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I am an MBA student with a mechanical engineering background who wants to redirect its career to software industry (business development, strategy or marketing). Employers now are not willing to take risks and they hire only people with relevant experience (which I dont really have). I'm looking for advice on:

  1. How to prepare myself and get the necessary knowledge
  2. How to convince potential employers that I have that knowledge
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The MBA should give you the credentials for business development, strategy, or marketing. Learning how to program isn't going to help you there. – kdgregory Jul 17 at 17:54
add some basic software classes to the MBA mix: data structures and operating systems...then you'll be good to go. BTW: I was an EE and switched. – Kenny Jul 17 at 19:39

closed as not programming related by McWafflestix, Thomas Owens, RSolberg, JB King, Robert S. Jul 17 at 19:28

7 Answers

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If you don't have any experience… Get some. I'm not trying to be snarky, but it sounds like you pretty much know what the next step is.

There's no magic secret to convincing potential employers that you have experience. Either you do or you don't. You can gain professional experience by finding jobs that you are qualified for but that would allow you to start learning new things on the job.

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+1 ... have software projects (possibly open source) that you can point them to. Depending on the type of industry you want to get in, you can even work on specific projects. For example, if you want to get into financial, prove that you can write code that does financial calculations and possibly even displays relevant graphs and analytics on financial data. – Joel Martinez Jul 17 at 17:47
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Well, you need to be able to show that you do have the experience. Open source projects are a great way to start. Additionally, a portfolio of programs which showcase your abilities will go a long way in convincing them.

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Hi Carlito,

I'm also a Mechanical Engineer turned Software Engineer. I completely concur with Tyson and Steve. Get experience. It will take some time. A lot of time actually.

To be a (good) programmer, you need to have a strong focus and desire to master it. But you have a great start being a mechanical engineer, because the concepts do translate to software design. You just need to learn the ropes.

  1. Join an open source project, and/or
  2. Pick a piece of software and write it. Learn the "hard way" (quickest way to get experience)

Don't hesitate to look me up personally to chat further.

-JG

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I don't think Carlito's trying to be a programmer. In his question, he says, "business development, strategy or marketing." Which, to me, sounds like he wants to do pretty much exactly what his MBA is supposed to have taught him to do. But, of course, managers who are developers or used to be developers are usually better managers than those who have no idea what developers do. – Tyson Jul 17 at 18:55
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Do you have experience with business development, strategy or marketing while you were a mechanical engineer? If you do, you could use use that as valid experience. Most companies in my experience wouldn't be absolutely won over, but it would get you a second look and maybe even an interview.

If you don't, use the time in MBA school to intern for a local software company. Use your MBA networks - the networking is half the value of the MBA anyway. If you don't find a decent local software company, see if you can help popularize a decent Open-source project that has plenty of tech smarts but poor marketing (lord knows there are a lot of those...). Essentially, paid or unpaid, you need to do what the Project Aardvark guys did at Fog Creek. Read about the stuff their Product Manager did and ask yourself who could you do that for, paid or unpaid.

If you do well, that'll be a killer thing to add to your CV.

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I'd pick just about anything programming-related you're interested in and focus on that. Just don't waste your time with a dead language. .NET has high demand in the workplace, as does Microsoft SQL, mySQL (if you go the Linux route), PHP (for web development), etc, etc. Find some good tutorials and just dive in.

Whatever you choose, document everything you learn in a public blog. Post your projects for the world to see. This will become an ever-growing public portfolio that'll be good for your career on many levels. To start it may be good to do some consulting work. And before long you'll have the experience companies are looking for.

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kdgregory's comment is right on the nail. Marketing, business development and strategy have nothing to do with programming.

I'd suggest that the first thing you should ask yourself is: do you want to write programs, or do you want to sell programs that solve people's problems?

Put another way, if I gave you an interesting software program, would you be able to work out the important things that make it interesting, then drop you in a room full of strangers and tell them about it?

Marketing really does boil down to this ability to tell stories and make people want to buy. While you can learn what this at business school, the best marketeers have an inbuilt ability to come up with brilliant ways to communicate and execute them really well.

And yes, a good marketeer has to sell. Especially in smaller startups, "lead generation" is vital to get business in. That can mean anything from cold-calling to writing advertising copy, but it also means working with potential customers to really understand who they are and what they want.

If you'd rather sit in the background writing the programs and creating the software, then marketing won't be a satisfying career.

A word of caution: "business development" in software firms almost always means developing partnerships, which itself means selling relationships with peer companies. And, except for the most naive of cash-rich VC-funded startups, "strategy" positions are held by VP-level fellows with lots of experience.

If this all still sounds like fun, then good employers will hire on potential ability. Show them that you can learn -- the MBA will be a good start there, especially if you have produced work that is directly relevant to the field you want to work in. You will have to interview lots of times, but as part of marketing is being keen, enthusastic and self-starting that shouldn't be a challenge.

As previously noted by others, your network of contacts will be vital, and you can expect your potential employers to check your online history. Brush up your LinkedIn profile, and work your existing networks such as old school colleagues as well as your MBA classmates.

Good luck,

-- Jeremy

Marketing Director, Borland EMEA, mid-1990s to 2000 or so

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If you've got a Mechanical Engineering background, work with that - maybe try to find a position with a company that does CAD software, or other engineering-support software. They'll value your engineering experience, and your MBA should be "good enough" to get you into a lower-level biz-dev or marketing position. If you're actually any good at that kind of thing, you should progress pretty quickly.

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