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by mattjaynes 1347 days ago
And to continue the Grace Hopper example... Remember that she transitioned to computing from being a Mathematics professor at Yale, so she was able to leverage her previous training into the new career.

Try and do the same if you can. Leverage what skills you've already gained to switch into a career where they are a big advantage. Then you are starting nearer to those already in the field, not the beginning.

1 comments

>Leverage what skills you've already gained to switch into a career where they are a big advantage.

Absolutely. In many cases, there are often a wide range of related/adjacent jobs that are significantly different in various ways but can nonetheless be a fairly natural transition. (Though key word can. I've seen examples that worked and examples that didn't.)

On the other hand, I'll go back to school and get a Masters degree in this very tangentially related STEM field is probably going to be a lot harder.

Harder, how so?

And even if harder, wouldn’t it still be a productive means towards the end of moving into that field?

If I go from product management into software development into some sort of technical marketing or sales role or even to certain types of consulting, there's a fair bit of overlap in the IT industry related to general knowledge of the market, practices, etc. I've changed jobs substantially twice and significant training to transition was never needed at all.

And, sure, if you want to change to a completely different area with much less overlap, that's not to say you shouldn't do so. But I certainly couldn't walk right into an unrelated engineering job at this point even if it were related to undergraduate coursework. In fact, it would be probably be easier for me to do a software job today even though I did essentially no programming in school.