As I embarked on my one last week of freedom before going back to work, I decided to do some postmortem analysis on my job search process. Since I’m a nerd I made it into a methodical data mining exercise 😛 Anyway, here goes!
After 7+ years in consulting, I was looking for a career transition for several reasons:
- The higher up I move, the more I have to project manage and sell, two things I don’t actually enjoy doing.
- I like to gather a lot of information and understand things from multiple perspectives before making recommendations, and the time sensitive nature of consulting projects doesn’t allow for in-depth study most of the time.
- I want to understand how a company operates as a whole, instead of just focusing on one specific function.
- I want to make long-term contribution to something that I can see growing.
I reviewed my strengths and weaknesses and came up with this SWOT analysis:
Having picked up a lot of random skills throughout the years, and being the curious person that I am, there were a lot of jobs that I was interested in and thought I could do, everything from financial analysis to corporate development to marketing research. So I actually started my job search by looking at companies I wanted to work for, and combing through their careers page to look for anything that I might be able to do. This was quite a fun, since during the process I was able to discover many cool new companies and technology in general, even if I couldn’t work for them.
Long story short, after a while I decided the best fit for my skill set and interest would be something that involves:
- Business analytics – I love digging into data to find trends and interesting stats, and figuring out what it all means
- Financial analysis – I also love building Excel models. I don’t even really care what they are for. Just love building them (again, nerd).
Unfortunately I don’t have enough experience in either of these to make a lateral move from my current position. I can’t “manage” someone else in a job I’ve never really done before. So I accepted the fact that I will likely need to take a step down in terms of level and pay to get on the right career track. After all, title and money matter a lot less than being excited about going to work!
Now that I had my search words, I went back to the company list. Ideally I wanted to work for companies that fit at least three of these criteria:
- Tech company (that part wasn’t hard!)
- Less than 200 people
- A product that I use or like
- Located in the city (hopefully within walking distance)
- Can wear jeans and flip flops to work (super important, also reflects the kind of culture I want to be part of)
- Growth potential
Well, with these constraints the pool ended up not being that big. I started passively looking for a job in October. This was a scary thing to realize, but I haven’t really looked for a job since 2006. That was almost a decade ago!! So I had a pretty slow start with this and two lessons were especially important from this stage:
- Apply for lots of jobs, even ones you don’t want, just to practice. My second interview in 10 years was with Airbnb for a global operations analytics position which I absolutely coveted. I’m pretty sure I could have done the job well. I completely bombed the interview because I was so out of practice.
- Keep applying for jobs even if you really like certain companies and think you have a pretty good shot. Look at this table — I applied for 10 jobs in 3 months! That’s just… stupid. What was I thinking?!
So of the 45 applications I did manage to submit, well, I didn’t hear back from 73% of them. Eek! I think the biggest reasons are what I already anticipated:
- Lack of industry/corporate experience
- Lack of direct experience for the role
- Too many years of work experience for the position
Thankfully after I got passed the resume review, I didn’t do too bad on the interviews. The main reasons for not moving on to the next rounds generally involved:
- People/cultural fit – I think there was a mutual lack of affection during hiring manager interviews for some
- Salary expectations – I’m willing to take a reasonable pay cut, but I do live in a ridiculously expensive city
- Position fit – The position was too high or too low for my experience
When I first started the job search, I figured I would have the best chance at getting into a finance position. After all, that’s where most of my experience lies, and CPA + Big 4 background would mean a bit more to people in the finance world. Surprisingly, I actually didn’t do that well with the finance crowd. I think the difficulty is due to:
- Finance people generally really want people who already have the right experience
- HR not super clear on what the hiring manager wants and let me slip through the crack
- I probably wasn’t super excited about certain types of finance roles
I realized the jobs that fit me best is generally something that involved a combination of business analytics and financial analysis. Unfortunately a lot of times the roles I’m seeking aren’t defined appropriately. So I ended up looking for anything that includes “analysis” in its job description, which is a much wider net, but I had plenty of time to sift through the job postings.
Well, in the end, I found a position that I’m quite happy about. I’ve used the company’s product for years, the interviews were challenging yet friendly, the culture seems to be open and collaborative, I get to walk to work, but most importantly, I can define my role and my future career.
Being unemployed for an extensive period is hard. While I wasn’t worried about not ever finding a job, it would defeat the purpose of quitting if I ended up in a similar role and company. Not that I didn’t think about giving up.
But I’m really glad I didn’t give up.
Leave a Reply