I'm in the same boat, went from a software engineer at Intel for 6 years to "oh sorry, this entry level position requires a master's and 15+ years experience" or "are you willing to relocate to San Francisco/New York/other very high COL area?"
I closed on a house 2 weeks before being laid off, I'm terrified.
If you're up for corp-to-corp and contract work, Dice is a very strong choice. The CEO of Indeed is a friend of mine, so I hate to admit this, but we've historically had very poor results with it.
Just got a new job after 3 months unemployment. While I'm glad to not be homeless, I'm going from 5 weeks vacation to 2, from full-time remote to dragging my ass to a cubicle 3 days a week. The worst part is putting that fake fucking smile on my face so my new bosses can't tell how much I despise being there.
Brother I feel you, but you still have a golden ticket. I just wound up back at minimum wage breaking my back, somehow, and I think about killing myself every day. I was making $22 an hour, great benefits, vacation time, etc. All gone because I was stressed out and thought I could find something else. Now I have nothing at all but overdrawn accounts and a million bill collectors calling me every day threatening me. Life could be worse.
I feel this and it's honestly one of my greatest fears. I did customer service for so long to get where I was working for petty bullies with management titles.
After hundreds of failures, I managed to get a government job since they were obligated to test me on some incredibly easy "standardized test" which automatically gets you an interview with the team.
At least in these cases you're less likely to be at the whims of a wholly inept HR person and instead at the whims of a wholly inept assessment third party. And the latter at least doesn't care if you're fresh on the market.
That's stellar. I'm finding myself being pushed out of consideration for almost every government or government adjacent field since I foolishly focus on the company before myself and don't have a degree for what I do. Hoping I can find something contracted if anything.
Ah, the irony is I have a degree but it worked against me since it's specialized--- you'd think I wouldn't have the 400+ applications rejected or ghosted, but every rung is filled with people asking too many years of exp, focusing on "objective facts" and ignoring soft skills like work ethics. (Incidentally, years worked on something isn't inherently good, it can mean you do the same bad job for longer, haha).
No degree, your best bet might be in IT. My dad started off at City Hall without a degree and moved up from an on call tech to something pretty decent. They likely still test you on basic computer skills but it's generally easy to learn.
One advantage you have at least is you can technically apply to anything. You don't have the burden of a degree forcing you into a given industry, and a lot of places will train you if they need the help (childcare and healthcare are always in desperate need and pay more than average). Try not to be discouraged!
satan! I usually only apply to 5-10 a week when im actively looking massively. I mean I look at a lot more but I only apply to things im pretty qualified for.
I did software testing for sound systems / IoT and their associated software. It was a fun mix of scripting, test planning, data. As a musician it really scratched that itch and as a nerd doubly so. Only now after being forced out have I come to realize I was riding a unicorn.
Nah thats bullshit. And this is coming from somebody who would tend to agree with you, but you can't always be so excruciatingly black and white. For example, my dream job is what I do in my free time, except in a non-profit organisation where I am not chained by an individual lack of resources. Some work furthers humanity. Some work is completely voluntary. Sometimes a dream job is that way to scratch the biological itch to keep our brains busy.
Additionally, this supports the bullshit capitalist argument that people wouldnt want to work anymore if not coerced into it. I believe people would still dream of doing important jobs that help humanity even out of their own free will.
Only a fool wants to work to make someone else rich. That is what a job is. Laboring for the benefit of a boss. Doing work is totally separate from that. The language you use is important. There's much good work to be done, that's true, but jobs are a construct of the ruling class. If you dream of any job you are sick. You are supporting the capitalists.