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by Benjammer
2199 days ago
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R&D ML software dev --> Implementations Consultant seems like a pretty drastic change in roles. You're going from a very technical role to something that is very fundamentally soft-skills based. You'll be a communication pipeline between your company's sales and product teams, and your clients. You'll need to learn how to deeply investigate a client and figure out their needs, in a short amount of time, and then translate that foreign data into your internal company "language" and goals framework. You'll be dealing with two sets of politics at once, and be expected to move and translate seamlessly between the two. You're fundamentally a diplomat. Your technical background will help you establish authority for what you're talking about, and your problem-solving skills will be invaluable when investigating new clients. (disclaimer: This is all assuming that "implementations" works the way it has at the several B2B software companies I've worked at as a developer. It sounds the same from the short description given, but you never know with a new employer.) |
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Re: technical background, it will certainly give you authority, but a soft skill I lean on every day is you'll need to learn how to educate/explain in brief sentences, while still sounding enthusiastic and without any hint of eye-rolling or annoyance, even if it's a basic concept to the project or something you have a deep knowledge of.