Xequecal wrote:
You're not an exception, you have decades of experience. I'm going to go out on a limb and guess it didn't work that way for you when you were 25.
And you'd find yourself falling... darn limbs!
It's been my experience that consulting companies typically interface directly with functional managers at companies, and I've always turned to consulting for getting in any door.
I went into the Army in '74, served my 2 years, came out and started with a consulting company as an electronics tech while going to college for a electronics technician type degree. I never finished school, mainly 'cause I got good jobs doing what I wanted without the degree, and when I did, I changed degree programs, first from tech, then to electrical engineer, then to management, but always got the title on a business card before I got the title on a diploma.
I ended up (after a few other gigs) doing subcontract consulting through Bendix at McDonnell Douglas's St. Charles electronics plant in MO and was offered a full time position by the management there. Then came IBM after McDonnell outsourcing, then back to consulting with a few perm gigs along the way as a result of consulting at the place.
Now I know people. When I want to move, I tell them I want to move and wait for calls. I used to get calls all the time, but I've told my contacts that I'm happy where I am and won't move without an offer I can't refuse... I have a challenging job I love, I make enough money and I work from home. I don't really do anything
- I'm a "storage architect", so I just design stuff and validate the work folks do for me. It really doesn't get any better, in my opinion.
Thing is, I still study all the time, several hours a week, and I have all my adult life. Like I said, if you think you can, you can... but it just doesn't happen, you have to make it happen.
Want a nice cake? Put nice ingredients in, wash, rinse, repeat. It may not turn out right the first time, but you'll get the hang of it. It, however, starts with the ingredients, then you stir in the skill. Careers work the same way. You don't need college, or HR, or any of that... for sure it'll help, but it's not mandatory.
All that aside, I don't buy into the whole "degree as a commodity" philosophy where more folks having a degree does anything. Degrees have been a great way to differentiate one guy from another, but if more folks had degrees and it became less a measure for differentiation then something else would be used. More education in a citizenry is a good thing and any suggestion otherwise is mistaken, in my opinion.