How I Would Start My Career In 2024 (if I could redo over)
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How I Would Start My Career In 2024 (if I could redo over)

Tina Huang 01.07.2024 49 814 просмотров 2 291 лайков обн. 18.02.2026
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Check out this free resource that helps you use AI to optimize your job search: https://clickhubspot.com/mir In this video I talk about how I would redo my career if I could start over in 2024. Btw if you're looking into getting another degree I highly recommend checking out Course Careers instead as a practical alternative where you're not put in a massive amount of debt. You can use this link for $50 off: https://coursecareers.com/a/Tina ✉️ NEWSLETTER: https://tinahuang.substack.com/ It's about learning, coding, and generally how to get your sh*t together c: 🤖 AI Lunch & Learn series: https://www.lonelyoctopus.com/email-signup It's a FREE weekly 1hr livestream about AI & tech topics eg. how to build a GPT, how to build AI products, jobs in the era of AI etc. 🐙 Lonely Octopus: https://www.lonelyoctopus.com/ Check it out if you're interested in learning AI & data skill, then applying them to real company projects! 🤝 Business Inquiries: https://tally.so/r/mRDV99 🖱️Links mentioned in video ======================== 🔗Affiliates ======================== My SQL for data science interviews course (10 full interviews): https://365datascience.com/learn-sql-for-data-science-interviews/ 365 Data Science: https://365datascience.pxf.io/WD0za3 (link for 57% discount for their complete data science training) Check out StrataScratch for data science interview prep: https://stratascratch.com/?via=tina 🎥 My filming setup ======================== 📷 camera: https://amzn.to/3LHbi7N 🎤 mic: https://amzn.to/3LqoFJb 🔭 tripod: https://amzn.to/3DkjGHe 💡 lights: https://amzn.to/3LmOhqk ⏰Timestamps ======================== 00:00 intro 📲Socials ======================== instagram: https://www.instagram.com/hellotinah/ linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/tinaw-h/ discord: https://discord.gg/5mMAtprshX 🎥Other videos you might be interested in ======================== How I consistently study with a full time job: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=INymz5VwLmk How I would learn to code (if I could start over): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MHPGeQD8TvI&t=84s 🐈‍⬛🐈‍⬛About me ======================== Hi, my name is Tina and I'm an ex-Meta data scientist turned internet person! 📧Contact ======================== youtube: youtube comments are by far the best way to get a response from me! linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/tinaw-h/ email for business inquiries only: hellotinah@gmail.com ======================== Some links are affiliate links and I may receive a small portion of sales price at no cost to you. I really appreciate your support in helping improve this channel! :)

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if I were to start my career in 2024 I would be doing things very differently over the past year I've met so many people who have all done the right thing they went to a good college they worked hard they applied to hundreds of jobs networked aggressively maybe even did a couple interviews but no luck some of them even went on to get another degree but months if not years down the line still jobless it feels really unfair because once upon a time if they worked hard went through this process they will get a good job the way that I did but now it feels kind of pointless no matter how hard you try you're still stuck in this pool of overqualified candidates all trying to compete for just that handful of jobs so as somebody on the job hunt for roughly 6 months now why am I not getting a job why is it so hard to find a bloody job I've been looking for 3 months and I've had one interview in this video I like to take a stroll down memory lane and explain the very different career choices I would have made if I were to redo my career and start over in 2024 starting all the way from high school to getting my first job and starting my own business this video is sponsored by HubSpot back when I was job hunting what I would essentially do every day is I would log on to all of the different job websites and then just apply to everything I could find and if they give me an interview I will put on a spreadsheet and a calendar I am not the most organized person and I probably ended up applying to the same job multiple times and I probably also missed out on a lot of good opportunities not great and honestly in this job market you can't really afford to do that anymore because you need every lead that you can find if I were to do it now I would take advantage of a super obvious tool keep talking about it AI That's why I recommend checking out this free tool kit how to Lear a job using AI from HubSpot the toour kit has 20 AI tools for you to use as well as 60 plus ways for you to use chat GPT throughout the entire job search process for example if you're still manually searching for jobs on LinkedIn or some other job website you should consider checking out these smart job matching tools are you still writing your cover letters from scratch painfully optimizing it for each company consider checking out the AI writing tools are you considering shelling out like over $100 just to get a mock interview from someone out of desperation trust me check out Chach BT for doing a mock interview it will save you your $100 I recommend that you download this AI for job Seekers toolkit at this link over here also linked in description thank you so much HubSpot for providing free resources to help us Leverage The Power of AI and for sponsoring this portion of the video now back to the video I graduated high school in 2013 and then I went to university 2013 was a time assuming that you didn't go into a trade job um the no-brainer was that you tried your best to get into the best university that you can get to maybe take on a little bit debt if you have to and you go there and you try to do your best this made sense at that time because there weren't really that many higher education Alternatives online education mukes were just starting out udemy and skillshare started in 2010 and they're starting to show a little bit of Promise Udacity started in 2011 and corsera had just started in 2012 YouTube which is now my default resource whenever I want to learn something educational um had already started since 2005 but in 2013 it was still the era of entertainment the big names were Nigahiga PewDiePie smos and your makeup tutorial Guru Michelle F basically knowledge and opportunities were still being gatee kept by universities the ability to make money that was not tied to a degree or not associated with a degree was also pretty limited making money online which is very cool these days was still not really considered a real job so even though universities were still really expensive there's just this assumption that you should go to university and even though you may be carrying debt you will be able to make it up when you graduate and get a good job so yes I also dutifully went to University but if it were today in 2024 I would seriously reconsider my Approach according to college board the average tuition for 4 years in 2023 ranged from around $45,000 for public schools to $166,000 for private schools adjusted for inflation it's about the same as in 2013 and of course you still have to spend 4 years and work very hard but this degree is considered less useful and actually worth less for starters more companies are claiming that they no longer require candidates to have a 4-year degree but this we should take with a grain of salt because research has also shown that even though it's not required there's still a preference towards people who have a college degree and anecdotally recruiters have claimed that they still do prioritize people who do have a 4-year degree but it is certainly true that year on year there are more and more people who do have college degrees now which means the advantages of having that degree is decreasing as well in 2013 approximately 32% of us adults over the age of 25 have a college degree now in 2024 that's projected to be over 40% there is such an overabundance of people with college degrees that according to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York there are 33. 8% of college graduates that are working in jobs that don't even require a college degree if you don't believe this next time you go to a restaurant just ask your waiter how many people there have a college degree I recently did this and almost every single one of them had a college degree they could have done the same job without paying tens of thousands of dollars were potentially being in debt and spending 4 years learning things that were not relevant to be clear I'm not saying that you should not get a college degree especially if you're going for certain careers that are very highly regulated like being a doctor a lawyer architect like a professor then you definitely do need to get that degree but in my specific case I do want to share some of my core personality traits that May challenge the fact that focusing very hard on getting that college degree is the best approach number one I was not a good student like I caused a lot of headaches for my past teachers I was not good at falling directions and I especially was bad at kind of like organized school activities acties like things that have some sort of like Rule and some sort of hierarchy like for example student council like clubs team sports things like that for whatever reason just having that structure just made me like not want to follow the rules and definitely I didn't feel an incentive to climb up like the club ladder or become the like president or something like that anyways my point being in retrospec this should have given a hint as to the fact that I would not do well in the corporate world and I just like would didn't do well in careers that had a lot of regulations and a lot of rules and things like that like doctor teacher architect or Professor the professions that actually care a lot about you having a degree basically on the other hand my strength has always been in learning things myself and then applying them myself I got really good at self-studying at a young age because I realized that if you maintain decent grades teachers and parents are generally more lenient even if you're not paying attention in class where you don't show up to class anyways self- studing is one of my strengths and in 2024 there are a lot more educational resources out there in which I could have really like used my strength of self-studying in order to gain an education like for example a corser certificate or joining a professional program like course careers where I would be very focused on learning applied skills metant for a specific job role side note if I was good with my hands um if I was starting over in 2024 I definitely would consider going into the trades there's a shortage of people in the trades and the average salaries in the trades is actually higher now than the average salary for white collar workers I was recently watching this YouTube video of this guy who was interviewing people um with jobs into trades and like kind of yeah like blue callar workers yeah and then this girl um she dropped out of school and she was basically saying like I earn like $600,000 a year by starting off as a nail tech and eventually owning nail salons there's also this video of this Korean kid who got into the best university in Korea but then actually dropped out in order to go into the trades he joined the team after dropping out of Soul National University one of the country's top schools anyways my point being in 2024 I wouldn't necessarily have just like went like no I'm not going to University but I wouldn't have blindly believed that I should try my best to get into the best university that I can work as hard as I can and just trust I'm going to get a good job and be set for life since that paper doesn't actually matter that much and it's actually decreasing value of over time some questions that I would think very carefully about will include hm should I actually get an associates degree or go to Community College first to not have that much debt since you know the name of the school and the paper doesn't actually matter that much should I consider an alternative higher education where I could still learn the same skills and be job ready but at a portion of the cost and time commitment to would I consider going into the trades well in that case I definitely will not because I'm terrible with my hands but you know for other people that could be worth a consideration okay so assuming that I did choose to go to university um I would definitely change a lot about what I did during University I started my undergraduate at the University of Toronto in the General Life Sciences category mostly because my mom told me that I should become a doctor which again if I had more carefully thought about the fact that I would not be suitable to be a doctor given my inability to follow directions and problems with authority I would have realized this was a terrible idea however hindsight is 2020 and what actually happened is that um in my second year when you had to choose like a specific major I decided to go into pharmacology which is the study of drugs and the reason why I chose this was because all my friends chose it that was it so surprise surprised by my third year I was [ __ ] miserable I really didn't want to be a doctor but I was getting a pharmacology degree which is not particularly useful unless I'm going into a medical field or going into research instead what I wish I had done if I could restart ining 24 is I would have chosen computer science or computer engineering plus pharmacology or just really like computer science Computer Engineering plus something else if you know I did not know what I wanted to do let me explain so first I want to address the elephant in the room if you've been following the AI development you probably heard Jensen hang who is the CEO of Nvidia say this it is our job to create Computing technology such that nobody has to program so this freaked everybody out and they were like oh my God like AI is going to replace programmers so I should definitely not go into computer science or computer engineering but I greatly disagree first of all the job of Jensen Hong or really just any Tech CEO is to paint a idealistic picture of the future there's this video compilation on YouTube called elon's broken promises we're probably only a month away from having uh autonomous driving at least for highways and for relatively simple roads he's been promising this for the past 8 years last time I checked the cars still seem to have drivers disappointing so even if Jensen's promise comes true and there's going to be no need for programmers in the future I still think there's value in learning computer science and computer engineering and that is because I believe that most people are misunderstanding what Jensen Hong is saying when he says nobody has to program people just kind of assume that programming is equal to computer science is equal to engineering so bad no more computer science no more engineering but in the same speech when asked what is that he recommends people learn in the future he also says this if I were to do it over again right now I would realize that the technology to turn life science to life engineering is upon us and that digital biology will be a field of engineering not a field of science that's where the misunderstanding comes from programming does not equate to computer science and engineering in fact programming is actually a very small part of computer science and computer engineering what you're really learning these degrees is the ability to problem solve how do you think like an engineer what are engineering principles if subjects like drug Discovery the medical Sciences Life Sciences is going to fall into the domain of engineering then learning about these engineering principles is going to be more relevant than ever this is why if I were to choose a major in 2024 I would choose computer science as Computer Engineering plus another domain like the life sciences this will position myself well to have the skills in order to tackle the problems of the future during college would also make sure to focus a lot on internships and gaining work experience ask any recruiter in a sea of applicants where most people have more than a 3. 5 GPA the difference between getting hired or not hired is having a slightly higher GPA what makes the difference is having job experience if I were doing my University years in 2024 I would focus most of my attention not on getting good grades but on getting as much work experience as I can so yes you're probably thinking right now batina how do I get job experience if I don't have any job experience so this is one thing that I did get right back in 2014 2015 you got to lower your expectations you're right nobody is going to offer you an internship or offer you the chance of getting job experience when you have no job experience so what you got to do is humble yourself and go find some research labs and research professors and just be like hello Professor can you please allow me to do free labor at your lab I sent out probably over a 100 cold emails and literally went to go knock on the door of some professors that I knew and just being like hi professor please please pleas please can I please work at your lap for free I did that and finally a very kind Professor took a chance on me and allowed me to work at his lab I ended up working at his lab for free and I put that on my resume which made me look like I have relevant work experience it's a small stepping stone but that allowed me to get another job at a research lab which then converted to a paid job in 2024 I would still do this and I would actually be even more aggressive like going to everybody including friends and family and also being like please please can you please let me do free labor for you because I know that only by doing this I'm able to stand out in this very difficult job market the last thing I would make sure to do in my undergraduate if I were to restart in 2024 is to make myself very specialized in a skill set so I don't care what your feelings are about AI whether you think it's going to change the world a complete scam but what is undenied relable is that AI is a very valuable skill set that most companies are looking for like job hostings even those outside of tech are starting to list AI as either a basic required skill or a desirable skill to me this is an absolute no-brainer go learn some AI skills it'll make you stand out because it's clearly desirable to companies there's not that many people who know how to use AI properly and it's really not that hard to get started for some reason people have this misconception that learning how to use AI is really hard and requires you to know how to code and just be like very technical well yes if you're going to go build an Ari product from scratch that is very difficult but just learning how to use AI related to your specific domain can make you stand out a lot for example if you're in marketing learn how to use HubSpot and HubSpot AI if you're in drug Discovery learn how to use specialized models like IBM Watson Adam wise benevolent AI for anybody looking for a white collar job learn how to do prompt engineering well and you would just get so much productivity gain just out of Chachi BT and things like Microsoft co-pilot if I were redoing my career in 2024 I would absolutely learn how to use AI then after I learn these AI skills I would put on my resume and I will keep applying for jobs and emphasize the fact that I know AI skills and at the same time I would also start marketing myself on LinkedIn writing medium articles showcasing these AI skills that I'm learning in my specific domain maybe I'll even start making internet videos and teaching people these AI skills damn maybe I would have started my own company's 4 years earlier than the real timeline because in 2024 there are just so many opportunities to earn money online okay before I get ahead of myself and start going on a rant about how in this economy freelancing can actually be more lucrative and secure than a full-time job let me first address the next career choice I had getting a master's degree I didn't know what to do with myself when I realized I didn't want to be a doctor back in 2016 and like I said I had a pharmacology degree which is not very useful luckily by the time I graduated ated in 2017 I had convinced that nice Professor that I was doing free labor for to give me a full-time job doing B informatics specifically cancer genetics research I am honestly so grateful to him because that was where I learned how to code on the job and I even got the opportunity to publish a couple of papers but what I really wanted was a job in Tech because honestly being in research does not pay very well and a job in Tech pays very well and just being in Tech was like the cool thing the dream back then this is when I started thinking about upscaling and learning more things from a technical perspective like computer science because I thought that it would give me a better chance in letting a job in Tech at that time corsera was becoming very popular and in the year 2016 was when corsera partnered with a major university the University of Illinois to bring a world class degree program fully online I actually did consider going down the rout of online education and I also looked at some of the coding boot camps but it still felt like it was early days and I didn't really want to be a guinea pig at that time plus getting a master's degree in computer science at a top university would have almost guaranteed me a job in Tech so I applied to a few different master's program and I eventually got accepted into the University of Pennsylvania's masters of computer information technology program which was essentially computer science for people who did not have a background in computer science before accepting the offer I did the math tuition for 2 years was approximately 112k well that is definitely a lot of money the School of Engineering and applied sciences published their job placement of their graduates as a whole those who have a master's degree from the engineering school received an average annual salary of approximately $126,000 and the range was from $67,000 to $300,000 this means that if I were to earn the average salary after tax I should be able to earn back my tuition fee in 2 years it seemed like job placement was also very high with 75% of graduates finding employment at top companies and I absolutely made the right choice within 8 months I was able to secure internship at Goldman Sachs as a technology summer analyst which is basically software engineering then when I graduated I got a job as a data scientist at meta my salary was actually higher than average and I was able to earn back my tuition in about a year and a half but that was back in 2020 I was recently chatting with one of my old professors at Penn and we were discussing how since the pandemic it has been a lot more stressful for students and a lot harder for them to find internships and jobs at top companies it seems like having a master's degree a paper from a fancy school like pen just didn't cut it anymore and it really isn't that the quality of students is getting lower there is genuinely just less top jobs to go around so this is anecdotal but I was curious to see if this was reflected in any of the numbers or reports that pen publishes when I graduated in 201 20 the number of people who were employed was listed as 75. 4% with 90. 4% of graduates being either employed enrolled in continu education or serving in the military in the first 6 months after graduation now for 2023 the numbers are 78. 8% of full-time employment with 92. 6% of graduates who are either employed enrolled in continuing education volunteering serving in military were not seeking a job in the first 6 months after graduation very interesting so at first glance it actually looks like people who graduated in 2023 are doing better than those who graduated in 2020 which was my year however as someone who's worked very closely with data I also know that data is very easily manipulated and Pen absolutely has an incentive in order to manipulate these numbers in order to make it look like that things are looking good right I mean I really can't say anything for certain but first of all these statistics pen doesn't publish them by master's degrees they like combine everything into the masters of engineering so we don't actually know what the breakdown looks like for all of the different master's degrees in engineering a couple other interesting things to note in 2023 the number of full-time employment is 78. 8% so that is higher than a 75. 4% at first glance it looks like oh like there's more people who have full-time employment job placements right in 2023 but if you look a little bit closer in 2020 the top hiring employers were big tech companies Amazon with 40 people hired Facebook with 22 people hired Google 15 and then going down to list Microsoft Oracle Apple McKenzie and Company Qualcomm Boeing Company enture Huawei technology Uber right so these are all like very big companies very prestigious in Tech and Consulting in these places but if you look at this list in 2023 so the first is still Amazon hiring 43 employees but the second one is University of P Pennsylvania hiring 22 employees very interesting seems like the school is hiring a lot of its own students I don't know looks a little sus but you know can't say for sure just pointing it out but luckily there are more objective sources of the worth of a master's degree according to workplace analytics from pay scale someone with a master's degree average salary in the US is $83,000 which is about $20,000 increase over an undergraduate degree but does that justify the cost of the Master's Degree well according to the Education data initiative the average cost of a master's degree is $59,000 for a public school and around $888,000 for a private school theoretically speaking over time the Master's Degree should pay for itself maybe between 3 to 10 years however given the fact that unemployment rates for master's degree is also quite dismal the greater likelihood is that you still would not be able to find a job and now you just have more money that you've sunk in and potentially have even more debt now that you're trying to pay so what this means is that nowadays in 2024 I would think a lot more carefully about getting an additional piece of paper because I can't find a job with the decline of the tech industry you don't really have that like kind of thing that everybody's aiming for now like some job that will just give you really good salary really good benefits and you know that it's just going to be there with the Fallout Tech there's a lot less good jobs out there no would be worth putting extra money and extra time into getting a master's degree for besides most people also have the same idea they can't get a job with an undergraduate degree so they're like okay I should go get a master's degree instead to increase my chances but again we're all just becoming more and more overqualified and we're still competing for the same number of jobs except now we are more in debt and more desperate in 2024 if I'm trying to get a job or change my career I would probably not go for a master's degree the risk is not worth a reward right now and there's a lot more lowcost options for education out too for example even mcit the pen degree that I did now has an online equivalent which is about a third of the price of the on campus like I mentioned earlier there are also professional programs like course careers which are designed specifically to get you certain type of job Udacity has some really great professional programs and some big companies like IBM and Google have their own certificates in partnership with corsera I would offer one of these lower cost options to learn things and slowly build out my resume my portfolio by taking on contract jobs okay so after my Master's Degree I resumed applying for jobs I was talking to a new grad just a few days ago and he told me that he applied to hundreds of jobs but couldn't get anything and I said okay interesting send me your resume so I've actually mentored a lot of new grads before and the first thing I always ask them is to show me their resume because usually it's just the way that the resume was formatted that just makes it like not appealing to recruiters but in this case like his resume it was actually pretty good so then I asked a little bit more about these hundreds of jobs that he applied for I asked him okay hundreds of jobs and how did you apply for these jobs did you just do them all online did you go to networking events he was like yeah I did go to networking events but most of them are online now and they didn't really like do anything so I was like okay you also went to NYU which is a top school and I know for a fact that top schools like NYU they actually have companies go to their school to conduct interviews specifically for their students he said yeah he looked into those as well but over the past few years it's really dried out and there are fewer and fewer companies actually going to the school to interview candidates at this point I was kind of like holy [ __ ] poor guy you see my method in job hunting in 2020 was basically just doing that I cast a very wide net and applied to hundreds of jobs both online went to networking events and also took advantage of the school network I was in and I did fine and my peers all did fine too but clearly things are different in 2024 if I were to be job hunting in 2024 this is what I would do so like we talked about earlier we need to make ourselves Stand Out by having internships learning and demand skills like AI skills so I would go do that and keep applying for jobs and maybe try to see if anybody would adopt me as a nepple baby but at the same time I wouldn't be holding my breath and just hoping someone would give me a job I would actually be building my own freelancing career on the side in 2024 we live in what is called a gig economy which is defined as a labor market characterized by the prevalence of short-term contracts where freelance work as opposed to permanent jobs according to a report by team stage 36% of us workers are now part of the gig economy with nearly a third of us workers having a gig job as their primary engagement this is super interesting a third of people in America no longer have a full-time job they just focus on part-time work freelancing Contracting gig work the report also predicts that by 2027 over 50% of the US Workforce is likely to participate in the gig economy the this makes a lot of sense as companies are laying off full-time employees they still have work that needs to get done right so in their place they hire contractors and Freelancers and part-time people these gig workers to go and do these jobs instead so it kind of makes sense to not like fight this trend and just still try to go for the smaller number of full-time jobs now why don't we actually go with this trend and also start participating in the gig economy to cavia here though is to do well in the gig economy you need to have a specialized enough skill set so that you're in demand for a specific project for a specific company as you see this ties again into this whole theme of needing to be more specialized in needing to stand out so in 2024 I would be doing everything in my power to be learning these unique skill sets and then just Plastering them all over my social media so that people will know about me and companies would know that I'm offering these services this video is already really long but let me know in the comments if you want me to make a video about how it is that I would start a freelancing business a gig economy business in 2024 anyways okay let's now actually finish off the rest of my career story where we left off I eventually landed a full-time job at meta as a data scientist which was that nice cushy job that I really wanted to have at that time fun fact though when I quit to pursue content and freelancing full-time I actually did this only a few months before the first meta layoff started so chances are if I actually stayed at meta I would have gotten laid off as well who knows anyways my point being that in 2024 knowing that this was going to happen even if I did have a nice cushy job right now I would not be chilling the economy is not great layoffs are happening everywhere there's no such thing as job security these days I would be making a point in diversifying my income and building out other sources of income so that if I do get laid off it won't hurt as much and who knows maybe it would be like a blessing in disguise because I already have a freelance career that's taking off and I would just be like well I guess I got laid off take my severance pay very good severance package and just pursue freelancing full-time all right so this is the end of today's video I hope that was helpful just going through I guess like my past and talking about the choices that I would have made instead in 2024 let me know in the comments what stage of your career you're at right now and what are the questions that you're asking yourself what are decision points that you're trying to make and I will see you guys in the next video or live stream

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