I know a person that makes their income just doing bug bounties. No resume needed, just some documentation skills (which I don't have) On Tue, Oct 31, 2017 at 7:30 AM, wrote: > > How to you feel about being self-employed? If you think that might be for > you, pick your niche, and make a plan. If you can generate business leads > and can weed out the bad projects and unethical people, you can make an > above average income and have limited interface with others. If you use a > contract, and I strongly suggest you do, everything is spelled out. If the > client decides on a deviation it can be handled by an addendum and an > adjustment to the fees and payment schedule as may be necessary. > > And you can start learning and doing while employed. The experts say you > should "moonlight" until your business is doing good enough to replace your > day job. > > > > On 2017-10-31 00:06, trent shipley wrote: > > Well, as you may recall from my last installment about career options, I > am bipolar, have autism spectrum disorder, and I have attention deficit > disorder. Another disability is that I'm 50. After working with my "job > coach" it turns out that if you are both ASD and ADD the intersection of > viable, suggested career options comes down to "computers". If you are > ASD, something terrible uncreative and repetitive like QA. If you are ADD > something terribly creative like greenfield development or web development. > I like to try development/programming, and I like data, and have had > success working with SQL, but that was between 2000 and 2002. > > So after researching, my options I have reached the following conclusions: > > To get an entry level job with programming or data you need. > > 1) Recent, diverse experience bringing you close to a plug-n-play employee. > > 2) Failing 1, a portfolio. If you are a self-studier who starts their own > projects you have a good chance at an entry-level start that you can build > on. > > 3) Failing 1 or 2, If you have a BS in Computer Science or Software > Engineering, you need to have graduated with honors from a prestigious > school or done at least a year of internships, because odds are you won't > get work in your field. > > 4) Given 1, 2, 3 I qualify for telephone IT help desk. Help desk jobs with > no requirements like A+ or Net+ or knowing Active Directory. > > I currently work in customer service, no sales. They like high quality and > low handle times, but it's pretty low pressure. I get $13 & change an hour; > plus, a $4 & change allowance for benefits. Not bad. The downside is > people, phones, and dead-end McJob, oh and it's seasonal. Thirty-two hours > a week for about eight months out of the year. I also can't sell at all, > and my average, normalized, handle time is on the order of 1.8 standard > deviations above the mean, and rising. (My speed is measured as being in > the lower quartile for almost everything for which they measure > speed--math, reading, manual dexterity, typing, everything.) > > The big advantage I see working help desk is that there is room for > promotion to tier II and beyond. On rare occasions, help desk people may > even get promoted to something more interesting, better paying, more > prestigious, and less dehumanizing than help desk. > > On the other hand I expect that most help desk jobs will emphasize sales, > short phone calls, high levels of quality, and have very stressful, high > pressure work environments, where the workers are treated like eminently > replaceable manure, that pay $10 to $13 an hour to start. I expect that if > I change jobs, there is a very, very good chance I will be a failure at > telephone IT help desk. Unfortunately, telephone help desk, tier I or my > current job are the only options I see myself as having. > > Anyway I'd be happy to hear any feedback the list might have. > > I'd love to conduct a couple of interviews with people who have worked, or > are working unskilled tier I IT help desk. However, be forewarned, the last > such interviews I did lasted an hour. My vocational rehab working says most > such interviews last WELL under 20 minutes, but did the last ones after > work hours, and have an advanced degree in anthropology, so I kinda draw > out interviews. > > Also, If you can send any prospects my way, I'd appreciate it. > > Regards, > > > Trent. > > --------------------------------------------------- > PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.phxlinux.org > To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: > http://lists.phxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss > > > --------------------------------------------------- > PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.phxlinux.org > To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: > http://lists.phxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss >