceptance to anything, You won&#x27;t know unless you try (and apply). Don&#x27;t self select as someone who can&#x27;t get in because you didn&#x27;t apply. Make them say no.
dorfussover 11 years ago
I&#x27;m in a very similar situation - graduaded in cultural anthropology, working in insurance, started studying CS last week :)<p>My attitude is that I don&#x27;t think it will give me a better paid job, or a passive income, or become terribly smart - I just find it an amazing and interesting field of study.<p>Good luck to everyone who pursues his &#x2F; her dreams!