[-] morg@programming.dev 1 points 1 year ago

I’ve been on the waitlist for awhile now. I don’t know anyone on it so I can’t get a code, unfortunately. Wish I was

[-] morg@programming.dev 11 points 1 year ago

Well that’s a wild sentence

[-] morg@programming.dev 54 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

It’s just a playground for the riche to do a music and drug festival pretend poor style. Or maybe it has something to do with a bunch of those hippies that nearly killed climate protestors blocking the road on their way in.

Every Burner I’ve ever met has been one of the most entitled, out of touch, morons I’ve ever had the displeasure of talking to. Let’s see where their “radical self reliance” gets them now.

[-] morg@programming.dev 1 points 1 year ago

True. ‘Tis but a poor facsimile of a Blahaj.

176
Blahaj cake rule (i.imgur.com)
[-] morg@programming.dev 3 points 1 year ago

the SQL syntax is certainly very straightforward. It's funny, I find excel really fun to work with. Maybe that's the Stockholm Syndrome of it being the only tool I'm really capable of applying at work 😅

[-] morg@programming.dev 3 points 1 year ago

Yep! I’ve got an account. I really need to give the site a deep dive though and see everything it has to offer.

[-] morg@programming.dev 2 points 1 year ago

I think that’s where I’m at. I just need to update the resume and start putting it out there while I work. I have done some work with Tableau, and I already see how much potential it has. I definitely have the least amount of experience with viz as my customers are all researchers or labs that want raw data.

[-] morg@programming.dev 3 points 1 year ago

I don't even know much VBA (wrote my macros in visual studio using the record macro tool to help me teach myself while I built), so DAX shouldn't be too jarring!

All this definitely makes me feel better. I actually really enjoy this type of stuff. Working with the data has been really cool and I love learning the new skills. I want a job where I can keep doing that instead of just being a data monkey locked at a 3% increase every year with no bonus.

[-] morg@programming.dev 3 points 1 year ago

That Data Model tool is going to be an absolute game changer. Bless you. I can think of at least three use cases in my current system that need this desperately.

I'm going to make myself a little pet project to work more in BigQuery and make my own queries, outside of what the cert has had me doing. The last part of the cert is a case study type project, so I will at least have something to accompany my resume once I start applying.

Also, no kidding about the imposter syndrome. I'm in this weird limbo feeling like I'm being gaslit at work about what I know and don't know just because no one around me knows what I'm doing. We're all animal science/biology majors, but everyone else has more lab experience. They claim to want people that understand the chemistry, but I don't have any clue to it and I am now basically a team and product lead with the computer and analytical skills alone.

[-] morg@programming.dev 5 points 1 year ago

Thank you! I will look into Google Analytics and Looker Studio, and Quicksight.

I haven't done anything with like any of what you mentioned. That's how niched I am right now. It's ridiculous. The common sense things in the basic Google cert is far and above the capabilities of my current team in an appalling way. Not surprisingly, my salary is garbage. My priority for the last months has been making myself hireable somewhere else.

Do data analytics positions normally do a skill interview? How common is on the job training for a junior/lower mid level position when you onboard? I have plenty of experience teaching myself what I'm supposed to be doing, but having some skill transfer is much less stressful.

24

Hey there, everybody. Recent joiner who's been lurking. I have been searching the posts here and gotten some great info from them, but I've now got some questions of my own. Hopefully, they're ones that others have and they might benefit from the thread, as well.

TL;DR: I feel like I need more skills to apply for new positions, and I don't know which skills to learn or the best places to cultivate them that an employer would recognize as legitimate.

I am currently working as a Data Analyst (though that title is a reach, you'll see why below) since Spring of 2022. It's my first corporate position, though not close to my first work experience, and I have advanced very quickly. I am in line for my second promotion right now, depending on the completion of some goals. The trouble is, this company fucking sucks. It's a mess at every level. I am one of the most competent people on my team "data analytics" wise, and some of these people have been here for the better part of a decade. I really don't say that to make myself sound like some sort of savant, but to highlight just how poor the standards of quality and skill are. Our R&D department is basically one guy whose file organization is about as clear as muck. All it took to be a walk-on was some creativity and a VERY baseline understanding of computers.

All of this to say that I do not have the same industry skills as other data analysts. My team is really pigeon-holed in the scope of what we do. Without giving away too much detail, it's basically just bioinformatics quality assurance. So the softwares I now know, and the processes I have learned, are largely industry and company specific. I opted to teach myself Excel macro construction to make my own life easier. I'm only one of two out of 15 people on my team that knows how to make them. All of it is self study. I can't go to anyone at my company, because they don't know anything, either. They don't even "allow" us to use SQL, and the data we produce is far, far too large for Excel.

I am currently finishing up the Google Data Analytics Certificate on Coursera. But I don't feel that any of it is enough when I read these job ads. There's another course that follows this one, but I'm thinking that I'd rather pivot to data science. That just leaves me with more uncertainty on which skills to invest in.

All this to ask: once I've completed the Data Analytics cert, what do next? Those boot camps don't seem worth it price wise, and I imagine that workforce is very saturated. I have considered applying to graduate programs for bioinformatics, but I'm on the fence about returning to academia unless I can get some sort of grant, and that's so competitive these days I'm not sure if I will outshine other candidates. I have some experience in JS. I am learning Python, R, and SQL. I have ordered the book "Automate the Boring Stuff" for my python learning, too.

Once I decide what to do, it'll be easy. I'm very good at learning these things and solving my own issues as I learn (which is most computer shit anyways). The problem I have is that I just don't feel like I have a good read on the industry outside of the very small corner I'm in.

Thank you in advance. Sorry that got so long-winded.

morg

joined 1 year ago