What do you do for a living?

ZJeepMI

Forum Member
I'm 18 and just finishing up my first semester of college at Schoolcraft, and I'm really starting to realize that I need to make a decision soon on what I should go to school for. When I was in high school I always just dismissed it, saying that i'd be a firefighter because that's what my dad is, but now there are no jobs for firefighters, and the pay is crap, but the job is kinda cool.

Looking into it more any type of computer science job is in demand, and some mechanical/electrical engineer job. But, i'm not sure if i'll like a desk job. So, I guess i'm really looking for ideas. What do you guys do? anyone have a desk job and like it or have any recommendations? Thanks guys.
 
Sales can be a tough way to make and easy living or an easy way to make a tough living. I bitch about my job from time to time because of the hours, but if you can get past that it's a good living
 
What do you LIKE to do?

Do what you love and you never work a day in your life. Also, learn to do what you love or learn to love what you do. Both corny phrases but the "successful" people in life will say it rings true.
 
I do IT support for a major company, I sit at a desk all night on facebook watching movies, the job is VERY boring and I'm about to look for a more fast paced job.
 
Went to school for IT, got picked up by a local software company and now do various software work, QA, project management, etc. I'm so glad, as I ended up not wanting to do hardware stuff and getting in anywhere on the networking side is so cut-throat. I love what I do, and the specificity of the knowledge gained here puts me in rare company.

They're based back in CT but when I planned to move out here they made an exception to company policy and let me telecommute. Haven't been to the office in 2 years and just work from home, also Netflixing all day :lol:

I also do powder coating & metal polishing on the side, and being home all day comes in handy for that.
 
union millwright,like the job but work is soooooo slow right now,im lookin for something that im not layed off 6 months a year
 
Well if you mean hobbies, I love the mechanical aspect of cars. Not fixing them, but the design of the engine or transmission. I find it really incredible that we are able today to make fuel efficient, powerful, incredibly smooth engines. But, I'm also very good with computers, and do enjoy working with/on them. I won computer geek in high school my senior year :thumbsup:. So, I'd probably do well at a computer based job, hence my interest in computer science.

Right now I work in a screen printing shop. It's boiling hot in the summer, and super cold in the winter. I come home covered in ink/dirty water/whatever else I come across everyday. I don't like this kind of work at all, it's mindless work for 8 hours straight and there is really no end product. Plus having to dress crappy everyday and coming home smelly is a huge bummer for me. I'd much rather go to work in a shirt and tie and do something cool or important, but it is just a college job.

Those of you with IT jobs, what do you like or dislike about it? Are you paid decent enough to live comfortably?
 
Stay away from all forms of public service. The pay
sucks and you get treated like crap because everyone
is on edge.

Find something you can use your mind to make $$. Being a
fireman is very honorable and exciting... until
you hit 40!

When your body starts to go tge job isnt
so fun anymore.

Good luck whatever you choose. Your generation
will either pull us out of this hell hole we are in,
or it will be like a Mad Max movie.

Im saving my $$ for an aussy ford falcon lol!
 
acounting or business administration degree will take you far (main reason my wife is still working)
my neighbors are both CPA's (never out of work)

I worked my way up from the ground to management in construction building new homes (not too much of that going on )

stay in school

get at least a B.A. or a B.S. assoc degree wont help you
 
I manage a hospital department. I have been in the medical field since right out of highschool, and while you'll never be a millionaire unless you're a doctor or entrepreneur, I have always had more work/hours than I know what to do with, and I am living comfortably. Plus I get to help sick kids on a daily basis, so thats a nice perk.
 
What do you LIKE to do?

Do what you love and you never work a day in your life. Also, learn to do what you love or learn to love what you do. Both corny phrases but the "successful" people in life will say it rings true.

Perfectly put above. I do R&D with the automotive industry. I get to travel around the world, drive prototype vehicles on test tracks, build them, test them on chassis dynos and having fun the whole time AND they pay me.
 
I'm an independent insurance adjuster. I run my own business. 50% of my work is vintage cars. They get wrecked and I write the damage estimate on them. Started at AAA at 21.

IMG_0400.jpg
 
I'm an Electrical Engineer that works in IT. I've always worked at universities or utilities. I happen to understand enginerd so it gives me an advantage.

IT stuff comes more naturally to me than engineering but I prefer engineering. Each pay grade wherever I have worked for an Engineer has been roughly $8,000/year more than an IT professional with the same education and experience.

I go to work to pay for my hobbies. I don't go to work because it is "fun" and my life-long dream. Whoever came up with the "do what you like to do" is either willing to be poor, has family that can bail them out, or is just plain sadistic. You need to find whatever career that isn't dwindling that you can tolerate that allows you to live how you would like to live.


Right now, in IT, the two most promising fields are security and development. In 2-3 years security is going to hit the pooper as the "grow" part of the job is going to be done (implementing intrusion detection, vulnerability management, et cetera) and it will not be a huge build-out like most places started 5 years ago. Between outsourcing and the market being flooded with a ton of new college grads, the highest paying field (even more than database administrators) will be driven down to what network engineers get paid. And networking is a bad industry to be in these days as it can all be done remotely except plugging in the cables...

I've been a generic system administrator, a network and firewall guy, a database administrator, a storage administrator, and right now I'm an applications engineer/storage administrator. Storage is cake yet boring, it will soon be a cheap job once people realize that it doesn't take a lot to tune storage. Applications can be a lot of fun as long as you're at a place that is big enough to have its own developers. My favorite job has been being a system administrator because you literally get to touch everything. But it's stressful.

Few fields in IT has survive outsourcing as beautifully as development. Code assembling has largely been outsourced to India. However, someone has to fix their junk (problem solving). And someone has to take what the "business" needs and come up with an end product (creative end of the spectrum). There aren't any other jobs in IT that I'm aware of that a 30 year old can make $100k+/year by sitting at home in their pajamas.
 
Get into a skilled trade, I started in plumbing and HVAC when I was 19 and now I do sales/run a HVAC company.
 
Looking into it more any type of computer science job is in demand, and some mechanical/electrical engineer job. But, i'm not sure if i'll like a desk job.

If you don't already program 'for fun' I'd stay out of computer science.

Move to North Dakota and work the oil fields for a few years!
 
I have been in car dealerships for over 30 years started as a porter in the service dept. painters helper at 16 was a painter by 18. by the time I was 22 I moved into assistant body shop MGR at Les Stanford chevy>>> (yes they are related to Trunk)and BTW great people to work for... left there and have been a Body Shop Mgr for over 20 years now. Auto Dealerships have a vast variety of positions. but one thing about Dealerships as I am sure Trunk can tell you.. You have to be dedicated and hustle It is a very tough market out there right now.
good luck in whatever path you chose !
 
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