All Content from Business Insider 07月22日 09:14
I lost my internship after talking about pay. I flew to New York anyway and networked my way into a new role in 2 weeks.
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一名加州大学伯克利分校的学生Aaron Chen,在即将出发前往纽约开始一份实习前,因薪资问题被取消了录用。身处困境的他,带着“光脚不怕穿鞋的”心态独自前往纽约,积极参与各类科技活动,密集拓展人脉。在两周内,他通过不懈努力,成功获得了一份新的实习机会。这段经历让他深刻体会到,在逆境中保持积极心态和主动出击的重要性,也认识到人脉在职业发展中的关键作用。正如他所言,‘光脚不怕穿鞋的’成为了他这个夏天的座右铭。

💡 应对突发变故的积极心态:Aaron Chen在失去实习机会后,没有沉溺于失望和焦虑,而是接受了现实,并以“光脚不怕穿鞋的”心态前往纽约。这种积极转变帮助他释放了全部能量去应对新环境和寻找机会,是其最终成功的重要心理基础。

🤝 密集社交拓展人脉:抵达纽约后,Aaron Chen立即投身于各种科技活动,平均每周参加超过60场活动,并积极与人交流,主动分享简历和作品集。这种高强度的社交和人脉拓展,为他接触到潜在的雇主和获得内推机会奠定了基础。

🚀 抓住机会高效行动:在获得斯坦福教授的推荐后,Aaron Chen迅速回应了Axal公司的试炼任务,并在两天内完成了高强度的设计和编码工作。他在最终面试中充分展示了自己的能力,并因此获得了这份新实习,实现了从接触到录用仅四天的快速入职。

🌟 关键人脉的重要性:Aaron Chen的成功在很大程度上归功于他积极建立和利用人脉。从最初获得实习机会,到后来获得新的工作,都离不开他通过参加活动、加入社群以及主动联系他人而建立起来的联系和支持。

A UC Berkeley freshman networked his way into a new internship.

This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Aaron Chen, a rising sophomore at UC Berkeley. This interview has been edited for length and clarity. Business Insider has verified Chen's employment history. The startup that pulled his offer did not respond to a request for comment.

After a few calls with a crypto startup in New York, I was offered a summer internship over email in March. I signed the non-disclosure agreement with them.

I was really happy as that was pretty late for recruitment, and I was stressed. Most upperclassmen got an offer in December.

In June, I hopped on a call with the head of operations to talk about compensation.

I might have asked a little too much, but I left room to negotiate. Product management internships typically range from $40 to $50 per hour in New York. Considering my combined skills in frontend engineering, UX/UI design, and motion graphics, along with my ability to support marketing, I proposed an hourly rate of $45.

Five days before I was set to fly, they replied: "We do not have any budget for this internship, or any additional head count for that matter."

I wrote in my email that I was open to discussing this, but they did not want to continue this conversation.

I had already booked a flight to New York, paid for rent, and found a roommate to share it with.

I was on a bus crossing the Bay Bridge when the email came in. I sent a goofy selfie to my sister saying, "Guess who's unemployed now?" But within minutes, reality hit me, and I started crying at the back of the bus.

I called my parents, friends, and roommate. They were like, "Just go to New York and have fun." They insisted on supporting me in following through, and now I'm here.

Straight off the plane and into networking

I was on my own, and I searched for things to do in New York, specifically in tech.

The first two weeks were pretty rough. I hopped around during New York Tech Week, which began the day I landed. I dropped off my bags and went straight from JFK Airport to IBM's office, running on zero sleep.

Every day, I juggled different events, met different people, and networked, trying to get my foot in the door and establish myself in the city. I signed up for probably over 60 events in the span of a week.

In the second week, I attended a crypto conference. I met a part-time blockchain builder and part-time professor from Stanford, who offered to circulate my résumé.

By that time, I had already applied to around 50 companies and asked at least 20 people in my network to share my résumé and portfolio, hoping to find anyone who might be hiring — a long shot since it was already June.

Thanks to the Stanford professor and folks in my blockchain club, I interviewed with six companies, and I really connected with a founder from Axal, an Andressen Horowitz-backed crypto startup.

After our first interview, he messaged me at 3 a.m. on a Friday with the files for the take-home assignment. I was already awake, working, so I dove right in. Over the next two days, I pulled all-nighters designing, coding, and engineering the interface.

At the final interview on Monday, I walked him through my design process, code, repository, and everything I built. He offered me the role on the spot.

We went back and forth a bit on compensation, but things went smoothly. I got the official offer in my inbox, and this time, I signed it for real.

I'm their fastest hire ever, from first contact to offer in just four days.

It's been a chain of networking that put me in the position to even interview for the role.

Everything happening literally within two weeks of me landing in New York with no job, no backup plan, still feels incredibly surreal to me.

Summer motto: I have nothing else to lose

It was really difficult to turn my mindset from being disappointed, anxious, and stressed to "I'll just take whatever life gives me."

Accepting and embracing that reality has helped me so much because that allowed me to not withhold any of my energy or hold back when I go to networking events.

I have nothing else to lose — that has been the motto of my summer.

I am so happy I came to New York to meet the people I met and be part of the opportunities I've had.

People who are older than me always tell me success comes in different ways, and I've always found it so corny. I truly believe that now.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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