|
|
|
Ask HN: How to network if I share a name with another person in the same field?
|
|
2 points
by TheAsprngHacker
2200 days ago
|
|
As I prepare for college, I would like to do more to network myself and build my career. I currently plan to go into academia and specialize in programming language theory. I have a common western first name and a common foreign last name. When I search up my name (first and last), the top results are a computer scientist at UBC who shares my first name, last name, and middle initial! What's more, this person appears to specialize in formal verification, which overlaps with PL theory. What can I do to distinguish myself? In addition, should I worry about discrimination for having a foreign last name? Should I invent an alias or nickname for myself? |
|
A few possible ideas that some people have used:
(1) Try to use a variant of your first name if it's a name that has variant spellings available, or a shorter or a longer form (Tim/Timothy, Kim/Kimberley, Will/William/Bill, Cate/Catherine/Kate/Katherine/Katy).
(2) Consider using your full middle name instead of just middle initial.
(3) Consider using your first initial and middle name instead of your first name and middle initial (like C. Wright Mills or J. Presper Eckert). This pattern is not uncommon in the English-speaking world although it is most used by people who simply don't like their first names that much.
(4) If your last name is a transliteration from a different writing system (like Cyrillic or hanzi), consider using a different transliteration method so that your last name is spelled slightly differently in English.
(5) Maybe contact the other researcher to describe your situation? I imagine most people would be amused and sympathetic in this situation.
(6) Maybe adopt a second middle name so that you have two middle initials instead of one. While this still might allow for some confusion, I think most publication venues would accept it.
On the bright side, there were two different researchers at the same time in the same department at Bell Labs named Stephen R. Bourne (one of them wrote the Bourne shell, /bin/sh) and apparently both of them had successful careers. :-)