| ▲ | michaelchisari 3 hours ago | |||||||
Nepo baby. Joking (sort of). I can't say I know of any in the fields I'm familiar with. I've watched tech get increasingly top-heavy since the covid hiring boom and bust, although it was already trending that way. There are a lot of fields dominated by boomers on the verge of retirement that are the safest bet for people who want to be good and make a good living but don't care to be extraordinary. I've heard that from arborists, water treatment specialists, actuaries, a few others. | ||||||||
| ▲ | pfannkuchen an hour ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
Has tech really gotten more top heavy? I feel more like people kept flooding into the middle and bottom, and companies that used to focus on top talent got watered down with those middle and bottom types. A lot of the people getting laid off from Google and Meta would not have been hired at all in those places 15 years ago, for example. | ||||||||
| ▲ | dakolli 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
Nobody who has ambitions of being the top of their field in engineering wants to be a water treatment specialists, arborist or actuary (maybe actuary if you're a stats nerd). What you're saying is go do something on the based on the potential for you to be professionally successful.. What about people doing things they love? I hate these people telling people who love to do a certain thing that they should just become a plumber or an electrician. Not everything is about spending your life to make as much pieces of paper the govt tells you are worth something. I'd rather be in poverty working with computers everyday and doing what I love than make 10k a month being a plumber. I actually can't stand you people. | ||||||||
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