Almost Half of Tech Workers Worry About Losing Their Jobs Because of Ageism, Says Survey (siliconbeat.com) 291
An anonymous reader quotes a report from SiliconBeat: More than 40 percent of tech workers worry about losing their jobs because of age, a new survey shows. Jobs site Indeed also found that 18 percent of those who work in the tech industry worry "all the time" about losing their jobs because of ageism. The release of the survey Thursday comes amid other news about diversity -- or lack thereof -- in tech workplaces. Often when we report about diversity issues, readers wonder about older workers. The Indeed survey offers insight into the age of the tech workforce: It's young. Indeed concluded from surveying more than 1,000 respondents in September that the tech workforce is composed of about 46 percent millennials, with 36 percent of respondents saying the average employee age at their company is 31 to 35, and 17 percent saying that the average worker age at their company is 20 to 30. What about Generation X and baby boomers? Twenty-seven percent of respondents said the average age of employees at their company is 36 to 40, while 26 percent of respondents said the workers at their companies are 40 and older.
What comes around goes around. (Score:5, Insightful)
What do you expect when you came in in the 90s and 00s and shunned the older workforce, that you would be able to be an older worker later on?
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It depends on the workers.
The biggest problem is that as we get older we get stuck in our niche.
Back in the 1990’s the older workers were mainframe gurus while the desktop PC is getting ground as a primary device for computing. While many of these skills can cross over the older worker was reluctant to use such technology. Today the workers who are in their 40’s and 50’s are getting the same additude towards mobile development. Still many of our skills cross over however we miss the opp
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I guess my frame of mind is part the startup culture where you gotta be young "We're not working for our dads" mentality,
The second is and I see this a lot in the non tech sector is the assumption that "younger generations are just better with tech because they grew up with it." And will pick someone younger under the assumption they will just get it. Ive seen that happen and then they learn not every millennial (or similar) actually likes tech, and don't get it easier either.
Re:What comes around goes around. (Score:5, Insightful)
Who are these mythical "older workforce" people that refused to stay current? I know exactly one guy like that. I sure have kept up, and I started in the 70's on batch FORTRAN. And the advantage I have is when everybody raves about some exciting new tech, I can use the good parts and recognize the parts that are either reinventing the wheel, or were discarded decades ago because they were a bad idea.
This myth that older devs are universally hulking dinosaurs is just plain dumb. There are good older developers and bad ones, just like younger devs. And the idea that the younger ones have a leg up because they used the latest tech in college doesn't hold water. Tech is changing continuously. In the last few years I've gone from C++ to Ruby on Rails to .Net MVC to a single page client app in Typescript. The key is being able to learn. No one comes out of college knowing everything.
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They're all over engineering. Trying to get engineers just to upgrade versions of software is like pulling teeth.
I've worked with peers that are as proficient in Excel as your average 16 year old these days.
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Sure. Some devs are good, some are bad. But it's not correlated with age.
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Probably because upgrading Excel isn't their specialty, they are busy doing engineering and don't have time for flavor of the month gratuitous changes to their tools.
I develop software. Show me an actually better language or a better compiler and you'll have my attention. Show me a minor version bump to a text editor that moves all the options around and I'll show you the door.
But about that language, if it's just yet another rehash of an idea that came ind went in the '80s because it seemed like a good ide
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That's the trap. There are enough younger people who won't listen that the idea and/or language will be adopted into widespread usage and you won't have an essential skill. It's also possible that something has changed which you aren't accounting for.
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That's the biggest difference between office workers and talented tech workers, office workers know what they know, tech workers know how to figure things out and really talented tech workers appear to know tremendous amounts because they can figure things out so fast they
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I wish that were actually true in reality, I really really do.
Re:What comes around goes around. (Score:4, Insightful)
No one comes out of college knowing everything.
Ya, but people see youngsters on TV shows like Mr. Robot and MacGyver who seemingly know everything and can do anything on/with a computer and think that an actual thing. But, it actually takes time to learn things and acquire skills and knowledge. Ditching older workers simply in favor of younger ones is extremely short-sighted. And as far as stamina and putting in long hours, even at 54, I can work my younger co-workers under the table - as a programmer and admin - but that's me; I've always been able to burn the candle at both ends and up the middle.
Re:What comes around goes around. (Score:4, Insightful)
No one comes out of college knowing everything.
Ya, but people see youngsters on TV shows like Mr. Robot and MacGyver who seemingly know everything and can do anything on/with a computer and think that an actual thing.
Oh gawd, the weird "children will teach the parents" BS. You see so much of this social engineering on television, even movies. The child is invariably more emotionally mature, and much smarter than the parent, espscially the father, and the whole attitude persists throughout their childhood and education. I have one adult child I'm working with right now who is trying to educate me on something he has 1 years experience with, and I have 15 now. Demanding to implement all the ideas I tried long ago when I didn't know any better. My problem is I want to step in, but my boss says let him fall on his ass and get a little humility. The boss is right, but dammit, Gromit!
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Sounds like you failed as a parent.
Sounds like you failed reading comprehension, me hearty.
Re:What comes around - burning at both ends. (Score:2)
Re:What comes around goes around. (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't think it's so much older employees refuse to stay current. It's a balance sheet decision.
The drawbacks of older employees include higher pay and less patience to tolerate bullshit, occasionally uncompensated, overtime demands. There more likely to tell you how they really feel, which is sometimes viewed as insubordination instead of candor. You know, some of the same foul-tasting criteria employers outsource a youngster's job to on the infamous H1B program.
There are indeed likely benefits to consider. Youthful employees are more easily distracted, less experienced, and decidedly more prone to underperformance at work due to self-abuse the previous night... haven't even learned to hold their liquor.
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I'm afraid most of the time, you'd just be trading tomorrow's inefficiency for today's.
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Yes. New employees mean lower pay and an expectation that they will be more like Jello and less like clay. Management wants to "green" their workforce which means hiring more people wet behind the ears and letting go of more people that make a salary that reflects their value to the company. It seems it is always about the short-term gain and thus shareholder cheering as the labor costs are reduced. There seems to be no long-term math to show how much the customer suffers from this kind of decision thus
Re:What comes around goes around. (Score:5, Insightful)
Who are these mythical "older workforce" people that refused to stay current? I know exactly one guy like that. I sure have kept up, and I started in the 70's on batch FORTRAN.
Exactly. After retirement, I was called back into work on an emergency hire to do all the things the smart new folks just out of college couldn't do. And it wasn't old school stuff.
The young folk especially, fresh out of college, with ultra high self esteem, ready to move to management in a month because they knew the straight dope, and were going to change the world after righteously wresting it from teh cold dead hands of thos old folks who they were much better than.
And then they found out that they didn't know half of what they did. And then it go weird. They started treating the older people like servants. A typical response would be to try to slough off work onto me when they didn't know how to do it. One young woman I caught pawning work off to me, and I caught her busy with her social media all day. You would thiing they understood how easy it is to find out what you are doing on teh intertoobz. Told her I assigned the work, and if she didn't know how she had to learn quickly. Fortunately or unfortunately, she took the Millenial exit eventually, quitting with no new job, and moving in with grandma. But this has been the case with most of them, coming in, expecting to turn the world upside down, than crashing and burning after learning that the world no longer revolved around them. GenX'ers only have the normal good employee to bad employee ratio. They were fine. To the point where I recommended 40 and up for hires.
The real reason why any ageism exists is because the suits want to pay an entry level employee less money and create an artificial profit until you have to hire the olde fartes back.
Re:What comes around goes around. (Score:5, Interesting)
the suits want a bunch of things:
- low pay for the worker bees
- abusable workforce with little experience to be able to say 'no, I wont work that weekend. I already worked too many in a row'
- energy level; I'll give the kids that; they have more energy, but there's a lot more to writing code than pure energy
- they are not set in their ways; so you can 'program' them to your culture, even if its a toxic culture
there are lots of reasons. the elephant in the room knows all this, but the media are not allowed to mention it (a third rail, don't touch!)
its amazing how few people know about this, outside of tech. I tell people all the time and they have a hard time believing me.
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Yes, that's really exactly it. The "suits" have no idea how the day to day business is run. My company recently offered early retirement for 55 and older - and lost a huge amount of talent that left the company reeling for a couple of years.
There is a certain contempt that a lot of people have for people who are not doing what they do. Many suits are convinced that the only difficult work in the world is performed by an MBA. Many accountants are hopelessly caught up in the Excel spreadsheets, and have absolutely no idea of human knowledge and psychology.
So every job in the company is legal theft according to the suits, who are upset that such stupid people are even allowed to draw a paycheck, bolstered by the accountants insistance that th
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The real reason why any ageism exists is because the suits want to pay an entry level employee less money and create an artificial profit until you have to hire the olde fartes back.
And I just used up my mod points...
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Who are these mythical "older workforce" people that refused to stay current? I know exactly one guy like that.
Funny, I know one guy too. And he had a plan. He had reasonable savings and wanted to leave IT and open a fishing-tackle shop. He deliberately didn't stay current to the point where the company had to make him redundant (yes they probably could have just sacked him, but he would certainly appealed to tribunals and ended up costing more in money and effort). So he left with two months redundancy payment (which is tax free), as well as nearly two weeks pay in lieu of holiday not taken.
I've no idea how his sh
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Who are these mythical "older workforce" people that refused to stay current? I know exactly one guy like that. I sure have kept up, and I started in the 70's on batch FORTRAN. And the advantage I have is when everybody raves about some exciting new tech, I can use the good parts and recognize the parts that are either reinventing the wheel, or were discarded decades ago because they were a bad idea.
This myth that older devs are universally hulking dinosaurs is just plain dumb. There are good older developers and bad ones, just like younger devs. And the idea that the younger ones have a leg up because they used the latest tech in college doesn't hold water. Tech is changing continuously. In the last few years I've gone from C++ to Ruby on Rails to .Net MVC to a single page client app in Typescript. The key is being able to learn. No one comes out of college knowing everything.
I know plenty of examples in both camps. Older devs that are more current than I am, younger devs that are less current than I am. Like you said, the key is being able to learn. Not everyone is. There's a whole spectrum of where peoples' minds are at. Some only dedicate time to learning on the job. Some people and digest blogs, articles, and books everyday like dinner. I will say, based on my own anecdotal experiences and opinions, there is a higher tendency that as people fill their lives with non-
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It's rarely talked about, but there's a kind of reverse problem.
I work on a system (mostly in C, some C++, some Java, and even some ancient assembler code) that's fairly old (though fairly nice from a support/UI standpoint), very stable, but not under heavy development. In fact, the only remaining dev staff are in their late 50's to early 60's. The system's not going away, but the company's been so shortsighted that there's no next generation coming up to support it - and now they're worried about our eve
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I went thru a similar situation, where my company had a product that worked great, but it was aging. It was clear that if we were going to stay in business, we needed a more modern look.
By implementing an ODBC driver to the database we were able to rewrite parts of the product gradually as a Windows client / server applications (which at the time was state of the art) while maintaining complete compatibility with the existing product. The database had been well designed so we weren't held back by maintain
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Therein lies the problem, so many things are a bad idea that isn't easy to objectively prove and because tech is younger generation heavy the bad ideas become very widespread. In the minds of the younger majority, refusing to use the bad ideas is refusing to stay current. Because th
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And you know what? I recently worked on the worst code I've ever seen, and it was written by a kid a couple of years out of college.
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I find my ideas and skills are taken less seriously than those of my peers despite my knowing far more than they on some issues.
There's an easy cure for that. Stop using Slashdot.
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Don't live stupid (Score:5, Insightful)
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The social contract between the older generations and the younger ones has been broken. It used to be that you struggled a bit at first, but there were genuine opportunities. You could own a home, raise a family, get your annual raises and make your pension contributions and be golden at the end of it. Your quality of life was going to be at least as good as your parent's.
That's all fucked now because there are too many old people, and not enough young people and immigrants. The older ones vote more often s
Re:Don't live stupid (Score:4, Insightful)
You are mistaken though, there is definitely no shortage of young people and immigrants, especially immigrants.
The other half........ (Score:2, Funny)
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Severance pay hasn't really been a thing for more than 20 years now.
The other half know that skills matter, and that learning the tech necessary for the job is more important than playing buzzword bingo with your resume.
Re:The other half........ (Score:5, Interesting)
My last layoff was at age 57 from a pretty large tech company. The severance package was reasonably generous. Then, in addition, there was the "Promise not to sue us for age discrimination" add-on severance package, which was... pretty dang good. And, it came with about an inch thick stack of statistics about the ages of those laid off, which kind of established they were more than ready to defend themselves against any age discrimination suits.
I signed. It was a pretty good chunk of change (three months' pay, I think I recall) paid extension of benefits ... and there was an email from recruiting from another company in pretty much the same business in my inbox when I got home, which is where I'm working now.
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Cisco gave me three years pay with full benefits (health care coverage, 401k, and stock vesting). Severance packages still exist. It was an "early retirement" vs a "layoff" or "termination" ...for whatever that is worth. They paid us to go away.
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Yeah I had the same situation, including the stats on who was laid off. I think that may even be a legal requirement in the USA now.
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It's a severance if you have to sign a form saying you're not going to sue in exchange for this extra pay they're giving you. And it is still relatively common when people are laid off (not fired for cause). If you don't plan to sue you may as well sign. Many places you get separate physical checks; the final paycheck, the severance check, the payout of unused vacation, and potentially a few others; sometimes the final pay goes into autometic deposit and the others are physical. I haven't seem them all comb
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You aren't making any sense. You do work, you get paid. The severance is ON TOP OF your last paycheck. You don't have to sign anything to get your last paycheck, you already signed before you got your first one. My last severance was two month's pay AFTER the last paycheck.
I'm 39 and already seriously concerned about this. (Score:5, Interesting)
Posting anon,.....
Living in Australia with over 250 to 300k per year immigration, we're seeing an incredible drop / stagnation in wages. If you're not a seriously skilled professional (admitedly, a reasonable percentage of /. posters but certainly in no way, all nerds and geeks) then you're in potential trouble.
We've got more and more and more people, willing to work for significantly less money. These people are accustomed to a poorer quality of life back home, so when they come here and share a house with 5 other people, they think it's a palace, but sounds like torture to us.
Plus you've got people who simply made a couple of bad choices skills wise or job wise, wound up in a role and found themselves simply with antiquated skills. I'm one of these myself. Yeah it my fault but my government is NOT making it easy. Wage stagnation is going on seriously for the middle class across the world.
We're getting boned.
Re: I'm 39 and already seriously concerned about t (Score:2, Interesting)
I am nearly 50 and still in high demand. Most people my age just want to work 9 to 5 and go home. Unlike them I push myself to keep up with the latest tech and aggressively manage my career. The guys in their 20s wish they could do half of what I can accomplish. When hunting for jobs if some place rejects me due to age it probably was a lousy place to work in the first place. I only take jobs from firms that need someone who can just handle it all from Manager down to dev work.
Re: I'm 39 and already seriously concerned about t (Score:5, Insightful)
Mid 50s here, and I work in C and embedded systems. So it's hard to find qualified candidates for the jobs, plus I'm good at it, and get a lot of recruiter spam. So I'm not worried about ageism for me. There are people that definitely are dismissive of older workers but I haven't bumped into any for some time.
People say old people don't keep up on the skills, but that will apply to everyone. The problem is not about age or skills, it's about cost. If you're 30 you're NOT old, but even if you know 50 programming language you're still going to be compared to the cheaper worker who only knows the one language that the company wants. Those are dumb companies to be sure, they value quantity over quality, so maybe you're better off not getting a job at those places.
An even bigger concern than ageism, especially for those with moderate skills, is outsourced. No matter what your age in the US, they can find someone that costs less overseas. Not good workers mind you, but if they can hire 5 incompetent people for the price of one qualified person then many companies will do that. And there are countries where it is routine for the manager to lie our their asses about how awesome their workers are and how they can do anything you can possibly ask. Being young won't protect you there.
Comment removed (Score:4, Interesting)
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How very Calvinist of you. Work will set you free...
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You're not the only one, and you're right. I was earning a liveable wage three years ago, but then I was unemployed for 12 months and now earning an entry level salary after 15 years experience - simply out of desperation.
The major parties simply don't care. It's quite happy to throw it's own citizens under the wheels to keep it's economy going, just as easily as it has thrown it's own citizens under the wheel during wars in times past. Then we have a bought and paid for media telling us that immigration is
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What is the alternative though? The birth rate among the non-immigrant population isn't very high, so you are headed towards serious problems as the population ages. You have plenty of space, those immigrants obviously want to improve their 5-in-a-house situation and seem willing to work towards that goal, creating new economic activity so it's not just "stealing your jobs".
There were several major studies done in the UK into the effect of immigration on wages. It concluded that there was only a very small
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Fortunately you're not American, so you won't be tarred as a racist just for expressing that sentiment.
Is the problem discrimination or population set? (Score:2)
I've always worried about age discrimination as well. But that's because I don't often see any software engineers in their 50's and 60's. Is the issue that companies aren't keeping or hiring older people or is it because there are fewer people of that age grew up around computers? When I was a kid I was monkeying around with a Commodore but few people even my age were doing that. What about people 10, 20 years older? It wasn't even an option for many of them.
Plus, most companies I know are so desperate for
Re:Is the problem discrimination or population set (Score:4, Interesting)
You open up a different can of worm with population sets. Of course by skewing their employees younger, software companies can often make their employees more gender diverse faster than if they did not do that...
Older engineers are going to be more likely male. If you want to fix a "gender-diversity" problem in tech simply with new hires, you will likely find it to be pipeline limited. Interestingly, if you wanted to make faster progress than being pipeline limited, you can simply reduce the fraction of older engineers (who are more male dominated compared with the younger pool).
Sadly, that's two strikes against companies keeping older engineers, generally more expensive and generally more male.
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We keep hearing about this big bubble of women who went into computer science in the 80's, in far greater numbers than have been seen in recent years. This makes me wonder... where are these people? They'd all fall into the "older engineers" category now.
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You bring up an interesting point. Are all those older women as vulnerable as the doddering 50-year-old men in this thread, or can they just slide over into HR?
As a retired IT ... (Score:4, Interesting)
... I've some experience with this.
Competition for IT jobs being what it is, I sometimes had to make a persuasive argument for hiring/keeping me as opposed to a young'n.
In brief, it went like this:
While recent grads know HOW to do stuff that I don't, I know WHY we shouldn't be doing it.
Business is not a good place to be experimenting by being an early adopter.
In skill comparisons, I got my first computer (TRS-80) in 1978. I speak DOS, lived the digital revolution, saw Windows 3.0 fail -- to be fixed by 3.1 -- helped bring in the first network for Mobil Oil, and grew up with the Internet and social media.
I had the experience that entry-level peeps would get later, at the company's expense.
It worked for 30 years.
I've been retired for 3 years, so I don't know if that approach would work today.
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Business is not a good place to be experimenting by being an early adopter.
Business is a great place for that. You have to keep innovating and improving to stay competitive. I've worked on countless projects where we had to invest new techniques from scratch, adopt the latest technology and be ready to pivot if something didn't work out. That's how we got into 1st place and delivered a product that no-one else can touch.
If it's worrying you.... (Score:5, Interesting)
Get ready to change. There's lots of roles in IT that tend to prefer more experienced folks, the type of role where "Ya, I've seen that 5 times before, here's what we're going to do about it..." is the order of the day. Architectural roles of all stripes, infosec in general, etc. I've moved roles a few times in the last 25 years, (network monkey -> Mgmnt -> infosec -> infosec architecture) and I always find a new fun challenge every time I have.
You're probably in technology because you can adapt to change, not because you're scared of it. Embrace that.
Min
To the 50% who aren't worrying... (Score:5, Insightful)
Give it a few more years... you will definitely start.
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Give it a few more years... you will definitely start.
At what age? I'm 48 now. One of my colleagues is 70. When will I start worrying?
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I'm 48 now. One of my colleagues is 70. When will I start worrying?
49 years, 10 months, 28 days.
I'm with the "not worrying" crowd.... (Score:3)
To be honest? I spent my WHOLE working career worrying about losing job X, Y or Z -- and have lost a few jobs due to the company I worked for filing bankruptcy and shutting down, as well as a layoff and a huge pay cut and threatened layoff at another one. I finally believe I found employment with a company that's not only successful, but makes smart investments in buying other successful small businesses and merging with them. (That, in turn, increases their need for the I.T. support I provide them along wi
Not just Business but Academia too (Score:5, Informative)
I spent years working at a university rearch center. When I got there, they had no direction or plan regarding technology. One system at a time, I built the technology that they used for everything from directory services, storage servers, database, phone system, and even a security camera system. I used tons of open source systems - Linux, BSD, Postgres/PostGIS, Asterisk - and saved the institute hundreds of thousands of dollars. My reward? Shortly after my 50th birthday, and a few months before I finished my doctorate, they eliminated my position. As a bonus, it was also Christmas time too. Just lovely people. Two car payments, a mortgage, and a kid in college. While my wife and I were taking Christmas presents back and cancelling every possible optional expense we could, my former employer was hiring twenty-something business school types to fill seats and firing nearly everyone over 40.
Filth. And doing this on the governments nickel down!
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My (albeit limited) experience with academia is that they make incredibly poor hiring decisions when it comes to I.T.
There's the inevitable conflict of interest, for starters. They feel compelled to prove formal educations have real value, so they put a heavy emphasis on your number of degrees, certifications earned, etc. Often, the people who "collect" this stuff are just good at test taking and cramming for exams, but not necessarily any good at actually doing the job.
There's a LOT of "politics" too ... I
Younger != smarter (Score:2, Informative)
real issues not allowed (Score:2)
Not me, I'm 58 next week (Score:2)
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People worried about ageism are typically not problem solvers.
I've seen it, but I've also seen other stuff (Score:2)
So I've been around for awhile. I've bounced into several different roles. Now I've seen outright agism. Where the boss just won't hire anyone over 35 and once you're pass that point, you're sent to support and then eventually shown the door.
Now, not 100% of the time, but a lot of the time, would say 60%, they're doing projects that are one offs and the customer is maybe a five year account or something. Basically, everyone goes into this, knowing that whatever is built, isn't sticking around for a long
The problem is avoiding management (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm 61, writing code, and having fun. My advice:
First, find a company that lets you do what you want. In particular, find one that doesn't push you into management (unless that's what you really want). Many companies will push you in that direction, but unless you're really good at it, it's a dead end.
Second, don't get stuck on the same project forever. Being the old fogey who knows everything about that important legacy system isn't a good place to be when the old system is finally retired. It isn't enough to "keep up with new technology". Knowing it and doing at are different things and are judged differently.
Third, don't expect that your superior wisdom is enough. Be wise, but be productive, and help other people be productive.
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It's NO MYTH (Score:2)
I was the first one hired to start the "internet" dept of a printing/advertising company.
After several years, I was replaced with six guys in their early twenties.
I'm the boss (Score:2)
Lost my job at 51 (Score:5, Insightful)
Keep in mind, I'm not saying I interviewed and didn't get hired. I can't even get a fucking interview nowdays.
Re: Lost my job at 51 (Score:2)
Re:Lost my job at 51 (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Lost my job at 51 (Score:5, Interesting)
So what am I saying? Don't give up hope. For me, every layoff has been a blessing in disguise. Each time I been able to broaden my skills, gain exposure to people and ideas, and learn to boldly go where no man has gone before.
It's not about what you know; it's about who you know, and who knows you. Go to Meetups. Stay in contact with people. Get your name out into the back channels.
One little trick to get your resume past the stupid HR filters. At the end of your resume add a section entitled "Software and products I've used or been exposed to:" and list every language you've written more than 1 line in, every technology and product you've used even if just once. Everything that you can legitimately claim to have been exposed to. Even if it was a demo. Now format that section in 1 pt font, white text. It becomes invisible in MS-WORD and in PDF, but the HR scanners care about content, not format. They will see all those magic buzzwords and your name comes out near the top of every search. It actually gets to be a pain when the endless Indian consulting firms begin matching you for every possible technology known. And now that that little trick is out there, it won't last long. Act appropriately, and good luck.
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Valid worry (Score:2)
So, so confused. (Score:2)
I'm 51. This is not young in tech. And I'm right now earning really good money as a top-notch Linux/cloud guy. So long as I don't sit on my laurels, and continue learning and being relevant, I see no reason to worry about ageism, at all. Indeed, the longer I work, the more people I know, and the more who have enjoyed working with me, the less worried I am about what would happen were I to lose my job.
Note that there *is* a different kind of older worker: the one who's found a niche in a company, hasn't
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Wups. (Score:2)
That was me, above. I forgot to log in. Silly early-onset Alzheimer's!
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No kidding... (Score:2)
By high-tech standards I'm ancient (56). I have a pretty good gig going at the moment, but if (when) it ends, I will change careers because I know I'll be unemployable.
Technologically, I've kept an eye on newer tech and have been active in deploying it in the company. We've replaced a major part of our company, a legacy communication system that ran on custom no-longer-available hardware, with Linux and VoIP running on COTS servers. We like it because it works better. The bean counters like it because it
Cargo cult of technology (Score:2)
I'm more worried about H1-Bs (Score:3)
Something else I notice that bothers me too though, the old guys at my place are usually fervently right wing, anti-government regulation and anti-Union except for this one thing. In this one thing they want the government to step on and protect workers rights. As someone that got screwed over a lot when he was young (right two work state and all that) that hypocrisy really pisses me off.
Losing your job is normal ... (Score:2)
... and had little to do with age. Unless you're a geezer that is.
As for career changes due to age:
I notice me getting more nimble and less worried about age, at least in terms of income. If I can't score a job I'll simply go Freelance. With grey hairs and wrinkles coming, I'll have to up my stock of business trousers and shirts and lose the t-shirts, but that involves upping my rates aswell and doing a little more writing and management and less all-nighters seeing up some machine, because next morning an
Many corporations force folks out too (Score:3)
For example, Leidos, a large government IT contracting firm, recently announced it's 2018 benefits package. It was noted that those employees with 10+ and 20+ years of service will now be losing 3-4 vacation/sick/PTO days and a few even more.
Essentially, corporations view older longer term employees not as notable for their loyalty, but as a burden. Why pay more, and give more vacation time to senior employees when we can hire someone fresh out of college or import an H1B Visa holder and pay them much less and give them half the vacation time.
Meanwhile, Leidos executive compensation went from $2 mil, $2mil, $4 mil, $7 mil, $14 mil, and now $35 mil. The CEO went from like $2 million to $7 million, to $14 million in compensation. Essentially, what we have is a group of elite who simply game the system to move the wealth and benefits of the laborers to their own pockets.
It's disgusting... but I doubt we'll see any change until we bring back the proverbial guillotine - granted it may be molecular disruption chambers in 2140.
Over 60 (Score:2)
1/2 would GTFO but for ... (Score:2)
The other half of older workers in America would GTFO if health care wasn't so f'd up.
And, all of the older workers would love for the youngers to age up so that rediculous low-contrast web page text would go out-of-style.
My Experience with Ageism (Score:2)
After submitting several sample HOWTO pieces, I got a gig at MaximumLinux magazine as a Contributing Editor. I successfully submitted articles after that and was eventually authoring a monthly column. What my employers didn't know was that I was in my late 40s at the time. I didn't meet my editor, Bryan, until a Linux convention in NYC. When I approached him, I could see the surprise on his face when he realized that I was much older than he had assumed.
That was the only experience that involved my age. I c
47 and better than ever (Score:2)
I'm worried, and I actually keep up! (Score:3)
I'm 42, and although I haven't knowingly experienced ageism, I foresee a day in the future when I draw the short straw, get laid off and become another statistic in this "can't get hired past 45" environment. Every other real profession values experience, and in IT and development it seems like it's being actively ignored lately in the pursuit of new and shiny. Doctors don't have this problem...they can practice as long as they're able. Professors can do the same, but when you suggest that IT people have a similar career they look at you like you have 2 heads.
I admit that there are _plenty_ of older workers who feel that they don't need to keep current in IT, or that their knowledge as it is today will continue to be relevant throughout their career. I know that's not the case and spend a large amount of time both inside and outside work keeping up to date. The problem is that potential employers paint all older workers with the same brush: "They can't learn, they're too expensive, they want too much time off, ..."
I guess the problem is that IT and development are fields where things are constantly changing, and you need to keep learning at the same pace you were when you started, throughout your career. Yes, we have lives outside of work, we can't work 100 hour weeks, we don't want to live in the office, and we have more obligations than the average 25 year old. But, some of us have valuable experience that will prevent the younger workers from going down a dead end and redoing all that work. Personally, I still really enjoy the technical aspect of my job. Management isn't for everyone, and companies should recognize that...that's usually where they stuff the older burnt-out IT workers.
I have no idea how to solve this either. Silicon Valley worships youth and cheap labor. I would love to go work for AWS or Microsoft doing cloudy stuff, but I'm not going to abandon my family for a job. I know way too many IT folks who are on their second or third marriage or are just perpetually alone because they're constantly trying to impress their employer. I think my advice would be to be a generalist who's willing to change direction as needed, learn constantly, live within your means so you're not the guy begging for raises every year, and find an employer that has figured out that a healthy mix of youth and experience works best.
I'm not even applying to google (Score:2)
Google is losing access to older talent they might recruit. Even if their hypothesis that on average younger is better was true their is older talent out their and they won't get that.
we need to lower the Medicare age (Score:2)
we need to lower the Medicare age
Re: (Score:2)
It seems like we get lots of stories about social and political issues at the expense of stories about hardware, software, programming, and DIY projects to hack stuff to do interesting things. Maybe not as many people read or comment on those stories, but that's because they've been driven off by the changes in Slashdot over the past several years.
Worked for Scientific American, didn't it?
Re: (Score:2)
YUP