Career advice for your 20s and 30s
12:08

Career advice for your 20s and 30s

Tina Huang 22.04.2022 131 385 просмотров 6 057 лайков обн. 18.02.2026
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Sign up or learn more about SharpestMinds here: https://www.sharpestminds.com/?r=tina-huang ✉️ NEWSLETTER: https://tinahuang.substack.com/ It's about learning, coding, and generally how to get your sh*t together c: In this video, I hope I help y'all out there that are having existential and/or quarter-life crises with some career advice for your 20s and 30s! Btw thumbnail outfit was my default finance and consulting interview outfit. I am very grateful I went into tech where I can look like a homeless person instead. 🔗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 📲Socials ======================== instagram: https://www.instagram.com/hellotinah/ linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/tinaw-h/ discord: https://discord.gg/5mMAtprshX 🤯Study with Tina ======================== Study with Tina channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCI8JpGrDmtggrryhml8kFGw How to make a studying scoreboard: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KAVw910mIrI Scoreboard website: scoreboardswithtina.com livestreaming google calendar: https://bit.ly/3wvPzHB 🎥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 a data scientist at a FAANG company. I was pre-med studying pharmacology at the University of Toronto until I finally accepted that I would make a terrible doctor. I didn't know what to do with myself so I worked for a year as a research assistant for a bioinformatics lab where I learned how to code and became interested in data science. I then did a masters in computer science (MCIT) at the University of Pennsylvania before ending up at my current job in tech :) 📧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! :) #tinahuang #careeradvice

Оглавление (6 сегментов)

  1. 0:00 Intro 148 сл.
  2. 0:37 Get Started! ! 777 сл.
  3. 3:57 2. Don't Be Afraid to Commit 317 сл.
  4. 5:20 Learn From Your Senpais 750 сл.
  5. 8:39 Create a Vision For Yourself 503 сл.
  6. 10:42 Don't Stop Learning After School 291 сл.
0:00

Intro

this video is sponsored by sharpest minds but more about them later in the video hey guys how's it going welcome back to another video before we get started i just wanted to let you guys know that i have a newsletter called boops keyboard it's a weekly newsletter about learning productivity coding and basically how to get your together so if you're interested check out this link over here also linked in descriptions it is totally free so in this video i'm going to talk about my career advice for people in their 20s this video is the video that i wish that i had when i was first starting off my career at 20 and i think it would have saved me at least a few existential crises as well as a couple years along the way career advice number one is to get started oh
0:37

Get Started! !

my god i have known so many people who are just like i don't know what will make me a lot of money that i would like and that i'm good at and then they kind of just like agonize over this they bounce around a lot of different unrelated industries and different jobs war even worse they just kind of put it off and take jobs that they know that they wouldn't want to stay in the future and just hope that one day they will just magically figure out what it is that they want to do and then they can start their lives you see the mistake is that you shouldn't be running around trying to figure out what you like what you're passionate about instead you should be getting started and developing skills that are considered valuable to society by the way i highly recommend this book called so good they can't ignore you it talks a lot more about this and i talk about it as well in this video over here so you know i started off in my undergraduate doing pharmacology and the issue is that i really just didn't like medicine like i did everything that i had to do i did the clinical work i did the research i had my grades and stuff but i just really didn't like it so at some point i was just like i can't do this right like i'm done so after those four years of working really hard i basically had like a really big extra big existential crisis because i didn't know what to do now here comes that quarter life crisis everyone's talking about so at that time i didn't know too much but i did know is that from the people that graduated from my undergraduate the people who didn't have issues landing jobs and the people who got paid high salaries were the people in computer science and computer engineering like basically the people who knew how to code so i took a couple courses in computer science and then i got a job in bioinformatics which is like applied data science to biology and it was like the only place that would hire me because i had that biology background i learned how to code in r i also learned how to apply coding to a real world context after doing that for about a year i was like okay like i think i can do this you know this is okay so i thought that i should accumulate more of this valuable skill set by doing a computer science masters at the university of pennsylvania in the states because then i could really be like those cs people and from that program i saw that people got really good tech jobs that had really good salary and really good perks and i wanted to do that so that's what i did by focusing on developing a skill that is considered to be valuable instead of trying to figure out what i was passionate about that allowed me to become valuable i started to figure out what parts of coding that i liked higher level programming as opposed to lower level programming i also explored data science which i liked more than software engineering and from there i explore different industries like finance and tech and different topics like integrity for example i was able to do this because i had that valuable skill set i'm pretty sure if i just like sat there and just try to like think really hard about what it is that i wanted to do what is i like to do or just like tried a bunch of random things um i probably still wouldn't have figured it out and my 20s would have just flown by like that it's the fact that you can't build these skills overnight you know like they take a lot of time to nurture and to develop just because you decide that you want to be a teacher where data scientist you want to be a software engineer you can't just suddenly become that because why would anybody hire you to do that so if in your 20s you waste a lot of time and you just kind of like bounce around different jobs in different industries then you wouldn't build up these skills and these accomplishments and these connections that are the foundation for establishing and building up a career this is a great segue into career tip number two it is the fact that career decisions are not as set in
3:57

2. Don't Be Afraid to Commit

stone as you probably think it is i think the reason why people don't commit in the first place is because they feel like if they commit to something then that just like locks them in like they have to do this now for the rest of their lives and i think that's a really big misconception there's a lot more fluidity in these careers than you probably think there is like even for people who get it md decide to be a doctor i personally have known several people who then go on to do med tech or like pharmaceutical or medical device sales we're consulting people hop around all the time and as time goes on there's certain new jobs are being created certain things that are being disrupted and your career will also shift with that i have a friend who went from software engineering into sales and he's like absolutely killing it it's because like he has that coding background right so he's able to automate a lot of the sales funnels and also figure out like where it is that he should be investing in a really common hop is also from data scientist to product manager so pick an in-demand skill and get good at that first and then you can pick up other skills along the way my criteria for what is a good skill to pick is that it pays well and is in high demand it doesn't lock you in so not something that's like super niche and something that you don't hate of course i'm really biased i think that learning how to code is one of like the best skills that you can possibly pick up but there are also obviously other ones as well like video editing content marketing so get started okay i promise everything's gonna work out third piece of career advice for
5:20

Learn From Your Senpais

people in their twenties learn from your senpai back when i was doing pharmacology i literally thought that there were four career paths i could choose from i become a doctor a pharmacist a nurse or do research like that was it in fact all of the people i saw went down those paths but that wasn't true at all there were lots of people that went on to different things as well there are people who went to politics patent law and this is where having mentors can be so crucial and so important i guess i turned out okay but if i had someone who could have told me hey like there's so many more options out there here are the things that you might have not considered are in demand and they may have been able to introduce me to other people other connections that would have further allowed me to make better decisions and also opportunities like people these people can give you referrals right to like different companies and different places when i wanted to make that switch from pre-med into doing coding and computer science if i had a mentor i would have done that way sooner and because my program was very geared towards people who became software engineers i had to figure out a lot of things myself i learned about computer science knowledge and software engineering and i didn't really know that much about data science so i had to go learn sql by myself for example and do all that interview perhap by myself now when i think about something that i want to do something i even want to explore the first thing that i do is try to find a mentor in that space for example kenji is my mentor for doing youtube in data science and at work i talk to lots and lots of people who are in adjacent roles and also more senior than me for me to understand where my career was developing what are the options that were open to me the question is probably how do you find a good mentor then sometimes you send people a terrible video and for some reason they respond to you and they cheer you on think you can also ask your senpai's who graduated college before you and they can offer their guidance or you can just kind of mention what it is that you're interested in to your friends and your family and they might be able to introduce you to someone who works in that field however with that being said i know that sometimes you just don't know anybody in that field um and just cold calling people probably they don't work out super well for you so in cases like this in my opinion it's not a bad idea to be open to paying for mentorship nowadays there's a lot of platforms that offer services to get guided mentorship like official mentorships that you pay for um that can help you land different roles help you explore different options and if you're interested in transitioning into data science specifically then you should be very interested in the sponsor of today's video sharpest minds the world of data science is getting increasingly more broad and subdividing and splintering into sub niches and sub disciplines cookie cutter curriculums from boot camps and moocs can only get you so far they're great starting points but they have to be general to appeal to a wider audience plus there's a big gap between the data science fundamentals that you learn in a bootcamp and what it's actually like in practice a great way to close this gap is to find a data science mentor who's able to help you with your specific goals and weaknesses sharpest minds is a marketplace for data science mentorships it's home to 400 plus mentors senior data scientists and machine learning practitioners working at top tech companies startups and blue chip companies you can sign up for free and find a perfect mentor for you and the best part about sharpest minds is that you don't pay unless you land a job mentors on sharper's minds invest their time in you on an income share agreement so everyone's incentives are aligned they make money only when you do two so check them out visiting the link over here also linked in descriptions all right back to the video advice number
8:39

Create a Vision For Yourself

four create a vision for yourself this is my vision in my vision book over here so i'm based in china canada and us but i'm able to travel and work wherever i want because i am fully remote and have multiple streams of income mostly online that is at least 50 passive very lofty goal this allows me to spontaneously travel different places and focus on what i find the most impactful work without worrying about making ends meet i'm running my own business and i have a team that i trust and the business is running smoothly and i can focus on learning and creating content i also have goals that i set on a year by year basis as well as metrics to measure my progress towards those goals i won't go into too much detail about this here but you can check out this video over here you might have noticed that in my vision the career aspect and the lifestyle aspect they interact with each other a lot and that's because for most people your career determines a large part of what your lifestyle is going to be so if you can't envision like exactly what your career is going to look like you can do something like me like envision what your lifestyle is going to be like how do you want to live your life like for example if you want to be able to travel around a lot all over the world then you probably shouldn't be picking something that is specific to a certain region so now this vision that i have over here is it going to change yes as life happens as i learn new things as the world around me changes it is definitely going to change a lot over the years but i still think it's really important to have this working version because it gives you something to work towards oftentimes the most life-changing things are not natural progressions of your day-to-day life they're the intentional things the stuff that you go out of the way to do the things that are hard for example this youtube channel changed my life but i didn't just like accidentally become a youtuber and grow my channel nor did i accidentally go and get a computer science masters the one thing that i do want to point out though is that you should make sure that this vision is your vision often times parents in society they have an idea of what they want your life to look like and it's really normal for us to just like internalize it and accept it like for example my mom was like tina you should become doctor is good and i was like yes okay i'm not saying that you shouldn't take the advice of other people like definitely do that but in the end make sure that you are the one that's making that choice because it's your life career advice number five
10:42

Don't Stop Learning After School

don't stop learning after school the world that we live in changes so quickly when i started university back in 2013 data science was like a newfangled thing it was so niche at that time and machine learning was like essentially magic over the past year social media content creators that was considered like not a real job and now it's considered like the dream job of so many people in gen z and also very recently the pandemic it's completely shifted the way that we work so many jobs are remote now and that opens up so many different opportunities things are changing so fast and it's only going to be faster and faster so it is a huge mistake if you're like i got a job um now i can stop learning it's really important to upskill your skill set to keep up with the times and also to be able to take advantage of the new opportunities that are now available like i said before careers are fluid as new opportunities pop up and you take advantage of these you're slowly shifting your own career into something that it works for you something that you love not to mention there's just things that they don't teach you at school like stuff like budgeting personal finance investing these things you need to learn on your own and it is extremely important that you do so as soon as possible all right that's all i have for you guys today do comment below if you have any big career choices or challenges that you're facing right now myself and other people in the comments might be able to help i will see you guys in the next video where livestream

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