Ask HN: Where can I find stable employment without a degree?
I do not have a degree, but I do have a sizable amount of skills when it comes to Node, Networking, and Linux system administration. I have absolutely no idea where I should even begin to look for better employment than I have now.
I live in a medium-sized city in Illinois, and our job market is dead outside of retail/food.
Is there even one place that allows remote work, and will give an ambitious man, with decades of effort and learning under his belt, so that he can take proper care of his family? I can't go on at $11 an hour any longer. In general most programming and sysadmin jobs can be had without a degree (https://codewithoutrules.com/2017/04/06/you-dont-need-a-cs-d...). But if you want to work remotely there's another problem: you need to credibly demonstrate you can work independently. So make sure you emphasize that when applying, based on specific examples in your work history. There are sites like https://weworkremotely.com/ that list remote jobs. I tried to go to college, wound up homeless, living in a van trying to pay for it. Now that I have a family, it just crushes me that I couldn't complete it. That sounds awful. But the US is set up to fail people without money on pretty much every level, and that isn't your fault. Even if perhaps you happened to make some mistakes along the way, we all make mistakes... but some of us are lucky enough to have resources to help us get through the mistakes. You're feeling responsible. That's good. Looks like all you need is moral support. For now, forget about college. Try to support yourself and your family. Hopefully things will fall into place. Good luck! Moral support doesn't sound too bad haha. I have found meager wages working at a local repair shop, and have taken that time to hone my skillset into something useful. I have a firm handle on async Nodejs as a result, but it's hard to look at the applications I can make as useful when I struggle to put gas in the tank to get to the shop in the morning. I'll get 99% of the way to 'completing' something, like the react-native app I am developing, and spend two weeks asking myself "Why don't you just watch Deep Space Nine on Netflix? It's not like anything is going to make paying rent this month any easier." and wind up like I am today, on the verge of tears instead of learning redux. From my perspective, I have been chasing a dream that will forever reward me with not-enough-money for my efforts. Around here, at least, there are small one-to-three person shops that build websites for local companies, repair people's computers, things like that. And there's Geek Squad and equivalent jobs at bigger companies, that has a better hourly pay for some jobs it sounds like. Stuff like that. By programmer standards they won't pay well, but likely more than $11/hour. And it's a start, and it sounds like you can obviously do some work. So maybe instead of going straight for upgrading all the skills, start by trying to upgrade your pay by working for one of these? That way you get some benefit immediately, which might help with motivation. > I do not have a degree, but I do have a sizable amount of skills... The simple/hard thing to do is look for a person that you can help. To find people, do a key word sort on Linkedin in your town, see who is using Linux, etc... Try to target the likely boss for that company/group (look for Senior Manager/Director/VP/CTO). Reach out those individuals direct and have a live converation. That's how you will find hidden opportunities. Generally, small-medium sized companies are more flexible on degree requirements. Incidentally, holding a degree does not inoculate individuals for employment. You must hustle. Start talking to people you can help.