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My Job Application Statistics

Apologies in advance, this is going to be a very short, uninformative post; it's more of a public diary entry of sorts for me to put down a couple quick thoughts, and so won't be especially englightening or deep.

I've been applying for jobs since December of 2019.

I figure, it being the two year anniversary of unemployment, I'd celebrate by making a diagram and rambling a bit about my experience!

Context

I was in my undergrad program until December of 2020.

Most of the jobs I applied for were internships; of the 141 job applications shown here, about 30 were full-time new-grad positions.

My interests also changed over time; the first few applications were to mechanical engineering internships, then I realized that I really just don't enjoy mech eng, so my applications became more computer science/robotics oriented.

By the time I began tracking these job applications, I had 3 internships under my belt; one, a mix of mechanical engineering and software development for a local startup, another, programming a robot, and the last, doing research for a professor which involved quite a bit of programming.

So I had some experience, but it was fairly spread out across different domains.

I was mainly applying for jobs in the Bay Area, where my partner works.

There were maybe 20 or 30 jobs back home, but the majority were in San Francisco/San Jose.

I was basically setting myself up for failure by trying to find a job in the most competitive market possible.

I wrote a custom cover letter for pretty much every job; only in the last month or so have I been sending out generic cover letters, which hasn't changed my success rate at all.

The Diagram

Embedded Image: /img/job-application-stats.png

I only counted applications on here which are more than two months old; I figured it would be unfair to count a recent application as ghosted.

"Other" includes jobs which were cancelled due to covid, or which had a job opening window that didn't line up with with school, or the position was straight up removed (and they had the courtesy to let me know).

I interviewed for 2 jobs; the first, I didn't get past the company recruiter.

The second, I interviewed with their recruiter, then an engineer, then the CEO, the latter two interviews consisting of technical questions.

They were a lot of fun to chat with, the the work was very interesting, but in the end, they said that I should probably get a Masters to work in robotics.

Thoughts

I'm okay with getting rejected for jobs.

Very often, I think I reached higher than I probably should have, and so there's no bruised ego associated with getting turned down.

Like most though, getting ghosted is frustrating.

I'm not on the other side, so I don't know what the applicant vetting process looks like, but I'd be surprised if there's not a "send generic rejection email" button on whatever UI companies are using to process applications.

I'm curious to see how being in a Masters program will influence my interview rate for internships (mandatory part of the ETH program, will talk about in future post), especially for robotics jobs.

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26 December 2021.

References

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