Congrats, EMC does some really cool work.Start a new job Christmas week (posted somewhere else).
Industry: Solutions Engineer at EMC Corp
Education: BS in Computer Engineering
Experience: 1.5 years Software (firmware) Engineer intern
Location: MA, USA
Salary: $76k + MBO bonuses
Benefits: Choice of dozens of insurance providers/plans, 26 days off a year (36 at 5 years), paid holidays, able to work remotely, travel, nothing nuts.
It was sort of similar situation as Heylel. I was on my honeymoon and some jobs were posted. I quickly glanced but wasn't sure what they were so I ignored them. Came back to the manager of GPS (firmware) telling me that they wanted someone for a solutions engineering position under the director of solutions engineering. The director specifically asked for me and pushed for me in the interviewing process. Pretty flattering to have a bunch of people at work pushing for you. This will be my first job out of college, so excited.
Grats man, good luck. You're in Atlanta, right? I've only been gone a few months and I would still move back there in a heartbeat, but alas there are no semiconductor jobs.I really, really want this. The salary is enough to actually establish myself, pay down student loans and start a family without living paycheck to paycheck. My girlfriend's career is taking off as well, and between the two of us we're doing pretty well for a young (31 & 26) couple in our city, but it's tough to get ahead. Plus, it's the kind of job where I'm shaking hands with all the right people to keep some career momentum. Senior personnel at private non-profits, state agency directors, congressmen, etc. It's got me nervous, even though I know I have a little bit of an inside track. This would without a doubt be the largest promotion of my career so far, with a much larger workload and a concomitant increase in both prestige and salary. It's roughly a 30% increase from my current earnings, and a job that many people senior to me are scrambling for as well. He's had applicants across the spectrum from fresh graduates all the way to associate deans, and it will be incredibly competitive. I just have to hope that I can impress the right people.
Is that all? pffft.Yep, $21.7 billion revenue last year. We are going down the shitter.
I wish man, its getting pretty gnarly.You should teach a beard growing/how to care for clas Grumpus. You are wasting your talents on anything other than that.
This happens to a lot of people if they let it. Sure I travel 1-3 nights a week and that isn't always great... but I don't actually work 80 hours or even 50 to be honest. Work life balance isn't given to a worker, it is taken by them. A lot of people in my same job at the same company fall into the work all the time trap giving up weekends etc, I just refuse and get by fine. You have to have the strength of will to say no to 9am meetings on Mondays, chew out your AE when they try and make them etc. Learning the right way to say no is 90% of the battle... and the thing most people fail to learn. Just always have a story/spin on why you can't do something and people get it. There will always be the people who work 80 because they love it not understanding why you don't but you just have to spin things so that they have a perception of you being retardedly busy all the time. Perception control can give you the reality you want.My cousin's husband does IT sales and wants to kill himself since he is travelling all the fucking time and working like 80 hours a week. He makes insane bank because he supports the family mostly on his own salary and they have 2 kids and a gigantic home in a prestigious housing development. Not for me. Maybe I'm too lazy but I've never defined myself by my career nor do I like it taking over my life.
Sounds like we have the same cousin.My cousin's husband does IT sales and wants to kill himself since he is travelling all the fucking time and working like 80 hours a week. He makes insane bank because he supports the family mostly on his own salary and they have 2 kids and a gigantic home in a prestigious housing development. Not for me. Maybe I'm too lazy but I've never defined myself by my career nor do I like it taking over my life.
Originally I planned on pursuing software engineering, but I found the solutions work to be a bit more 'big picture' and more intriguing. I'm hoping it works out. I am trying to get on a path towards solution architectEMC is a great place to transition towards technical sales (SolutionArchitect, SalesEngineer). Go that way for the big $$$! I compete directly with the pivotal wing/spinoff.
My story was that I went to college with lots of credits and no work ethic. EQ came out the year I started at the dorm with a wide open 100mbit connection in 1999 and you all know that story, ended up going back home after 2 semesters or so and getting back on my feet at a CC. Transferred to the local university and graduated a semester late at 22ish. Couldn't find a job since I had no internship/coop so did crap web work on the side to get by and went back for a masters which I slacked at bigtime but graduated in 06 or 07. Was 26 by the time I broke into a development job, but rose fast once there making Lead Software Engineer by the time I was 29. I finally got the drive to get my shit in order and lost 140lbs, met a girl who I love and become engaged. This gave me more confidence in work life especially with the soft skills. Now I am 32 and making almost 200k after bonus as a Big Data Solutions Architect doing pre-sales and proof of concepts for fortune 500 companies. Getting married in 9 days, have no doubts about it at all (she has a PHD in her field, amazingly smart) and life is fucking good!
Went from depressingly shy and fat basement dweller to successful technical sales specialist getting married. Never lose hope!
Go figure eh? Not every path is linear.
Big Picture is tons more fun than code imho. SA roles are great!Originally I planned on pursuing software engineering, but I found the solutions work to be a bit more 'big picture' and more intriguing. I'm hoping it works out. I am trying to get on a path towards solution architect