What makes me sad also is I am finding advancement to be a big challenge. I see many of my former classmates doing well and growing. I have all the "ingredients". I work hard, have the education (3 degrees from good schools), I keep up with the latest. Every company I join seems healthy but in a year or so starts showing financial problems and then there's a massive layoff and yes, I am always part of it. Good performance reviews don't seem to matter. I am even working on "hot" stuff like AI/ML.zooguy96 said:
Infinity, sorry for your predicament. I hope you eventually find something that suits you and where you can be happy.
Finding a position that fits (work environment, supervisor) is far more important to me than pay, etc. When I was first teaching, the administration was far more helpful; erego, I wasn't looking. I left for my wife's company, who recruited me for a position.
When I can back, the administration was new, and far less helpful (it takes 15 "demerits" for an office referral, which led to nothing, and the student back in class with no real consequences).
I'm finally leaving teaching. Got a job as an Asst Manager. Not exactly what I'm looking for, but far better than teaching middle school brats. I got it through networking.
I had a 2nd interview last week for a position I'm very interested in, a first interview with another job I'm very interested in, and have a first interview with a 3rd job I'm very interested in. All these other 3 jobs fit my career experience far better, and would represent a nice pay raise. Either way, at least I've left teaching for good.
Again, hope something works out sooner rather than later.
My big downfall has been to stick in this Midwestern city while wanting to do Product Management jobs. Not going to happen - wtf was I thinking? Everyone I know has moved to Austin, Seattle or San Fran.
I am as cursed as Aggie Football.
I need to get out of here as soon as I can. Daughter is a soph in HS so I am hesitant to disturb her school. But I might just do it if something good comes up.
The other thing is, on self-reflection, my parents did not bother to mentor or give me any advice. Other than the basics, I grew up on my own. So I did not want that for my kids, I wanted them to have a parent who is involved in their life. That has worked out reasonable well. In the process, I neglected my own career and probably was not aggressive enough. Anyway, lesson learned, time to focus on ME.