I love subscriber questions – please ask me yours! I answer each question to help you, and then anonymize them here to help us all improve our chances for a dream digital development job.
For example, here is a recent subscriber question:
Where are the entry-level ICT4D positions?
I am currently pursuing a Masters degree in Computer Science and will graduate in 2018, but I am worried. I am interested in pursuing a career in ICT4D, yet all opportunities I find require heaps of work experience. How do I get a start in ICT4D?
My usual response to this question is two-fold.
- Don’t sweat prerequisites. Job descriptions are the ideal candidate, and just like an online dating profile, should be approached with a healthy skepticism. Use the job ads as general guidance on the skills you need.
- Network, network, network. The final year of graduate study is when you should be networking, doing internships, and getting exposure to real-world activities and future peers and employers, even if you need to volunteer, so that on graduation day, you have job offers in hand.
But what about the day after graduation? I asked my colleagues in ICT4D for their views.
What ICT4D Experts Say About Starting in Digital Development
I tossed the subscriber’s question out to my Facebook network, and 34 responses later, here is their generalized response:
Get Industry Experience
They will be a Computer Science graduate, so they should focus on getting a job directly in the tech industry in an area where they will have transferable skills. This will build your skills and your income faster than if you start in ICT4D.
Keep Involved in International Development
While they are working on this space, keep abreast of development trends, build solutions that address real world problems, and share their results. These basic entrepreneurial efforts that will give them experience, feedback and get them noticed by the sector.
Make the Transition to a Small Tech Firm
When they’re ready, get a job w/a tech-oriented firm liked Dimagi, InSTEDD, etc. as a coder or project manager-type position. With the previous private sector income, they should have financial cushion to go into a lower paying position to pay their “development sector dues”.
See Where Your Career Takes You
A person with a Masters degree in computer science shouldn’t have any problem if they have industry experience. Employers who who run tech companies in international development are looking for tech experience and a willingness to learn.
If they’ve started int he tech space, then moved into international development, they obviously have both and they’ll have a long a rewarding career.
What the Subscriber Said About this Advice
I shared the Facebook post with them in real time, so they could follow along and ask questions if they wanted further clarification. And their response?
Wow! This is amazing. I have gotten a lot of valuable insight. I will keep following the thread and ask where I can. Thank you very much!!
So what are you waiting for? Ask me your career questions too!
Thanks for reading this far,
Wayan