Offer review. Would you leave? /u/whoopsservererror CSCQ protests reddit

Offer review. Would you leave? /u/whoopsservererror CSCQ protests reddit

I currently work at a big tech company as a senior SWE. I’ve been here 1 year. TC is $250k. Good company, good team, WLB is good, and nothing to complain about. I’m not sure what my career trajectory looks like here, but it will always be great money for the area.

From what I can find online, and what I’m told, this company has never done “real” layoffs. They fire people individually before they get to that problem. (You know the layoffs on this sub where 500-2,000 people are laid off overnight.) I’m a top performer so I’m not worried about being let go, not to say it couldn’t happen.

I have an offer from a traditional F500 business for a senior SWE role that would be a $50-70k raise per year. Due to the location difference, I would have a 25-minute longer commute each way. After the additional expenses of commuting and other “stuff” related to the change, it would be a net ~$45k raise per year… all in stock. From what I read online it’s a good company to work for, but they tend to do layoffs (not PIPs).

In my mind, taking the other offer sounds like a no-brainer because more TC > less TC; however, if I were let go from the new company, I don’t think I would have the ability to make the same money I’m making today. The company I work for is not known for boomeranging. The only reason the F500 is commutable is that they offered to let me work half days the 2 days a week I would go to the office to offset the additional time (~1.5h each eay).

Thoughts on what I should do? My main question I am asking myself: Is more money worth the additional layoff risk?

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

​r/cscareerquestions I currently work at a big tech company as a senior SWE. I’ve been here 1 year. TC is $250k. Good company, good team, WLB is good, and nothing to complain about. I’m not sure what my career trajectory looks like here, but it will always be great money for the area. From what I can find online, and what I’m told, this company has never done “real” layoffs. They fire people individually before they get to that problem. (You know the layoffs on this sub where 500-2,000 people are laid off overnight.) I’m a top performer so I’m not worried about being let go, not to say it couldn’t happen. I have an offer from a traditional F500 business for a senior SWE role that would be a $50-70k raise per year. Due to the location difference, I would have a 25-minute longer commute each way. After the additional expenses of commuting and other “stuff” related to the change, it would be a net ~$45k raise per year… all in stock. From what I read online it’s a good company to work for, but they tend to do layoffs (not PIPs). In my mind, taking the other offer sounds like a no-brainer because more TC > less TC; however, if I were let go from the new company, I don’t think I would have the ability to make the same money I’m making today. The company I work for is not known for boomeranging. The only reason the F500 is commutable is that they offered to let me work half days the 2 days a week I would go to the office to offset the additional time (~1.5h each eay). Thoughts on what I should do? My main question I am asking myself: Is more money worth the additional layoff risk? submitted by /u/whoopsservererror [link] [comments] 

I currently work at a big tech company as a senior SWE. I’ve been here 1 year. TC is $250k. Good company, good team, WLB is good, and nothing to complain about. I’m not sure what my career trajectory looks like here, but it will always be great money for the area.

From what I can find online, and what I’m told, this company has never done “real” layoffs. They fire people individually before they get to that problem. (You know the layoffs on this sub where 500-2,000 people are laid off overnight.) I’m a top performer so I’m not worried about being let go, not to say it couldn’t happen.

I have an offer from a traditional F500 business for a senior SWE role that would be a $50-70k raise per year. Due to the location difference, I would have a 25-minute longer commute each way. After the additional expenses of commuting and other “stuff” related to the change, it would be a net ~$45k raise per year… all in stock. From what I read online it’s a good company to work for, but they tend to do layoffs (not PIPs).

In my mind, taking the other offer sounds like a no-brainer because more TC > less TC; however, if I were let go from the new company, I don’t think I would have the ability to make the same money I’m making today. The company I work for is not known for boomeranging. The only reason the F500 is commutable is that they offered to let me work half days the 2 days a week I would go to the office to offset the additional time (~1.5h each eay).

Thoughts on what I should do? My main question I am asking myself: Is more money worth the additional layoff risk?

submitted by /u/whoopsservererror
[link] [comments]  I currently work at a big tech company as a senior SWE. I’ve been here 1 year. TC is $250k. Good company, good team, WLB is good, and nothing to complain about. I’m not sure what my career trajectory looks like here, but it will always be great money for the area. From what I can find online, and what I’m told, this company has never done “real” layoffs. They fire people individually before they get to that problem. (You know the layoffs on this sub where 500-2,000 people are laid off overnight.) I’m a top performer so I’m not worried about being let go, not to say it couldn’t happen. I have an offer from a traditional F500 business for a senior SWE role that would be a $50-70k raise per year. Due to the location difference, I would have a 25-minute longer commute each way. After the additional expenses of commuting and other “stuff” related to the change, it would be a net ~$45k raise per year… all in stock. From what I read online it’s a good company to work for, but they tend to do layoffs (not PIPs). In my mind, taking the other offer sounds like a no-brainer because more TC > less TC; however, if I were let go from the new company, I don’t think I would have the ability to make the same money I’m making today. The company I work for is not known for boomeranging. The only reason the F500 is commutable is that they offered to let me work half days the 2 days a week I would go to the office to offset the additional time (~1.5h each eay). Thoughts on what I should do? My main question I am asking myself: Is more money worth the additional layoff risk? submitted by /u/whoopsservererror [link] [comments]

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Citi or SAP new grad swe /u/Skyblue_Socks CSCQ protests reddit

Citi or SAP new grad swe /u/Skyblue_Socks CSCQ protests reddit

For full time new grad software engineering, I’m wondering which offer I should accept. Citi is in Dallas and SAP is in San Francisco area.

I heard SAP is very relaxed and Citi also has pretty good work life balance but I also don’t want to be bored out of my mind at work

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

​r/cscareerquestions For full time new grad software engineering, I’m wondering which offer I should accept. Citi is in Dallas and SAP is in San Francisco area. I heard SAP is very relaxed and Citi also has pretty good work life balance but I also don’t want to be bored out of my mind at work submitted by /u/Skyblue_Socks [link] [comments] 

For full time new grad software engineering, I’m wondering which offer I should accept. Citi is in Dallas and SAP is in San Francisco area.

I heard SAP is very relaxed and Citi also has pretty good work life balance but I also don’t want to be bored out of my mind at work

submitted by /u/Skyblue_Socks
[link] [comments]  For full time new grad software engineering, I’m wondering which offer I should accept. Citi is in Dallas and SAP is in San Francisco area. I heard SAP is very relaxed and Citi also has pretty good work life balance but I also don’t want to be bored out of my mind at work submitted by /u/Skyblue_Socks [link] [comments]

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I got offered an internship with “deferred” payment /u/IAmNot_a_virgin CSCQ protests reddit

I got offered an internship with “deferred” payment /u/IAmNot_a_virgin CSCQ protests reddit

I applied for a paid internship through my university career site, and the listing seemed legit. I recently had an offline meeting with the founder of the startup, and here’s where things got weird.

The founder told me about the company and its patents, claiming he’s been working on this product for 8 years. According to him, the company is “close to completion,” and a certain electric car company CEO is set to review their product in 4-5 months. He seems very confident the company will succeed and get acquired or secure funding soon.

Here’s the catch: the internship is on a “deferred payment” plan. Essentially, I would fill out a timesheet, set my own hourly rate, and log my hours. BUT I’d only get paid once the company either:

  1. Gets acquired by a big player (e.g., the car company mentioned)

  2. Secures funding.

This all sounds very “too good to be true” to me. I’d essentially be working for free now in the hopes that someday I’ll get paid. I get that startups are risky, but this feels like a gamble with my time.

I want to get industry experience, but I’m wary of being taken advantage of. Should I run, or am I being overly cautious? Has anyone dealt with something like this before?

Would love to hear your thoughts or advice!

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

​r/cscareerquestions I applied for a paid internship through my university career site, and the listing seemed legit. I recently had an offline meeting with the founder of the startup, and here’s where things got weird. The founder told me about the company and its patents, claiming he’s been working on this product for 8 years. According to him, the company is “close to completion,” and a certain electric car company CEO is set to review their product in 4-5 months. He seems very confident the company will succeed and get acquired or secure funding soon. Here’s the catch: the internship is on a “deferred payment” plan. Essentially, I would fill out a timesheet, set my own hourly rate, and log my hours. BUT I’d only get paid once the company either: Gets acquired by a big player (e.g., the car company mentioned) Secures funding. This all sounds very “too good to be true” to me. I’d essentially be working for free now in the hopes that someday I’ll get paid. I get that startups are risky, but this feels like a gamble with my time. I want to get industry experience, but I’m wary of being taken advantage of. Should I run, or am I being overly cautious? Has anyone dealt with something like this before? Would love to hear your thoughts or advice! submitted by /u/IAmNot_a_virgin [link] [comments] 

I applied for a paid internship through my university career site, and the listing seemed legit. I recently had an offline meeting with the founder of the startup, and here’s where things got weird.

The founder told me about the company and its patents, claiming he’s been working on this product for 8 years. According to him, the company is “close to completion,” and a certain electric car company CEO is set to review their product in 4-5 months. He seems very confident the company will succeed and get acquired or secure funding soon.

Here’s the catch: the internship is on a “deferred payment” plan. Essentially, I would fill out a timesheet, set my own hourly rate, and log my hours. BUT I’d only get paid once the company either:

  1. Gets acquired by a big player (e.g., the car company mentioned)

  2. Secures funding.

This all sounds very “too good to be true” to me. I’d essentially be working for free now in the hopes that someday I’ll get paid. I get that startups are risky, but this feels like a gamble with my time.

I want to get industry experience, but I’m wary of being taken advantage of. Should I run, or am I being overly cautious? Has anyone dealt with something like this before?

Would love to hear your thoughts or advice!

submitted by /u/IAmNot_a_virgin
[link] [comments]  I applied for a paid internship through my university career site, and the listing seemed legit. I recently had an offline meeting with the founder of the startup, and here’s where things got weird. The founder told me about the company and its patents, claiming he’s been working on this product for 8 years. According to him, the company is “close to completion,” and a certain electric car company CEO is set to review their product in 4-5 months. He seems very confident the company will succeed and get acquired or secure funding soon. Here’s the catch: the internship is on a “deferred payment” plan. Essentially, I would fill out a timesheet, set my own hourly rate, and log my hours. BUT I’d only get paid once the company either: Gets acquired by a big player (e.g., the car company mentioned) Secures funding. This all sounds very “too good to be true” to me. I’d essentially be working for free now in the hopes that someday I’ll get paid. I get that startups are risky, but this feels like a gamble with my time. I want to get industry experience, but I’m wary of being taken advantage of. Should I run, or am I being overly cautious? Has anyone dealt with something like this before? Would love to hear your thoughts or advice! submitted by /u/IAmNot_a_virgin [link] [comments]

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Struggling to figure out which career I want to do /u/Finite_Resources CSCQ protests reddit

Struggling to figure out which career I want to do /u/Finite_Resources CSCQ protests reddit

I am currently a sophomore studying Computer Engineering and I can’t figure out what I want to do. Most of my life I have been a science and math kid, but also did a bit of coding so I picked CE as a major. I have mainly focused on web development and know a fair bit of HTML, CSS, JS, and react. I have used a few backend technologies, but haven’t used them a lot.

I do not think I am a good software engineer. That being said I am decently smart and hardworking. I currently have a 4.0 GPA and although I know that does not mean a lot, I feel that it means that I must have some potential. Most of my life I have focused on studying and haven’t invested a lot of time in developing new skills.

That said if I had to pick my strongest skill it would be web dev. However, I realized that this is not what I want to do with my life. I do not want to spend my life making CRUD React apps. I want to solve technically challenging problems and work on intellectually stimulating stuff. But I can’t figure out what I want to do. It seems that every software engineering job I see is looking for Fullstack web dev stuff as well as Docker and Kubernetes.

I am an international student, so will need to work in a field which helps me get an H1B Visa to stay here. I also don’t come from a lot of money, and although I understand that passion is important, money is a very important factor for me as well as job security. With my college education I have a big chance to change the trajectory of my life and achieve financial freedom for myself and family so money is very important to me.

Out of the classes I have taken, I have loved low level stuff and my favorite classes have been Assembly and parallelism classes. I would love to do stuff where I can work at a low level or just work on making things very fast as I do enjoy doing leetcode and designing fast algorithms.

With all this what do you guys think I should do?

TLDR: CE student with mainly web dev background does not want to be a CRUD app developer all his life. Looking for alternative career paths with good job security and very good pay. Likes systems and concurrency stuff.

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

​r/cscareerquestions I am currently a sophomore studying Computer Engineering and I can’t figure out what I want to do. Most of my life I have been a science and math kid, but also did a bit of coding so I picked CE as a major. I have mainly focused on web development and know a fair bit of HTML, CSS, JS, and react. I have used a few backend technologies, but haven’t used them a lot. I do not think I am a good software engineer. That being said I am decently smart and hardworking. I currently have a 4.0 GPA and although I know that does not mean a lot, I feel that it means that I must have some potential. Most of my life I have focused on studying and haven’t invested a lot of time in developing new skills. That said if I had to pick my strongest skill it would be web dev. However, I realized that this is not what I want to do with my life. I do not want to spend my life making CRUD React apps. I want to solve technically challenging problems and work on intellectually stimulating stuff. But I can’t figure out what I want to do. It seems that every software engineering job I see is looking for Fullstack web dev stuff as well as Docker and Kubernetes. I am an international student, so will need to work in a field which helps me get an H1B Visa to stay here. I also don’t come from a lot of money, and although I understand that passion is important, money is a very important factor for me as well as job security. With my college education I have a big chance to change the trajectory of my life and achieve financial freedom for myself and family so money is very important to me. Out of the classes I have taken, I have loved low level stuff and my favorite classes have been Assembly and parallelism classes. I would love to do stuff where I can work at a low level or just work on making things very fast as I do enjoy doing leetcode and designing fast algorithms. With all this what do you guys think I should do? TLDR: CE student with mainly web dev background does not want to be a CRUD app developer all his life. Looking for alternative career paths with good job security and very good pay. Likes systems and concurrency stuff. submitted by /u/Finite_Resources [link] [comments] 

I am currently a sophomore studying Computer Engineering and I can’t figure out what I want to do. Most of my life I have been a science and math kid, but also did a bit of coding so I picked CE as a major. I have mainly focused on web development and know a fair bit of HTML, CSS, JS, and react. I have used a few backend technologies, but haven’t used them a lot.

I do not think I am a good software engineer. That being said I am decently smart and hardworking. I currently have a 4.0 GPA and although I know that does not mean a lot, I feel that it means that I must have some potential. Most of my life I have focused on studying and haven’t invested a lot of time in developing new skills.

That said if I had to pick my strongest skill it would be web dev. However, I realized that this is not what I want to do with my life. I do not want to spend my life making CRUD React apps. I want to solve technically challenging problems and work on intellectually stimulating stuff. But I can’t figure out what I want to do. It seems that every software engineering job I see is looking for Fullstack web dev stuff as well as Docker and Kubernetes.

I am an international student, so will need to work in a field which helps me get an H1B Visa to stay here. I also don’t come from a lot of money, and although I understand that passion is important, money is a very important factor for me as well as job security. With my college education I have a big chance to change the trajectory of my life and achieve financial freedom for myself and family so money is very important to me.

Out of the classes I have taken, I have loved low level stuff and my favorite classes have been Assembly and parallelism classes. I would love to do stuff where I can work at a low level or just work on making things very fast as I do enjoy doing leetcode and designing fast algorithms.

With all this what do you guys think I should do?

TLDR: CE student with mainly web dev background does not want to be a CRUD app developer all his life. Looking for alternative career paths with good job security and very good pay. Likes systems and concurrency stuff.

submitted by /u/Finite_Resources
[link] [comments]  I am currently a sophomore studying Computer Engineering and I can’t figure out what I want to do. Most of my life I have been a science and math kid, but also did a bit of coding so I picked CE as a major. I have mainly focused on web development and know a fair bit of HTML, CSS, JS, and react. I have used a few backend technologies, but haven’t used them a lot. I do not think I am a good software engineer. That being said I am decently smart and hardworking. I currently have a 4.0 GPA and although I know that does not mean a lot, I feel that it means that I must have some potential. Most of my life I have focused on studying and haven’t invested a lot of time in developing new skills. That said if I had to pick my strongest skill it would be web dev. However, I realized that this is not what I want to do with my life. I do not want to spend my life making CRUD React apps. I want to solve technically challenging problems and work on intellectually stimulating stuff. But I can’t figure out what I want to do. It seems that every software engineering job I see is looking for Fullstack web dev stuff as well as Docker and Kubernetes. I am an international student, so will need to work in a field which helps me get an H1B Visa to stay here. I also don’t come from a lot of money, and although I understand that passion is important, money is a very important factor for me as well as job security. With my college education I have a big chance to change the trajectory of my life and achieve financial freedom for myself and family so money is very important to me. Out of the classes I have taken, I have loved low level stuff and my favorite classes have been Assembly and parallelism classes. I would love to do stuff where I can work at a low level or just work on making things very fast as I do enjoy doing leetcode and designing fast algorithms. With all this what do you guys think I should do? TLDR: CE student with mainly web dev background does not want to be a CRUD app developer all his life. Looking for alternative career paths with good job security and very good pay. Likes systems and concurrency stuff. submitted by /u/Finite_Resources [link] [comments]

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Feel like i can’t decide on a career path to follow. /u/_Giffoni_ CSCQ protests reddit

Feel like i can’t decide on a career path to follow. /u/_Giffoni_ CSCQ protests reddit

Title says it all. Right now i’m doing an associate degree on system analysis and development, but i haven’t really chosen a career path to follow. Frontend web development seems boring to me and not what i’d be into, backend web development seems interesting to me, but so do DevOps and Cybersecurity. Although, i feel like for those last two i’d have a harder time finding job offers on a a more begginer capacity. In general, i’m undecided. What do you think i should do?

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

​r/cscareerquestions Title says it all. Right now i’m doing an associate degree on system analysis and development, but i haven’t really chosen a career path to follow. Frontend web development seems boring to me and not what i’d be into, backend web development seems interesting to me, but so do DevOps and Cybersecurity. Although, i feel like for those last two i’d have a harder time finding job offers on a a more begginer capacity. In general, i’m undecided. What do you think i should do? submitted by /u/_Giffoni_ [link] [comments] 

Title says it all. Right now i’m doing an associate degree on system analysis and development, but i haven’t really chosen a career path to follow. Frontend web development seems boring to me and not what i’d be into, backend web development seems interesting to me, but so do DevOps and Cybersecurity. Although, i feel like for those last two i’d have a harder time finding job offers on a a more begginer capacity. In general, i’m undecided. What do you think i should do?

submitted by /u/_Giffoni_
[link] [comments]  Title says it all. Right now i’m doing an associate degree on system analysis and development, but i haven’t really chosen a career path to follow. Frontend web development seems boring to me and not what i’d be into, backend web development seems interesting to me, but so do DevOps and Cybersecurity. Although, i feel like for those last two i’d have a harder time finding job offers on a a more begginer capacity. In general, i’m undecided. What do you think i should do? submitted by /u/_Giffoni_ [link] [comments]

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I have no direct reports and I’m not an IC. How do I get out of limbo? /u/Yakb0 CSCQ protests reddit

I have no direct reports and I’m not an IC. How do I get out of limbo? /u/Yakb0 CSCQ protests reddit

My job title is “Team Lead”. This year all my direct reports were laid off or resigned. All the contractors who nominally report to me, have been reassigned to a new team where I have no visibility into their actions.

My boss wrote my yearly goals and removed all references to being an individual contributor. As you can imagine, this leaves me in a rather strange position. My boss is relatively happy with my work in my current role, but he admits he has no idea how long the current situation will last or what the future will hold.

I’m trying to change jobs before I get laid off. Ideally I’d like to continue in management. I have limited experience and I’m not going to get any more experience leading people or projects in my current position. I’m fine with switching to an IC role, with the understanding that I’m looking to move back into management at the new company. I was a senior UI engineer for years before being promoted.

However, I don’t do any coding in my current role (and I’m actively discouraged from doing so). There are no coding bullet points on my resume for my current job description. I’d have to spend a lot of time refreshing my skills if I wanted to take that route. For a variety of reasons going back to an IC role at my current company is not an option.

Any advice on the best way to find my way out of this?

submitted by /u/Yakb0
[link] [comments]

​r/cscareerquestions My job title is “Team Lead”. This year all my direct reports were laid off or resigned. All the contractors who nominally report to me, have been reassigned to a new team where I have no visibility into their actions. My boss wrote my yearly goals and removed all references to being an individual contributor. As you can imagine, this leaves me in a rather strange position. My boss is relatively happy with my work in my current role, but he admits he has no idea how long the current situation will last or what the future will hold. I’m trying to change jobs before I get laid off. Ideally I’d like to continue in management. I have limited experience and I’m not going to get any more experience leading people or projects in my current position. I’m fine with switching to an IC role, with the understanding that I’m looking to move back into management at the new company. I was a senior UI engineer for years before being promoted. However, I don’t do any coding in my current role (and I’m actively discouraged from doing so). There are no coding bullet points on my resume for my current job description. I’d have to spend a lot of time refreshing my skills if I wanted to take that route. For a variety of reasons going back to an IC role at my current company is not an option. Any advice on the best way to find my way out of this? submitted by /u/Yakb0 [link] [comments] 

My job title is “Team Lead”. This year all my direct reports were laid off or resigned. All the contractors who nominally report to me, have been reassigned to a new team where I have no visibility into their actions.

My boss wrote my yearly goals and removed all references to being an individual contributor. As you can imagine, this leaves me in a rather strange position. My boss is relatively happy with my work in my current role, but he admits he has no idea how long the current situation will last or what the future will hold.

I’m trying to change jobs before I get laid off. Ideally I’d like to continue in management. I have limited experience and I’m not going to get any more experience leading people or projects in my current position. I’m fine with switching to an IC role, with the understanding that I’m looking to move back into management at the new company. I was a senior UI engineer for years before being promoted.

However, I don’t do any coding in my current role (and I’m actively discouraged from doing so). There are no coding bullet points on my resume for my current job description. I’d have to spend a lot of time refreshing my skills if I wanted to take that route. For a variety of reasons going back to an IC role at my current company is not an option.

Any advice on the best way to find my way out of this?

submitted by /u/Yakb0
[link] [comments]  My job title is “Team Lead”. This year all my direct reports were laid off or resigned. All the contractors who nominally report to me, have been reassigned to a new team where I have no visibility into their actions. My boss wrote my yearly goals and removed all references to being an individual contributor. As you can imagine, this leaves me in a rather strange position. My boss is relatively happy with my work in my current role, but he admits he has no idea how long the current situation will last or what the future will hold. I’m trying to change jobs before I get laid off. Ideally I’d like to continue in management. I have limited experience and I’m not going to get any more experience leading people or projects in my current position. I’m fine with switching to an IC role, with the understanding that I’m looking to move back into management at the new company. I was a senior UI engineer for years before being promoted. However, I don’t do any coding in my current role (and I’m actively discouraged from doing so). There are no coding bullet points on my resume for my current job description. I’d have to spend a lot of time refreshing my skills if I wanted to take that route. For a variety of reasons going back to an IC role at my current company is not an option. Any advice on the best way to find my way out of this? submitted by /u/Yakb0 [link] [comments]

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What are some good tech companies that sponsor part-time masters? /u/throwaway30127 CSCQ protests reddit

What are some good tech companies that sponsor part-time masters? /u/throwaway30127 CSCQ protests reddit

I completed grad school a year ago and have started working at my first job since then. I am currently learning extra things that I wasn’t previously very good with and I want to enroll in part time masters specialization at good university. I started researching some of them and the fees are 100k+ for most. I am also preparing for interviews in my free time so I would like to prioritise the ones based on location and the benefit to pursue higher education. I remember previously Google used to provide this perk not sure if they still do. So what are some of the companies that offer such programs where they sponsor for your higher education?

submitted by /u/throwaway30127
[link] [comments]

​r/cscareerquestions I completed grad school a year ago and have started working at my first job since then. I am currently learning extra things that I wasn’t previously very good with and I want to enroll in part time masters specialization at good university. I started researching some of them and the fees are 100k+ for most. I am also preparing for interviews in my free time so I would like to prioritise the ones based on location and the benefit to pursue higher education. I remember previously Google used to provide this perk not sure if they still do. So what are some of the companies that offer such programs where they sponsor for your higher education? submitted by /u/throwaway30127 [link] [comments] 

I completed grad school a year ago and have started working at my first job since then. I am currently learning extra things that I wasn’t previously very good with and I want to enroll in part time masters specialization at good university. I started researching some of them and the fees are 100k+ for most. I am also preparing for interviews in my free time so I would like to prioritise the ones based on location and the benefit to pursue higher education. I remember previously Google used to provide this perk not sure if they still do. So what are some of the companies that offer such programs where they sponsor for your higher education?

submitted by /u/throwaway30127
[link] [comments]  I completed grad school a year ago and have started working at my first job since then. I am currently learning extra things that I wasn’t previously very good with and I want to enroll in part time masters specialization at good university. I started researching some of them and the fees are 100k+ for most. I am also preparing for interviews in my free time so I would like to prioritise the ones based on location and the benefit to pursue higher education. I remember previously Google used to provide this perk not sure if they still do. So what are some of the companies that offer such programs where they sponsor for your higher education? submitted by /u/throwaway30127 [link] [comments]

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Advice for a coffee chat with CEO /u/Low_Trifle7557 CSCQ protests reddit

Advice for a coffee chat with CEO /u/Low_Trifle7557 CSCQ protests reddit

I cold emailed an alumni of my school and my fraternity and they got back to me to chat. how do I prepare for a call like this so I can leave a good impression and then ideally convey my desire for an internship?

submitted by /u/Low_Trifle7557
[link] [comments]

​r/cscareerquestions I cold emailed an alumni of my school and my fraternity and they got back to me to chat. how do I prepare for a call like this so I can leave a good impression and then ideally convey my desire for an internship? submitted by /u/Low_Trifle7557 [link] [comments] 

I cold emailed an alumni of my school and my fraternity and they got back to me to chat. how do I prepare for a call like this so I can leave a good impression and then ideally convey my desire for an internship?

submitted by /u/Low_Trifle7557
[link] [comments]  I cold emailed an alumni of my school and my fraternity and they got back to me to chat. how do I prepare for a call like this so I can leave a good impression and then ideally convey my desire for an internship? submitted by /u/Low_Trifle7557 [link] [comments]

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