Tuesday, 19 May 2020

25 LPA after BE in CSE



Now a days getting an annual package of 25+ is not a great thing. I can say it because I am earning and many of my peers too are.
 

If you include all compensation which are cash: bonus and base plus stocks. People get those in 3–4 years of experience. Excluding stocks 25+ in 5–6 years.

 
The only catch is never stick to a company or tech/skill for more than 1–1.5 years. I am a test engineer so I kept on upgrading the manual and automation skills. Along with that I never joined a company which had similar product in which I currently was working on. For dev role people acquire multiple skills.
 
When I joined my first company I started looking out from day one as graduating from tier 3 college with very average marks its always difficult for 1st jump. And then after that I never stick to one. You are always going to work then why not work for a better pay. If your current company is giving good hike (as a fresher consider good as 20+%) then consider otherwise never do.
Where people fail is starting for the 1st switch late and even worse is getting settled down in the 2nd own. But those who don't are those who crosses the mark. I have 6 years experience and in my 5th company. I crossed 20 mark including stocks in my 4th company at 3.9 years experience and left the same after 2.3 years when my compensation was somewhere around 32.5 give or take based on stock price. Cannot share the new company's salary though.
All the best and Never Settle. Love your work not the company.
 
Edit 1: Most people have doubt what to say if company asks for you have been changing so frequently?
 
What I usually follow is:

For the case when you have applied, I try to get information about the product which I will be working on and tell them why this role is suited for me and what value add it gives. Even though the changes are soon
 
If the recruiter has initiated the interview on his own that means they have gone through your profile. In this case you can directly confront them saying if the product and work is really good as mentioned in the JD you will be staying for long. Usually the JD has most of the buzzwords which you won’t be working on and they do the same as it was done by your current recruiter. In most of the cases they won’t ask this question.
 
Edit 2: How do I switch and what path should I follow?
If you want to switch where are you going to. What will be the target technology or product (company) for the switch?
If it’s initial, try to learn in the field that interests you. There are tons of courses and material available. Just for the sake of I need to switch because people does that. Is not going to get you anywhere.
If you think you are good at something then try to get the similar work in the current organisation or try outside. For me, I always focused on Core java and automation skills even though I didn’t work on automation till my 3rd company but was confident enough to crack an interview based on that.
You can plan for what is the target for you. This will help you a lot to decide on when and how to switch.
 
Edit 3:People have been sending me PM with just 1 or 2 liners as please guide me to change job or move from manual to automation testing. Humble request to them is I am not a career counselor who will reply to your one liner. It is you who has to to take up the task. Just because someone changed every year you too have to do that. You should find your own steps to move forward.
There is no simple answer to the questions like please help to change job. I don’t even know what you do and what your skills are. No one can help in such questions. Please make your own judgement to do that. If any queries are there which can be helped will be happy to do so.

-Shaswat Deep

Monday, 18 May 2020

High IQ or Good Work Ethic : Which is more important?



Why do you think that this is an either-or proposition? If you have a high IQ, why can’t you also develop a strong work ethic?
Wouldn't high IQ people have to work less and have more fun just because they have that gift?
Sure, foolish short-term thinkers may do that, but they’ll soon realize that the world doesn’t reward doing easy things as much. Besides, you’ll get bored with your life if you always do easy things. Learning a hard skill does three things for you: (1) provides you with material comfort, self-respect and pride in one’s work, and intellectual engagement, (2) builds a strong work ethic, and (3) helps develop humility.
Education is a great way to achieve all three. It builds grit and mental discipline because the degree shows that you can stick with a challenging multi-year commitment without quitting when the going gets tough, and it gives you valuable skills if you pick the right course of study for you.
Uneducated high IQ people are usually useless for solving highly challenging intellectual problems because they give up too soon since they were never forced out of their comfort zone because everything was easy for them in high school. They never struggled to solve novel and challenging problems, and hence never develop the mental stamina. A challenging university program is great training for developing and honing intellectual skills.
It will also build humility, like when you see other smart and brilliant people (colleagues and professors) around you, when you see your test scores, and when you fail at something. You will fail at some point if you’re doing something that’s worth doing, and this will teach a lot of lessons.
In short, if you have a very high IQ, learn to solve harder problems rather than coasting through life. It’ll bring you more long-term satisfaction and will help you develop into a better human being.
-Karan Mehta, Laser Designer, PhD in ECE

IISc is for highly intelligent people......



No it is not made for intelligent people, it makes people highly intelligent.

Let me tell you my story. When I entered IISc I knew I am not intelligent I was just interested in learning and research. My interview ran for almost 2 hours starting with a plot of y = k exp (c x) for different values of k and c, (positive, negative and combination) and ended with my M. Tech thesis. I answered some, tried to derive some. Important part was whenever I did things logically and got stuck the faculty members helped me reach the conclusion.
IISc is a place where you learn how to learn after that people may or may not label you intelligent but you know what you are and what you want.

Sunday, 17 May 2020

My Struggle.....



Getting a job in college was my first priority since my family financial condition was not good. My father earning was hardly 8K per month. He borrowed loan for my education. As you all know current fees for Engineering degree is very high. I never used to get pocket money as my batchmates used to get from their parents. I never attended birthday parties with friends as I didn’t had money to give them a treat back. My friends always asked my birth date, I never told them as birthday party was required to celebrate. I was fearing to run behind girls as money was needed to go out like restaurants, malls, movies and all. Never planned a college trip with friends. Due to financial constraints, I was limiting myself not to have trips, not to go for restaurants.

My friend used to say why don’t you spent little more money for buying branded clothes or good quality things. As I never wanted to be a burden on my parents’ shoulder. I was well aware how much and how my father is earning money. I have to restrict myself.
That moment, only thing used to run in my mind पैसा-पैसा
Let me introduce myself, I’m Yogesh currently 25-year-old and will turn 26 by September this year. I’m Electrical Engineer by profession. I started my career at 22 with L&T construction as a Graduate Engineer Trainee in July 2016. I got this Job through Campus placement. CTC offered by L&T was 5.11 LPA. I was getting 34K in hand during my training period. As everything was provided by L&T like accommodations, electricity bills, water bills etc. I had to pay only food charges which was hardly around 4K every month. I had not drinking and smoking habits so 6K per month was sufficient for myself. Rest I used to send at Home.
After one-year training completion, I was a senior Engineer in the same organisation with In hand salary 43K. This time I was sending 25K at home and 12K around, I was saving since I wanted to quit my job and start preparation for government job. It was very hard decision for me to leave the organisation when I need to support my family financially. 3rd April 2018 was my final day in the Organisation.
With full focus, I started my preparation since April 2018 for ESE-2019, everything was going well. I used to perform excellent in test series but somehow in main exam, I failed miserably. I couldn’t get good rank in GATE also. Now I had no job in my hand and only 30K in my account. I used to get nightmares what to do now. All gone in buying study material, test series and Lecture videos.
Again, my first priority became to get Job wherever it is possible. Luckily very soon, I managed to enter into profit making PSU.
Currently I’m working as Executive trainee with gross salary 1.08 Lacs per month. And within few months, I will be confirmed as Assistant Manager in E3 Grade with gross salary 1.28 lacs per month.
Every month my account gets credited with 70K-80K with PF, Income tax, other deductions and Excluding Performance related pay which is credited at the end of every year. There are many other allowances like dress code allowances, Laptop, mobile, medical reimbursement.
As I have been posted at non-family location, here no cinema halls, no restaurant, so 65-70K goes into my saving and I send 60K out of my savings every month at home since my house is under construction and it will be completed by this year. मेरा छोटा सा घर -
I’m coming to your question weather I’m happy now. Definitely BIG YES.
Reasons are sure like job security, no financial crisis, no dependency for money. Specially, my parents are happy.
One more reason for happiness-
I don’t have a girlfriend at this age means no extra expenditure and you need not to take care one extra person. And specailly Time saving, someone said, Time is money 😊
And What other thing which makes me happy-
Now
1. I’m much more confident
2. Don’t react to the situations,
3. I can manage stress,
4. Remains calm and silent in every condition.
5. No chaos, no office politics at my work place
6. Pollution free work place between the mountains, no one to disturb me.
What else is required for a happy life.
In last few months, I have travelled to some places in mountains
1. Shimla (HP)- First snow fall of my life.
2. Uttarkashi - Mahasu temple
3. Varanasi Specially Ghats.
4. Bhimakali Temple- Sarahan with serene view at back
5. A small trip
पहाड़ो के बीच हमारा छोटा सा घर (provided by company)- Accommodation
River just 100 meter away from my accommodation , it's water flowing sound is very pleasing. I usually spent time in evening.
Distributory of Yamuna river
I have made plan to explore Uttarakhand this year but Damn Covid-19 ruined it, waiting for everything to be on the same track.
Currently Enjoying beauty of nature in Uttarkashi with this view and writing my answer in जंगल।
A request to readers, please ignore grammatical errors.


-Yogesh Yadav,NIT Allahabad

Saturday, 16 May 2020

Follow these...........





  1. Don’t let peoples’ compliment get to your head & don’t let their criticism get into your heart,
  2. Be careful of the stories you tell about yourself. They change the rest of the world too ,
  3. When life feels out of control, lean on compassion. Compassion for others, sure but most of all , compassion for yourself,
  4. Stress & worry are good motivators , but it isn’t smart to utilise these emotions for actions. It’s better to learn how to relax, shift your focus, then take action with a better state of mind,
  5. Believing you’ll succeed rather than fail makes a huge difference, coz both future versions of you already exist in the quantum state ,
  6. Dwelling on the past is not the same thing as learning from it . Stop cheating on your future with your past,
  7. If you’ve a hard time saying no coz you’re afraid that others will not like you, then try to like yourself & practice saying No ,
  8. Keep away from people who belittle your ambitions. Small people do that,
  9. Be aware that as you’re feeling good, you’re powerfully attracting more good things to you,
  10. You know that you’re the new You when you’re no longer triggered by some old triggers,
  11. Many times your intuition knows better than other people’s opinions. Remember the next time you look for advice,
  12. Patience is good, but stop being patient for something that needs work,,
  13. Before you fix someone else’s vibe make sure you’re not killing your own in the process,
  14. Just Chill.!!

    -Mukul Royy

Friday, 15 May 2020

Why Farmers dont want their children to be farmer?




Thats because they don't want their children suffer the same, what they are going through. Farming is a very hard job, I used to work in field, and there is no guarantee of return due to natural calamities.
I used to farm rice and vegetables with my father upto my 10th standard. After that my father refused me to work with him and sent me to near by town to complete my 12th.
Pics of farming place where my father works.
Let me show you what my father had done as a farmer.
• A beautiful home not house. I don't want to destroy it because I have lots of memories attached to that home. Sometimes tears roll down when I entered into it.
• Work hard to earn more so that I could complete my engineering.
• My first job in TCS after engineering.
• My second job as junior telecom officer in BSNL.
• Topped in GATE 2018.
Now Officer in Indian Oil Corporation Limited.
And let me show you what we have done.
• Built our home in my village.
• Bought brand new Baleno. First car in my village.
• Good respect in village and I am the example for people and students in my locality.
My father wouldn't have done all this if he wasn't make me a successful engineer. It was their dream and I converted their dream into reality. There is nothing that gives me more happiness then their success.
My father is very successful now but I am not. I am yet to convert my dream into reality.
Thank you!

-Sanjay Kumar Ghose,B.Tech-Indira Gandhi Institute of Technology, Sarang

Thursday, 14 May 2020

Openness Coupled With Critical Thinking


Openness coupled with critical thinking.
The simple truth is, most of the people around you are as good as dead. I don’t mean physically, but spiritually and emotionally.
The masses tend to adopt whatever half baked ideas and beliefs their parents had and then continue to live inside of those beliefs for their entire life without ever questioning their assumptions or challenging the premises.
They live their entire lives in a box. They identify with their beliefs so strongly that challenging them is tantamount to blasphemy.
But to live a good life…not just a life of luxury and wealth, but a meaningful, passionate, and fully engaged life… you must open yourself up to new ideas and ways of being.
The world is a big place. Filled with billions of people, almost all of whom have different beliefs, ideas, and ways of being than you do.
To shut yourself off to these ideas is a form of spiritual suicide. You stop growing and hold yourself back from experiencing some of the best this life has to offer.
To be truly successful and happy, you must be open to new ideas. You must be willing to test every assumption, to ask yourself, “Is this true? And if so, how can I know that it’s true?” You must be willing to take your most cherished beliefs and dash them against the rocks to see if they break.
Constantly seek out the truth and don’t be afraid to follow where it leads.
The more willing you are to be open to new ideas, the faster you’ll learn, grow, and evolve into the person you want to be.
However…
Be sure that you don’t take this to the extreme. There’s a difference between openness and gullibility. Consider every new idea and belief with the same critical eye and scrutiny you do your existing beliefs and always, always, always, seek the truth.
Because in the end…it will set you free.
Stay Grounded, 

Andrew Ferebee

I always wished for AIR 1 in JEE(Advanced)


I always wished for AIR 1 in JEE(Advanced). I didn't study aiming for a rank, but I wished for it.
When Chitraang Murdia got AIR 1(he is from the same city as mine), he was all over the media. The city front page was full of his interview. I was devastated. I wished I would be the first one to top JEE(Advanced) from Udaipur. But he shattered them. I was impressed by his performance as he had qualified all four INOs, a feat I couldn’t even think of. I felt jealous. I knew I could never reach his level.

But I didn't lose hope. I kept that piece of newspaper in my study table cupboard. I used to see it everyday, I wanted to be there.


I don't think any student in India or elsewhere could have worked harder than I did from classes 9 till 12. It simply isn't possible because I studied all the time except sleep. I even used to study in my school bus. I wished to have an Olympiad medal round my neck. I wished to get AIR 1 in KVPY, I wished I get AIR 1 in JEE(Advanced). I wished I could show the world what I am.



But I failed. I always failed. I could get to a fiftyish all India rank. Whatever exam I gave, all converged to an All India rank of 50 or below or something. Sometimes I got into top 10 in some exams(like INAO 2017, and few other exams like the SOF ones). I simply felt helpless when I saw people getting medals in IPhO in class 11, whereas I barely cleared stage 1 that time.
But there was one thing in me. I never gave up. I kept on studying. Never left my path. Never let the fire inside of me burn out.


I made a new year resolution for 2017 to get AIR 1 in both the exams. I wrote it at the top of my wish list (my friend made me make a wish list that year). But somewhere inside I knew that I am fooling myself. I won't make it. Still, time passed.


I achieved an all India rank one in JEE(Main) 2017. And I did make it to the front page, only that it was bigger in my case. I just topped a simple exam like JEE(Main) with full score. It wasn't that tough. But I know I deserved it. And I wasn't done yet. It wasn't my goal.


JEE(Advanced)- My dream exam. Those 6 hours, and years of immense dedication. Plus a lot of external pressure of expectations(I didn't let it affect me, or at least tried to, and I don't blame anyone). I got AIR 109. If you told my 9th class self that you are going to get AIR 109 I would have been destroyed.


But I wasn't this time. I learnt a lesson.


I worked sincerely. I put all my teenage years into IITJEE preparation. As you might say, I 'wasted my childhood'.

For what, an AIR 109?


No. I didn't achieve what I wanted, I achieved something more. I learnt the importance of hardwork. I got something unprecedented in JEE(Main), something which no one ever thought of. People say I was lucky. But I think I got that luck of 'no silly mistake' because of my hardwork. I cleared almost all exams with good ranks, which are held till 12th.


Lesson learnt- The things you want to achieve are sometimes not found in your final destination or what you aim for, but are found along the way of reaching that goal, in bits sometimes.

This journey called IITJEE preparation isn't a two year preparation and one day execution thing. It's more. The life lessons you learn along the way are much more important than the fact whether you make it to IITs or not.

Even at IITs, all students(I hope), or atleast me, derive inspiration from how hard they worked when they prepared for this exam. This is why JEE is different from other exams.
Work hard. It will manifest into a good result for sure. It would be something for which you could say-”It was worth it”.


Whether you make it or not, every second of sincere JEE preparation is always worth it, and makes unforgettable memories.

All the best!!!

-Kalpit Veerwal

Wednesday, 13 May 2020

How My Life Changed After Becoming an IAS Officer | OP Choudhary IAS (2005) | UPSC CSE Motivation

When I was young, my father once told me an interesting story


A poor man was sleeping peacefully under a banyan tree, when a businessman happened to pass through the village. He was surprised that the man, who had barely covered his body with a torn cloth, could sleep so peacefully even in daytime.
He awakened the poor man and asked—‘Why are you sleeping? Why don’t you work?’
The poor man questioned the businessman—‘Why should I work?’
‘Well, if you work, you will earn money,’ replied the businessman.
‘Then, what?’ asked the poor man again.
‘Then you can invest the money in business and make more money. So you will have lot of money,’ advised the businessman.
The poor man repeated his question—‘Then?’
‘Then you can enjoy your life,’ said the businessman.
‘But that is what I am doing,’ said the poor man.
And he slept again peacefully.
This story teaches us to live a simple life and avoid working hard.
This story tells us that we can enjoy happiness without having money.
This story projects the rich as foolish people who are running after money and failing to enjoy happiness in their life.
This story teaches us the virtue of being poor.
However, the fact of life is that you must not only earn what you need for today, but also you earn enough for your future.
Today, you can see millions of poor people walking hundreds of kilometres to their hometown because they have no savings to survive even for a few months.
It is heart-breaking to see the desperation of people who are breaking law and risking their lives simply to go back to their homes because they don’t have enough to fill the stomach of their family.
The lock-down has hardly affected the rich and middle class people who have secured jobs or sufficient savings.
The bitter truth of life is that poverty is the greatest curse for any human being.
If you are poor, you can’t live happily and honourably.
The people working hard to earn extra money are neither greedy nor fools.
Don’t get swayed by the one sided wisdom of such moral stories.
Work hard to have enough savings to sail through the difficult periods in your life.

-Awdhesh Singh

Tuesday, 12 May 2020

These are 9 Things I’ve seen sink some incredibly talented people:





  1. Excuse-Making. There are no excuses in success - if you make it or don’t make it, it’s ultimately on you. If you are someone who comes up with endless reasons why things don’t work or can’t work, instead of finding solutions, you won’t make it.
  2. Not Executing…Regularly. You can have the best ideas in the world, but if you don’t actually do something about them, you won’t go anywhere. Be someone who is a doer. It takes executing on things *regularly* to get ahead, because if you’re not, be assured other people are.
  3. Lack of Self-Control. Unsuccessful people are not disciplined, easily distracted, procrastinate endlessly, get side-tracked, or want immediate gratification. Sit down, focus on one thing, and make it work.
  4. Unwilling to Take Risks. You have got to take risks if you want to be successful…while you have to be smart about the risks you take, but you’ve got to take them to move ahead, it’s unavoidable. Sometimes you’ll win & sometimes you’ll lose on those risks, and that’s all part of forward progress.
  5. An Unambitious Circle. Your social and friend circle should not be holding you back. Have people in your life who make you feel like you’re on fire, reaching for big things themselves or are actively encouraging you.
  6. Impatience. Unless you hit the lottery or have some inheritance, to be successful, you have to play the long game. That means a lot of work happens behind the scenes before you reach your goals…and you can’t rush it. Impatient people end up giving up or quitting.
  7. Fear. Most people *feel* fear - but successful people feel the fear and just keep going and push through it. Those that don’t succeed will hyperfocus on the fear - what might go wrong, what others will say, what might happen, and they let this fear hold them back from doing what they need to do.
  8. Unwillingness to Learn. If you think you know everything, be prepared to fail. The only path to success is continuing to learn new things all the time. It doesn’t stop with your formal education because progress doesn’t stop…you have to constantly be learning, growing, learning.
  9. Giving Up. If you’re going to do well in business, you are going to take some hits - financially, personally, and maybe even very publicly. Everyone gets hurt, angry, and frustrated by setbacks…but the ones that win get back on their feet and keep going.
   These are probably the top 9 enemies of success that I’ve seen. I’d be interested to see your thoughts and if people have others they’d add!


-Julie Gurner, I'm a doc of psychology

Their are some arguments that signal the end of a relationship as :

1. ARGUMENTS OVER LIFE GOALS A long-term relationship usually involves two people who both respect each other’s goals and desire similar thi...