| I work with students (older teens/early 20s) and I understand the feeling of fear/despair. The reality is there are things you can't change and you should focus on those that you can. We're still not sure what is the impact of this generation of AI and it's hard to get an unbiased view amongst the hype. There are non-AI factors (ZIRP, Post-COVID, economic/demographic trends) that are likely contributing much more to the poor hiring conditions we're experiencing. Some comments/suggestions: 1) Take the emotion out of it. AI is just a technology and you don't have to love/hate it. Do try to understand it. Even if you are a skeptic of the LLM/AGI hype, the technology underneath it all is still quite fascinating. It surprized a lot of technologists. 2) Don't count on your degree. I think we're in this weird period where the traditional institutions are slowly collapsing, but the new hasn't been invented/popularized. Do finish your degree, but take time to hedge your bets and gain experiences outside of school. The great thing about being in your stage of life is you have very little to lose and a lot to gain from risk-taking. If you're constantly surrounded by your peers and academics, you'll not have the exposure to reality that you'd need to adapt. 3) Biggest skill that's missing, esp in Gen Z and not taught in higher ed, is how to communicate/signal to others like potential future employers. Beyond the superficial stuff like how to craft resume etc, but genuinely building your professional network. Who you know really matters. And not in the casual/family/we-play-golf-together sense, but out of professional respect. Make it a habit to reach out to engineers you admire and just ask for advice and interesting trends they're seeing (ex. in cybersecurity). When you do it as a student, and not as a job/favor-seeker, it changes the social dynamics. You'd be surprized how many would not only respond but talk your ears off. If they ignore you, big whoop, don't take it personally and just move on. A small minority of these people could make a huge impact on your life and career. Some more tactical stuff: - I'd assume you already know this, but resist the urge to use AI to learn. I've banned AI assistants for our junior engineers because they really slow down learning. It feels faster but you actually retain very little. We're re-discovering that doing things manually has a ton of long-term benefits that are hard to capture. - Do take some effort to understand how businesses work. You'll likely be working in one and it's in your interest to understand the flow of money, incentive structures, and how businesses make decisions. - Learn to eat well and exercise. It'll help boost your mood and not get bogged down in despair. Find ways to keep your spirit up for the long-term. Diversify your information diet away from TikTok, Instagram, and social media in general. Young people today have the dubious honor of being the first generation to have to fight off mass algorithmic addiction. Try to talk to more people in person to get a better sense of reality. |