Just a Tech Degree won’t work! Here is what will.

A great image I just happened to find with a laptop and money in it.

In a family gathering in India, everything seems bland as long as the following scenario doesn’t take place.

“Oh! Our son is pursuing a Computer Science Degree!” My parents smiled with pride as they told my anticipating relatives (Who I had no clue existed till that moment!) who looked in awe at me, it was clear that they had no idea what a Computer Science Degree even meant, but were definitely fascinated. It’s not an uncommon sighting in India, for your relatives to start to look at you with respect the moment you tell them that your life has anything related to technology! They look at you as if the Universe had suddenly bestowed the responsibility of taking the generation forward on your shoulders and they were beholding the beginning of the next “Sundar Pichai” or “Satya Nadella”. (Spoiler alert: They most probably aren’t.)

The two aforementioned names have been immortalized in an average aspiring Indian household, as well as in the mind of every student who is looking for her or his seat in a prestigious Technology institute in India (Spoiler alert: Only 15000 get in out of a million!).

Coding and Tech Degrees in India are seen as a sure-shot way to make huge sums of money, for basically everyone. If you have hands to type and eyes to look at a computer screen, you will at least once get a suggestion from your relatives after you finish school to join either a coding class or a technology institute. Even better, some would start telling you as early as 7th grade (Correct me if your experience was even earlier than that!), rephrasing the old saying about there being a lot of scope in that sector.

And why not? Coding jobs do pay more handsomely than any other type of Job available to a majority of Indians.


The Flocking to College

The proposition of getting into a technology Institute in India (Be it just any other institute) and then getting Sureshot placement in an IT Company, like Infosys or TCS (Those two are the biggest names in placements you will see.), even though you probably have no passion or interest in the field at all, is a real and attractive deal for Indians, primarily Indian parents.

There are a few root causes for this :

The whole problem links its roots back to the eighties and nineties when an Engineering Degree was all the rage in the youth. Since then, the landscape has changed a lot. Engineering is synonymous with Unemployment and an IT Degree is synonymous with 25-year-olds working 9 to 5 in mini-cubicles, assigned to them by Mass Recruiting Companies. At least in India.


The problem with Tech College enrollments

Don’t get me wrong, let me put a disclaimer right here, I am a Computer Science Student myself (I guess you already knew this considering the second paragraph.), but I am pursuing this only because of one reason: I am solely passionate about this field. This is something I want to, and can do for the rest of my life (Still too young to say that)! If there was no such thing as money and people could do whatever they wanted to, I would still code day in, day out, as I already do.

It was only after I came into College that I realized what a huge scam it is! (More on that in another article if you guys are interested.) But it’s not uncommon for someone in my college to come in on a weekday and do two things for sure :

In my college you will see only two types of people:

Wait?! Aren’t there also supposed to be people who like what they are doing? Isn’t the population supposed to be split into the ones who like something and ones who don’t? Well. Not really.

This is the staggering situation I have always wanted to bring to the consideration of the world. The world is collectively not doing what it wants to do. There are 200 students in my batch, out of which 3–4 would be interested in what they are pursuing (DO NOT READ AS “STUDYING”!).

You wouldn’t really count these people in, just the way you wouldn’t count two or three canes as yield crop in an otherwise barren field.

So, enough ranting about our system. Because, in all honesty, I am a part of the system. And I too want to make millions doing what I love. So does everyone else in my College. The spoiler to that is: The Degree won’t make you rich! Or guarantee stability or success!


Why won’t this approach work?

I don’t intend you to take my word for this. Because I haven’t done anything big in my life in the first place either. These are just my viewpoints that I feel will help me later, and I hope will help you too.

I always have the following points to provide to my fellow students whoever joins College and bumps into me for asking for some advice after they have seen me coding on my Laptop for 2 hours straight :

Most people in the industry, are just coders. It is not uncommon to see Computer Science students focusing only on Coding skills, while what they really should be focusing on is using that Travelling Salesman Problem to solve a problem many people truly face, and I don’t blame them. They have been accustomed to the notion that Coders earn more, hence what is actually important is for them to code, in and out, day and night. Which is not necessarily bad, but most people don’t even do that.


What will work then?

Prof. Scott Galloway (NYU Stern) in his famous book The Four and his viral video The Algebra of Happiness (He also has a published book with the same name) highlights some life-changing views. A few of them in the abstract with an elaboration from me are:

These were a few points I loved in the book. I would now shamelessly put forward my own points, even though I have no right to since I am nowhere as nearly successful or respected as Prof. Galloway. Heck, I might have even lost my respect among my fellows if they were one of the people reading this article and fell into self-realization.

But it doesn’t have to be. The fact that a very small change in our views today can lead to huge changes and payoffs tomorrow is literally magical. This article might have seemed like a rant, it is. It is a rant to a world that focuses on sole maximization of wealth, rewards those who succeed and punish those who do not, leading to the problems stated in the previous sections.

Life isn’t supposed to be complicated. It’s supposed to be simple. And the advice that I gave is common knowledge, yet a very few people follow it. Because obviously, sitting along with the masses is easier than sitting against the masses. We don’t have to be extraordinary, but we don’t have to stay in an industry that makes us underperform either.

Look for places where you get opportunities for growth and happiness. And your sole purpose should never be to maximise your earnings through a job, if that’s the case, you are better off owning a business with steady growth.

As Mark Cuban put it :

If you discover something that you want to do, even if it isn’t making you a lot of money, and you want to continue doing it, you have found your calling.

And that’s my two cents.