What is the best way to look for jobs if you’re not tied to any particular city? /u/nozoningbestzoning CSCQ protests reddit

I have a somewhat specialized skillset, and I don’t really care about what city I live in. I’m experienced with a decent resume, but not so much that I can just walk into any tech job and get it, especially in this economy.

Is there a good way to search for jobs on a national level? Normally I’ll go on indeed or linkedin and search by city, but I worry I’m missing good opportunities by searching for a specific city (and frankly, all of the well-known tech cities can be kind of competitive). For all I know, the perfect job for me could be in Marquette, MI, and I’d have no idea. Especially now, I just failed my final round with Amazon and another smaller tech company, so the pressure is on to get a job before the gap in my resume grows too big or I run out of money.

The issue is if I enter “united states” in the location box, I mostly get remote jobs or I just get whoever is paying the most for ads nationally (which usually is because they want an MIT grad with 10 years experience, not because they’re desperate). Am I missing something? How does everyone else search for jobs?

submitted by /u/nozoningbestzoning
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​r/cscareerquestions I have a somewhat specialized skillset, and I don’t really care about what city I live in. I’m experienced with a decent resume, but not so much that I can just walk into any tech job and get it, especially in this economy. Is there a good way to search for jobs on a national level? Normally I’ll go on indeed or linkedin and search by city, but I worry I’m missing good opportunities by searching for a specific city (and frankly, all of the well-known tech cities can be kind of competitive). For all I know, the perfect job for me could be in Marquette, MI, and I’d have no idea. Especially now, I just failed my final round with Amazon and another smaller tech company, so the pressure is on to get a job before the gap in my resume grows too big or I run out of money. The issue is if I enter “united states” in the location box, I mostly get remote jobs or I just get whoever is paying the most for ads nationally (which usually is because they want an MIT grad with 10 years experience, not because they’re desperate). Am I missing something? How does everyone else search for jobs? submitted by /u/nozoningbestzoning [link] [comments] 

I have a somewhat specialized skillset, and I don’t really care about what city I live in. I’m experienced with a decent resume, but not so much that I can just walk into any tech job and get it, especially in this economy.

Is there a good way to search for jobs on a national level? Normally I’ll go on indeed or linkedin and search by city, but I worry I’m missing good opportunities by searching for a specific city (and frankly, all of the well-known tech cities can be kind of competitive). For all I know, the perfect job for me could be in Marquette, MI, and I’d have no idea. Especially now, I just failed my final round with Amazon and another smaller tech company, so the pressure is on to get a job before the gap in my resume grows too big or I run out of money.

The issue is if I enter “united states” in the location box, I mostly get remote jobs or I just get whoever is paying the most for ads nationally (which usually is because they want an MIT grad with 10 years experience, not because they’re desperate). Am I missing something? How does everyone else search for jobs?

submitted by /u/nozoningbestzoning
[link] [comments] 

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