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Good to Have Ability to Change Career?
8 points by Repose0941 753 days ago
It's unsure how the market will be tomorow, so what's good to have in case of career change or/and layoffs? What to learn or make? (More in the programming fields)
6 comments

I think the most useful superpower is marketing (or rather persuasion.)

It is required whenever you need to interact with another human (which is nearly every day, for any job/career).

And good marketing just boils down to understanding other people: their needs, fears, and desires.

- a resume/job interview is just marketing

- a job posting is just marketing

- marketing will help you understand what skills are in demand (i.e. what to learn/make?)

- asking someone on a date is just marketing

- and of course, marketing is used to sell products and services, too

I think its different type of marketing though. I'm perfectly fine with resume marketing as I'm getting jobs left and right in this climate and needed to reject some offers.

I'm OK with sales too, although I usually ended up persuading the other side not to buy our products, so I ended up giving up a career in stock broking 10 years ago.

On the other hand, I have never been good with dates. It's a completely different set of mindsets and skills IMO.

It is still marketing. The work is in creating the right product that meets a demand, tho. The product being you.
It's too broad to be spoken in one shot IMO.
Definitely! Always prioritise learning in any job. Don’t just blindly take a job which have high pay but low learning curve.

Stay up to date with everything which is happening in your field of job.

Regularly apply for jobs to make yourself interview ready. You can find newest job post’s aggregated from Twitter at careerbrige.com

I hope this helps!

if this helps: one of the ideas for modern development (one-off projects) is the creation of software for new and old ones, including CNC machines

if you can’t get a stable job, you can always start giving programming courses, this can be done at home. I really haven’t seen successful programmers who have completed such courses, but I have seen quite successful lecturers who teach such courses.

Ability to write clearly and concisely.
Quality communication skills are highly underrated.
Small business owner related skills & investments that generate steady reoccurring revenue.
Networking. Networking is a but kike reading: something whose importance was drilled into us, but never demonstrated. In my 30s I'm finally seeing how powerful it is.

The value in this case is that if you ever need a job, some people will want to hire you specifically, not because of your resume, but because they trust you and like your vibe. They'll say "I know a guy" and you'll be that guy.

People underestimate just how many deals are done in-network, based on vibes alone. Jobs only get listed online if all else fails.