I've been a software engineer for around 6 years now and am a tech lead. I sometimes have anxiety about not having a degree, worrying that the day may come where I will get stuck in terms of advancement or changes in the market will not allow me to get the jobs I want.
I'm an autodidact and dislike formal learning environments, and also don't want to put my life on hold to go do a degree, but sometimes I feel a bit like Mike Ross in Suits and become worried that my future isn't stable.
What are your opinions on this?
I'm on the same boat as you, I have 12 yrs exp, operated as head of engineering but I'm tired of ticking "Some college" on applications and having that "uncomfortable" conversation. I want to have the option to go to graduate school or change careers down the line and those paths require at least a bachelor's degree. So I've enrolled in a degree-completion program in a non-CS (but stimulating) field that interests me.
I have finished my core courses and I'm muscling through "uninteresting requirements" like foreign language, gen-ed, etc...
Curious, what do you dislike about formal learning environments?
Nobody is asking about my EE degree and lack of proper CS degree (I only have 1-year MSc in IT). There are more ways to improve your future prospects:
- Cultivating Linkedin profile with recommendations and good network
- Contributing to well known open source projects
- Speaking on tech conferences, writing blog or having presence on social media
- Selecting impactful projects and companies and building the right narrative
- Building skills in another business domain: medical, stats etcEven in a future unfavorable job market, over-saturated with workers, the profit motive doesn't change. Proven ability is more valuable than paper credentials. Especially in a job requiring innovation, where you can't simply do things by rote.
If you’re already established in the industry I don’t think the lack of a degree is a huge problem. I’ve heard of companies not letting people advance into middle management and such without a degree, but I can’t imagine you’d want to work for such a place anyway.
I say this as a fellow engineer without a college degree.