On career sites like ZipRecruiter, less than 15% of jobs list a bachelor's degree as a requirement for employment.
Employers across a range of industries are dropping a job requirement once considered a ticket to a higher paying job and financial security: a college degree.
Today's tight labor market has led more companies instead to take a more skills-based approach to hiring, as evidenced on job search sites like Indeed and ZipRecruiter.
"Part of it is employers realizing they may be able to do a better job finding the right talent by looking for the skills or competencies someone needs to do the job and not letting a degree get in the way of that," Parisa Fatehi-Weeks, senior director of environmental, social and governance (ESG) for hiring platform Indeed told CBS MoneyWatch.
Wait, you mean to tell me that a $100k piece of paper doesn't instantly make you the most desirable candidate for a position? Who could have possibly predicted that...
I’ve worked with some horribly incompetent phds (and some excellent ones), the paper alone only tells you they managed to finance and dedicate years to something, not that they have strong skills.
This is exactly my suspicion. "Not enough workers!" (willing to slave away for poverty wages), so now they're gambling that they can just hire and train anyone (and meet their arbitrary wage goals). May these businesses cease to exist.
My employer falls under one of these companies that used to require a degree for every position and has now relaxed that and they do pay several pay grades less along with hiring a bunch of temps instead of official employees.
Does anyone check? I've Costanzaed my way into a couple of jobs that asked for college degree. Nobody ever asked me to prove it, I just did the job as asked and nobody thought twice.
My college actually closed for a few years and it didn't have any effect on my job-seeking. I've also asked my three references if any prospective employer has ever contacted them and nope. For that matter, I'm a programmer and most of the jobs I've had required a Computer Science degree, which I don't have. I've often mused about what sort of outrageous bullshit I could get away with on my CV; these stories of high-up people eventually getting fired for fraudulent resumes surprise me not at all.
I find jobs with IT it really matters what you've done on your own or previous jobs. I don't have a degree, but I've setup piholes, truenas, Microsoft servers, dabble in Linux, have ubiquiti firewalls and waps, had Cisco equipment, have done a little of everything, firewalls, nas storage, etc. I have certs, and if you ask me how to do something I won't hesitate to show you what I'd do or tell you I'd have to look it up. It's not programming, but knowing larger pictures and scenarios really helps and you know "what" needs to be done, it just may be different on meraki vs ubiquiti vs Netgear equipment.
Both my last background checks "checked". You could see the status page where they were along the process and it had a green check after a few days. What that actually means, who knows.
I have seriously seen 50k jobs requiring a Master's. I have made well over that in the last 15 years with just an Associate's. That I just got. In the same field.
Companies are stupid if they think anyone is going to apply there.
I am not saying those are the correct rates. As a floor they probably should be low. Rates should vary by area anyway. Perhaps as a percentage of median apartment or home rent?
But here in rural America I have seen plenty of jobs that require degrees that pay less than that.
The best employees in my office went to State and Community college. The worst are the Ivy League ones who can't pass a single test outside of college. The second worst are those given jobs way outside their skills or degree. Then not required to take training. I would take a no degree cert over a degree in wrong field any day.
Anyone who thinks this is a "good" thing are, at best, naive.
Long story short: For the vast majority of jobs, all that matters is having a college degree. Often not even in a vaguely related topic. Mostly because that provides a filter on job applications so that the hiring committee/person has time to go through the remaining applications.
Except, as anyone who has gone job hunting in the past year or two can tell you, the days of having fancy CVs/resumes and business cars are gone in favor of filling out a workday application for every single position and so forth. And that is because you are being put through filters based on specific listed skills, number of publications, etc. And those are increasingly "accelerated" through AI tools. And... AI is great at being biased as fuck.
So all this means is even more "studying for the application" as it were. Except instead of memorizing whatever algorithm or question a given company will ask, you need to do specific online courses from specific outlets and add specific keywords to your job history and so forth.
I've said it for years and years, it's not what you know but who you know. That isn't 100% true but it's true more than it's false.
It's dumb, but really to get good jobs that tends to be the normal. I'm a great example of that. 7 months ago a previous boss reached out and offered me a new position making 50% more than I was. 100% remote, no on-call, no end-users, no hardware, etc. I jumped at it.
Would I have gotten it or even know there was an opening otherwise? Highly unlikely.
That's at least my experience in IT, I doubt it's unique.
We are social animals after all. Networking will never go away for that reason. My best hires/promotions were people I already knew the strengths and opportunities of. The odds of getting a quality candidate are much higher if you already have a relationship with them.
That's not nepotism, it's networking. Nepotism is getting the job by being the boss' kid. It's also the reason why degrees/diplomas with a co-op or internship component are valuable. As a co-op, you're a low-risk/low-cost hire and the manager can evaluate your skills and get to know you. Come graduation, if you did a good job, you can reach out to those managers and have a much better chance at getting hired.
I'm a programmer and I don't think I've ever been asked about my education.. not that I have much I'm mostly self taught. Even so, I can't imagine what more education could give me to show in an interview.
The opensource community changes SOP for all of us basically every quarter so how is my education supposed to keep up with that?
What is the best way to teach yourself programming? I love tinkering with technology systems in my home, and have often thought about how writing simple programs could unleash some extra potential, but I don’t know where to start.
We programmers share our knowledge freely in user manuals, tutorials, articles and YouTube videos.
But in my experience the only thing that I see slowing down new programmers is motivation. You can't really learn code without having a reason to apply what you've learned. You have to come up with a reason first, That's my best advice.