Originally posted by: BCYL
To put it bluntly:
There are plenty of people who has a college degree, same or more experience than you, and way younger than you... You have to ask yourself: what do I bring to the table these other people can't?
Originally posted by: Eltano1
Jagec, you just hit the nail in the head. That is what I need to do, emphasized my assets, age, maturity and experience 🙂 🙂 🙂
Thanks, I feel much better now (the wine is helping also 🙂 🙂 😉:wine:
Originally posted by: KMurphy
In reality, it's your age. According to law, it's "there were more qualified applicants".
You're 50 and only 10 years experience?
Like so many other things, it starts out being about machines, but it always ends up being about people.Originally posted by: Eltano1
phantom, you are correct and I now that my writing is not the best. I have dedicated my college courses to more technical stuff than to improve my grammar. That is my constant battle with myself and my wife (she is a translator and her english is impecable), but working full time (I was) and going to college full time as well, it does not give you more time to improve or take grammar courses (I know, I know I should have but I did not). I went the long way hoping that the more technical and certifications classes I took the better. Unfortunally, at my age is getting harder and harder to improve it, even though I try to do so. Again, I always though that IT is more working on PCs and hardware, and helping users than writing, but it seems that I'm wrong.
Regards
Eltano
Then he'll be 50 and have 0 years experience. Besides, IT changes so fast that the field was almost unrecognizable 10 years ago. Going back further than that is pretty much moot - I really don't think most employers care how good you were in DOS 3.2 running Banyan Vines anymore.Originally posted by: DaShen
Originally posted by: KMurphy
In reality, it's your age. According to law, it's "there were more qualified applicants".
You're 50 and only 10 years experience?
QFT.
Sorry OP, but it may be time to do something else.
Originally posted by: yllus
You don't have a degree, and at your age it's a hard sell for a company to invest in you for the long term.
Originally posted by: SampSon
You're too old for entry level tech positions.
Also many people who hire for IT want fresh young men with the ability to adapt quickly, endless amounts of energy/time, young and impressionable in business, generally accepted longer life span, cheaper to insure.
Originally posted by: SampSon
You're too old for entry level tech positions.
Also many people who hire for IT want fresh young men with the ability to adapt quickly, endless amounts of energy/time, young and impressionable in business, generally accepted longer life span, cheaper to insure.
Yes it would, and it would be a waste. Remember, we're all talking in generalizations here. Saying that "employers only hire young men fresh out of college" is like saying "men only marry blue-eyed blondes with big boobs". That may be the ideal, but what they can actually get and keep is often another thing.Originally posted by: Eltano1
True phantom, I was thinking the same when KMurphy posted that I have only 10 years of experience. I made a mistake, because I started before WIN95 showed up (what year was it?). So if I start working in another field would put me in a total disavantage.
Eltano