Unregistered |
10-07-2021 01:31 AM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by Unregistered
(Post 177357)
New engg grad here with little exp in coding, tbh, I feel like the salary that ACN offers; 4k+$400 allowance is a lot for a fresh grad. About 90% of my peers in engineering roles are offered abt 3.2k~3.8k as a fresh grad. It's hard to find a company that accepts people with no technical background in IT and pay a lot. Furthermore, my parents earning $2k+/mth for 20 over years without promotion, is it weird that I feel it's okay to just stay content with $4k forever? Feel it's more than enough for me.
That said, I'm interested in applying for the Technology Analyst program but here are some of my concerns:
1) Anyone (with or without IT experience in ACN) ever experience imposter syndrome?
2) I'm fine with OT-ing on the weekdays. But can't be out of 20 working days, everyday need to OT right? Even on the weekends?
3) We will be thrown into whatever projects that needs manpower, but what are some of the actual work done daily? Making slides? User Acceptance Testing?
4) Any advice if I should go for the program or what skills I need to be able to perform decently in a tech field? (coding?)
Still don't know what a Technology Analyst (with no exp) does. It's either this or applying for a traineeship. Sorry for the long post.
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1) Learn on the job one, curve is steep, high pay for a reason. If can pass interview means they think you got the tenacity to do the job.
2) OT usually weekdays, weekend nobody working one. OT only because deadlines, need to deliver outcome. If not OT for what?
3) You get interviewed, Manager like you, then choose you to join their account/team, not you choose one. Wait long long you get to choose as a fresh hire. Slides? Tech Analyst role leh, think you can answer yourself.
4) Traineeship vs full time job with pay, insurance, perks and CPF, no brainer. Many fresh grad these days are afraid of upskilling. What you learn in school really less than 20% can be applied straight into the job. Like you said for engineering, pay not as high like other field. IT jobs in demand but low supply. But more importantly coding is becoming an essential skill. Don't have to be a pro but need to be able to read and understand things. Think you apply first bah, whether you are accepted is one thing, don't count your chickens before they hatch. Market is oversupply now, limited jobs due to pandemic. If you have been applying for roles you would know, hundreds of applicants for one role.
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