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7 points arabello | 2 comments | | HN request time: 0.617s | source

I've got ~5 YoE as a Full Stack Engineer in a small software consultancy/house. We build products for external clients, covering everything from requirements gathering to production, with a focus on GenAI for the last two years.

Goal: Land an international role at a startup, preferably in the AI/GenAI field, ideally Founding or Full Stack Eng positions.

Problem: I'm not getting opportunities. I've been looking on and off for 2/3 years but only had 1 offer. My guess is my consultancy background isn't translating well on paper for the startup landscape.

We don't operate like a traditional consulting agency. I function as a Product Engineer (Full Stack and GenAI) including client-facing responsibilities, talking with stakeholders, challenging designers' UX/UI deliverables, partial team management, ownership of the internal AI tooling and some public-facing marketing stuff. I think all of this doesn't show up properly on resume's experiences.

I'm confident in my tech and soft skills. The main thing I lack is ownership of an ongoing production product with a massive user base, as we typically focus on project bootstrapping.

How do I properly showcase my product-oriented skills? I'm usually screened out or rejected after the first interview, suggesting the issue is primarily with my experience presentation or content.

If the issue is actually in my skill set, how can I effectively evolve in that direction while staying in my current position?

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DamonHD ◴[] No.45614301[source]
Why aren't you creating a new business rather than waiting to tag along with someone else's?

I have always created my own and had other people join me.

This is not a criticism: something in that gap may be useful in your search.

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1. raw_anon_1111 ◴[] No.45623904[source]
Why do people always use this as a go to like it is easy to start a business that nets as much as even the median salary of an enterprise CRUD developer in a 2nd tier city.
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2. bruce511 ◴[] No.45624994[source]
It is absolutely not easy to start a business that generates any revenue at all, much less a median salary.

But, to be fair, the OP was for joint a startup, not a generic programming gig.

Starting your own business is a massive amount of work. For next to no money for years. And chances are (>90%) that you will lose all the time, effort, and list income that you put into it.

If you do the work right (ie all the non-programming stuff) and you survive, then the long-term rewards are very satisfying. 90% will fail. 10% will succeed. And we all believe we are in the 20% right?