Re: The plight of IT professionals in their 40s A very nice and interesting topic for me personally as well
Let me first say I have been in the IT industry since 2002 and have never been a manager, a lead, or any other role than a hands-on hard-core coder (and since I work on an ERP platform made by the "great" Larry Ellison and his cronies, been a functional hand as well)
However, last year was my last job and I was let go because to put it simply they felt I was too old to learn new tricks (without ever giving me any form of training, or when I learned myself ... then no opportunities to work on that "new" platform/tech)
Now, I freelance a bit here and there where people really value (very rarely) a person with 16 years of total hands-on experience in one technology/platform
However, I have seen that in our country, the experience/knowledge of a person does not matter much to ITeS companies. They would rather deploy 2-3 younger folk to do the same task
I remember a story I heard some time ago which my then boss told me. It seems a major jet-turbine manufacturing company had a technical issue with a new engine they had built. They kept getting in "experts" to help solve the issue but then along came an old man with a tool-box. Initially folks were skeptical seeing his "age" and wondering how a simple man like him may solve their problem. He took some time, did a lot of looking around/checking and finally opened his tool-box. He took out a small hammer, knocked on some specific component and bang!! the jet came to life.
When the company asked for his bill, he presented a huge bill and the folks were shocked!!! They asked, so much for just knocking once with a tiny hammer? Ridiculous!!! The man replied, "It's not the hammering that matters, its knowing where and how that counts"
Coming back, the point is ITeS companies in India do not value enriched/purified knowledge. They value "billing in timesheet" and profit margin compared to the person's salary
As an example, when I was in my last job, I remember many of the "young guns" used to keep sitting in focus-groups (or whatever it is called) to solve an issue in our ERP. I would sometimes just go in there, hear them out, see the error message and know what the issue was. I feel that over 16 years, my knowledge which started as the raw Thorium on Kovalam beach, has become so pure and enriched that it is weapons-grade plutonium now
But this is not what India needs. After all we produce lakhs of engineers each year. Why keep an old man on board when they can go to colleges each year and pick up truckloads and fill up timesheets.
I agree that up-skilling, learning new tech can help, but the way I saw it was I would be a fresher/trainee again and more than the salary my body would not allow me to keep burning the midnight oil like I did when I was young
The one main learning I got from my life so far is to never stick around in a job because of some senior man's promises. They are mostly hollow and never come to fruition. They are just carrots to keep you going and not look for a change when you still can.
You keep giving and giving till finally one fine day you are just "too old". In fact I applied via a friend's referral to a job at a leading consulting company in Mumbai (after having re-written my CV to show just 10 years experience to fit the job) and the HR there told him (this is in his words) "Sorry yaar, this man may be good like you say, but he is 37 years old and we don't want to hire someone so old now. Don't tell him like this, just tell him we don't have any openings at this experience"
I am not yet debt-free as suggested by everyone else on this list and should be by Sep-2019 and I hope till such time I can keep freelancing and make some dough to get my loan done. If not, who knows then!!!
Learning new skills is important but in an industry where tech changes each day, each hour, whatever skill you learn and spend years refining, it will be obsolete very soon. This is the unfortunate reality of our world and there is no escaping it. I may go back one day to the college I graduated from (as the class topper) and hope they give me a job as a lab attendant at least or maybe join a BPO (if they hire old men) but otherwise my options seem limited at best |