Yes, it's wrong, in _general_.  Perhaps someone's already mentioned it.  But 
the truth is that "it's not what you know, but who you know".  That's always 
been the case.  E.g. I knew a very technical engineering-oriented (white male), 
with a physics degree, working for me in a programming position.  After I left 
the company (because it was dying), he was laid off.  He couldn't find another 
gig there in the valley.  So he got his "project management certificate" and 
restarted the job hunt, thinking it would round off his tech with some mgmt.  
It failed.  So he moved back home to the midwest, where he continued his search 
... to no avail.  He acquired more certifcates, again uselessly.  He finally 
landed a part-time teaching job at a community college.  He's since expanded 
that into a kinda-sorta full-time teaching career (at that college and 
elsewhere).

His flaw, as I tried to describe before he got laid off, was that he didn't 
schmooze enough with the valley gurus-in-power.  He (like me) disliked those 
people so much that it made such schmoozing painful.  The difference is that he 
thought what he knows matters as much or more than who he knows.

Given that yesterday was women's day, this article is relevant:

https://theestablishment.co/being-a-nerd-is-different-now-that-im-a-girl-5f9231389b09#.xgahtqy3t

Even if you enjoy schmoozing with a crowd, it can get complicated.  We live in 
a complex foam of siloization.


On 03/09/2017 09:21 AM, Nick Thompson wrote:
> Thanks.  I have learned a lot from the blow back.  Apparently Tech jobs have 
> become more siloed in the last decade, so people can get stuck in their 
> soloes (Silos?  Is that like “potato”?)  I have a relative who may be stuck 
> in a silo, even while living in Eastern Mass.  I would think that such a 
> person would take a few months off and do a certificate or a crash course 
> somewhere and emerge in another silo, if the opportunity is as great as it 
> seems to be.   I used to tell my undergraduates, “smart, flexible people will 
> always find work.”  Is that wrong? 

-- 
☣ glen

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