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Did you get lucky and stumble on your ideal job immediately?

Did you find a local small software house and send your CV off? How?

Did you go through graduate recruitment?

Did you start on an internship?


I know this is not programming related and off-topic but it could be an interesting question to those just starting their careers.

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True story:

I was in my first year of college, spring semester, when my older sister calls me to see if I wanted to apply for a summer internship at this company where she just started working. "Yes, please" I said, hoping to avoid another summer of washing dishes.

She called me back a few days later. "Can you come in for an interview?"

"Sure, when?"

"Tomorrow. 9:00am".

Luckily I didn't have any quizzes or tests the next day, so I hopped into my P.O.S. Nissan Sentra and drove 3 1/2 hours home. When I got there, I realized that the only suit I had was a tan corduroy leisure suit I last wore in 9th grade. The mall was closed, so I had to make do. Fortunately I was the same height as I was in 9th grade, but the trousers were a tight squeeze.

The next morning I showed up for the interview. I was there with a few other applicants, all smartly dressed. I looked like a reject from a Leisure Suit Larry game. We were taken into a room to do a "computer aptitude" test. We were given an hour to complete the test, but I was done in 20 minutes. I spent the next 40 minutes double checking my answers, worrying that I F-ed something up (it couldn't be that easy) and sucking in my gut to keep my pants from bursting.

We returned to the waiting area. Eventually I was ushered to an office to meet with an HR person. We shook hands, and as I went to sit down, I heard a loud ripping sound. "What was that?" the HR woman asks. Nervously I look down. The crotch of my pants was ripped wide open. Front to back.

"I think my pants just ripped."

"Oh? Let me see."

"That's OK."

She leans over her desk and can see the extent of the damage. "I think I have some safety pins here" she said, rummaging through her desk drawer. "Yes, here they are."

I stood up and nervously tried to re-attach my pants as best I could. She offered to help, and was giggling the whole time. We proceeded with the interview, which was only about 15 minutes long. I couldn't wait for it to end so I could high tail it out of there. Only I couldn't leave. That was just round 1. I was slated to interview with two managers in the MIS department, and they wanted to take me out to lunch with a few of their team leads afterwards. Great. Back to the waiting area.

A half hour later someone came down to escort me up to MIS. "So, you must be the flasher". We walked from the waiting area to the other side of the building, through the crowded atrium, up two flights of stairs, to the manager's office. It seemed that everyone we passed on the way was giggling and snickering. I was introduced to the manager, and sat down to begin the interview. "RIP!". One of the safety pins just ripped through the fabric. He laughs. I see my application on his desk. At the top, next to my name, is written "Flash".

I go through interview after interview, with managers and leads, for what seemed like hours. Finally, the interviews are over, and I head back to the first manager's office. "So, we'd like to take you out to lunch. What would you like?"

"Thanks, but I'm not really hungry," I said.

"Nonsense, it's the least we can do for all your trouble coming in on such short notice." I could see there was no getting out of it. It seemed like the whole MIS department was congregating in the halls, waiting for us to go to lunch. We piled into a few cars and went to a local restaurant. Everyone was really nice, but I knew they were laughing at me. People tried to make small talk with me, but all I could keep thinking of was to get the hell out of there. After lunch I had to return to HR, again.

"Thanks for coming in today. We'll contact you next week with our decision."

Finally, I could leave! I drove home as fast as I could and changed into clothes that fit. The tan corduroy leisure suit went right in the trash. I drove back to school, throughly exhausted and dejected. There was no way I would get the job. It was looking like another summer of washing dishes.

I got a call in the middle of the next week from the woman in HR. "Congratulations! We'd like to offer you one of our summer intern positions."

"Wow! Really?" I said. "I must have done pretty well on that aptitude test."

"Yes, you did, but we really liked the way you handled yourself under pressure. If that had happened to me, I would have left the interview. You must have been so embarrassed." I accepted the offer, and we agreed I'd start the Monday after the semester ended. "We're looking forward to seeing you again, but you may want to buy a new suit before you start."

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Well written story, thanks Patrick. – Simucal Feb 12 at 10:25
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Damn.. In the end, the pants became your greatest asset in gaining the job. ^_^ – DyreSchlock Aug 10 at 19:38
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Standing out and being memorable are the hardest parts of any interview process. Looks like you found a novel solution. – outis Aug 10 at 21:39
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Sounds somewhat similar to the job interview scene in "The Pursuit of Happyness" movie, where he has to interview wearing painter's clothes. – Aaron F. Aug 10 at 21:58
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I was half-way through my senior year at high school and I was offered a job at the school after I graduated in .NET web development.

That was 3 years ago and it's been a great experience all round. I'm about to leave and move on now that I'm almost finished my Uni degrees.

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I applied to a temp agency while I figured out exactly what I wanted to do and they set me up with a small company nearby who do employee management systems.

After a month I approached their head of development and asked if there were any jobs. There weren't but he interviewed me anyway and then a couple of weeks later offered me a job as a software developer.

The rest is history!

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I found a small software house and sent my CV off.

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My very first jobs was as a sysadmin at some small companies owned by my relatives. After that I got my first programmer job through a recommendation from a friend who was already working at the place. Ever since it's just been the standard career climb.

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My first job was easy. There where a lot of vacancies. So I wrote all interesting companies in the neighbourhood and chose the best.

The second job I found with a vacancy site. The third thanks to a google search. The fourth through my network and the fifth and last by a recruiting agency.

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DOE internship. It was a whirlwind 10 weeks of learning. I learned more in that 10 weeks than I had in the total of my freshman year of college.

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The people I was working for (in a non-programming capacity) had several computers but no programming capabilities. So I sat down and taught myself programming. That was in the 1970s however - things may be different now!

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I kind of drifted from undergraduate physics student to an application programmer at a scientific measurement instrument manufacturing company. First my summer jobs at the university's physics lab included just some programming as part of the research process. Already then I liked especially the programming part. My master's thesis included lots of programming in signal processing context.

Later on I sent my CV to the measurement instrument manufacturer. Although I wasn't a "real" programmer, I got the job because they needed somebody who understands the basics of the science in question, and is also able to program. Now I'm constantly learning.

Bottom line: keeping your abilities diverse can help to differentiate yourself form the mass. If you can do just one thing, there's always someone who can do it better. Combine disciplines!

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Only 185 more up votes and you could be the top ranked answer... so close... – JerSchneid Aug 11 at 0:28
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I started with internship. I coded DHTML & Javascript and ASP. Now when I look back, it was very helpful. today with ASP.NET, most developers do not know/want to learn UI design, HTML, Javascript, CSS, .. etc.

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My first programming jobs were internships (all needed during college). Worked at 3 different companies:

  • 1st primary school and make programs for kids
  • 2nd was research and programming in a big company(that had only 1 programmer)
  • as last a game development company where i learned the most.

I have no regrets that I did the first 2 internship because I learned a lot of 'non' programmic talking. I used to go in full detail code ;)

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My first programming job was for the university Technical Informatics department, while I was still a student. I had been financing myself by working half time as a paramedic, but at some point they decided to throw out all the part timers.

The same evening I went to the party of a friend, where I met one of the research assistants from TI. We knew each other from our sports club, and he told me that they had an open position, and wouldn't I like to get better aquainted with programming? Of course I said yes, and he organised an interview with his boss, and I got the job.

It was one of the best things that ever happended to me, I was working on real software projects, and the overall goal was to enable me to learn new stuff.

Oh yes, and I even got paid for that!

Conclusiuon: It never hurts to know somebody who knows somebody...

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Was a sysadmin and web designer (asp v3) before and during uni, after graduating I got a job as a Technical consultant for a international company implementing custom solutions, decided after a bit of internal politics and 18months that it wasn't technical enough for me and looked for a developer position. Sent off my cv, had a phone interview, went in for a face to face and started a month later ... just clocked up my 2 years still enjoying it and learning lots! :-)

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I got introduced to my first programming job, a year and a half ago, through the teacher that was tutoring me during my master thesis, then the same teacher suggested i became a freelance and got me a couple of other long-running jobs, including the one i'm currently working for.

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Internship

I was given a paid internship from a friend of a friend who was a team lead at a small software company. I would have never have gotten that opportunity if it were not for the volunteer web development that I did for a non-profit while I was in college because it was there that I met him and he got to know my skill set and work-ethic.

I would recommend to anyone trying to get a break in the field to work for free at first giving your time and skills to charities and community groups. Then you may find opportunity knocking it your door. The contacts you make by being active in the community when you are young are invaluable - otherwise you are stuck knowing only people who are starting their careers like you!

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I had a friend working in a company, and they had the need for a program to help them do their work. My friend then told them that he knows people who can do it and contacted me, so I ended up creating that program. That was on my second year of studying CS at university.

Actually all work that I've got has been through a friend. Either somebody in the company knew me an invited me, or somebody who knew me and the company introduced me to the company.

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While I was in my last year at university I started to apply for jobs. I knew I wanted to get out of where I was from and where I went to university (the same place, Limerick, Ireland) so I was applying for other parts of Ireland and also in the UK. I received interest from a company in Cambridge, UK, and went for an interview shortly after finishing university. I was eventually offered the job and I worked there for 6 and a bit years before being made redundant. It was a great company to work for though and I couldn't have asked for a better working environment.

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during my masters last semester we were required to do internships so I applied for internship where i got the first job and after compeletion of internship they were happy with my work so they offered me job in the same organisation

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I worked for Toshiba fixing laptops. During this time I developed several bits of report crunching software that turned useless reports into more meaningful reports. Toshiba advertised a position for a software engineer in R&D, and one of my colleagues suggested I apply for it, even though it was in another country.

I applied, and I was interviewed, and despite sucking completely at the interview, I was offered the job. I was offered the job because I was the only person that didn't bullshit my way through the interview. I admitted things I didn't know instead of trying to think up what a good answer would be.

I still work for Toshiba, but instead of fixing laptops in Wellington (New Zealand), I write software in Sydney (Australia).

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I got a student position at a very large corporation after attending a recruitment event they held in campus.

The first job after graduation was through a friend who already worked there.

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I was offered a job at a very small webdev firm after doing an internship there, basically rolled into it...

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I was a student majoring computer science.
someday I found job open for "Dragonball Online"

bang! that was it. I'm a game programmer now.

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My first job was working for a company that some friends of mine were working at. They had graduated the year before me and they helped get me hired as an intern during my last year in school.

I don't think what your first job is, is nearly as important how you handle it. Almost nobody gets the perfect job on the first try. You should plan on getting some useful experience to build your resume, but more importantly your contacts, so you can move onto something more challenging in 2 - 3 years.

  • It's good to let people know you are smart, so don't ever be afraid to throw in your 2 cents. Just remember that no matter how well you did in school, you will be working with people that have real experience. Lots of time experience teaches us that the technically correct thing isn't always the best solution. This is most often true when discussing efficiency, optimizations, and edge cases.
  • Take on extra tasks and get them done on time. Try to get your manager to give you tasks that really push you to learn and/or demonstrate that you know more than they are currently giving you credit for.
  • Ask questions when you don't know what you are doing, or what people are talking about. They won't think you are nearly as stupid for asking the question as they will if you let them think you understand and they realize a week later that you had no clue.
  • Get involved in the technical conversations that tend to happen in front of certain people's cubes. These are usually the smarter people. Getting involved will show them what you know, and that you are interested in your job. (Note: You have to be able to intelligently participate in these conversations. If you just stand there grinning and never say anything that truly adds to the conversation, people will think you are an annoying idiot, which is the opposite of your goal. ;-)

Overall, you want your first job to help you build a reputation as someone that pays attention and can get things done without a lot of oversight. If you do a good job at this, getting the next, better job should be easier. You might even find contacts you make at that first job helping you for the rest of your life, with references, as reliable coworkers that you each drag from job to job, etc...

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I got my first job when I entered the first year of CS.

It was at my father's company, working with help desk and overall structure of the network. After 6 months I sent a CV to a building administration company and got the job to work with Delphi/ASP and C#.

After another 6 months I sent a few CV and got a job in a real small local software house, where I learned a lot! Worked there with PHP, C#, Mysql.

Since then I waited more 6 months and started my own business, now I build only web-interface systems by my own, and growing my financial part.

Conclusion: Do not settle down with your regular job. Fools are the ones who are satisfied. Search always for the best. Be the best (to bad that i'm not =/ ).

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Internship is the way to go...

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I was in school and in fact preparing to go to a job fair type deal the next day; everyone was required to get an internship efore graduation so that's really what I was looking for.

That night I went out for a beer with friends and bumped into someone from my highschool who was a year older. I'd seen him around campus; he'd been in software development for 5 years and had gone back to school to get a degree to match. He said he would love to have an intern (technically, he had to do his internship as well, and that was kind of absurd, but he had someone else at work sign off on all the paperwork), so we started keeping in touch and the following fall I got signed up. That internship was not paid (the owners of that business were cheap), but eventually I started working their part time (paid 3 days a week, though I was coming in more often, first 4 days a week then 5), then full time, and then when that guy left for greener pastures I took over for him.

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With a background in real-time graphics programming and the demoscene as a hobbyist, the natural choice for me was the gaming industry. I did not have any strong opinions on where I wanted to work, I just knew I wanted to program games.

Seeing as there were only a few gaming companies in my area at the time, I applied to them all. I don't remember if either of them actually had any open positions announced, but I did not care. I just sent them e-mails with my resume and background, explaining that I wanted to work with programming games.

Of the four (I think, it's a long time ago...) requests I sent out, two of them got me interviews. The first interview did not result in a job, since they did not have any position suitable for me at the time. The second interview got me a job as a game programmer on an upcoming title. I did get recommended by a friend of mine who already worked there, but I like to believe I also got the job because of my skills and previous experience with graphics programming.

In later years I have also been in charge of hiring new developers (although not in the gaming industry), and I must say that showing a genuine interest in the field and/or company to which you are applying is a great advantage. As an employer I would always prefer the people who applied to our company because they had an interest in what we were doing rather than those you applied just because they wanted a job.

That being said, showing that you have an interest in programming in general is also a plus, even if you don't have any particular interest or experience in a given technical field or business area.

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For my first career job I went to a job fair in downtown Chicago.

After passing out all of my resumes I talked with somebody from a small company with a hand lettered sign on a sheet of loose leaf paper. This seemed more promising than all of the rest so I went back to a previous company asked for my resume back so I could make a copy. I handed the original to the first company and left. I had no idea where to make a copy so I didn't bother.

That company called me in for an interview and a coding test. I passed both with flying colors and had a job, 75 miles from home, a week later.

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I started building programs for my dad's company when I was pretty young. It was all simple stuff to handle the lengthy calculations they'd been doing pretty-much by hand. It didn't pay in cash, but experience, access to tools and a few handy reference books later I was on the road to a professional career.

My first real paid programming job was a work experience place as an Electronic Engineer. It's a requirement of all Engineering disciplines here to undertake a 6-month program working in the real world. You're expected to go out and apply to companies off your own back and find a position. No work placement, no degree.

I was hoping to do some DSP-hardware and interfacing stuff but there was a project working with C++ and VisualBASIC (ugh) that they put me on. I had some good mentors and I really made the most of soaking up knowledge while I was there. I learned more in that few months that I think I'd learned for the 3 years prior.

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My first programming job was pretty basic client side programming. I found it through a messageboard and just wrote the poster a private message. I just started doing my bachelors in computer science back then.

Since then I also started my own company, gained some exposure and after that I found my current job, or better said my current job found me through linkedin :). I would say, networking helps a lot in finding a good job or internship.

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