It doesn't translate as aerospace bench technician. You start as a bench technician for anyone who will hire you. I started out studying electronics at age 10. I passed the General theory test for an amateur license at age 13. I got a no pay summer job sorting tubes at an electronic store. A TV repair man buying tubes at the store liked me and hired me for summer work. Next summer I was doing juke box and pinball machine repair. Did that every summer until I went to College. At college I found girls that liked nerds and spent my time chasing them. Dropped out.ScottL wrote:So scenario here, you're fresh out of high school, 18 years old and your experience consists of fries at McDonalds. How does that translate to Aerospace bench technician? It doesn't and there aren't bench technicians at major companies anymore. I'm trying to tell you as someone who has more recently gone through this experience than you, that times have changed. There's really no such thing as bench technicians anymore. All jobs state as a requirement "Degree or equivalent experience" and when you have neither you're not considered. I get that you had an easier time way back when, but times have changed and now companies want degrees and experience and the only way to get experience is through internships during college. You can take my word for it at this poitn or you can continue to ignore it, your choice, but I personally went through it in the last decade.Managers do not look at that school crap. What they look at is how well what you have done recently matches what they need done. The final cut is done with the interview. I was always confident in interviews. A go getter. I could close.
Well any way - where there is a will there is a way. The trouble is that everyone takes your advice to heart and assumes it can't be done. How I would do it? Same way I did before. Contract where the requirements are a good resume and a good interview.
How did I get my present job? I wrote for free for several years. Just to get my foot in the door. I have yet to meet any of the people who have hired me. What is their criteria? Can I drive traffic. Every piece I write is judged by the numbers. I do low traffic stuff just to maintain my electronic bona fides. BTW how is advertising sold on the 'net? By the numbers. If you can make some one a profit you can get ahead.
In fact if you want to break in to the field my magazine is looking for writers. Go here:
http://www.ecnmag.com/articles/2012/05/call-freelancers
Let me add that writing is not difficult. What is difficult is driving traffic. You need a certain type of bent mind. My blog editor (I also have one for the print magazine) has a mind similar to mine. It is a pleasure working for him.
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Note "or equivalent experience" - lots of ways to get that. If you want it bad enough.