Playing the Student Card

As I mentioned last week, I’m a huge dork when it comes to the tech scene in Los Angeles and Pasadena.  You can find me driving to every event I can find in the city, even though that sometimes means up to two and a half hours of sitting in the car (welcome to LA, everything you’ve heard about rush hour and gridlock is 100% true).  Now, if you’re looking for how to find these events, I’ve got a lovely little post written up here, and you can read about the time Scripps Women in Technology and Innovate @ Scripps took a field trip to one here, but this particular blog is not about events themselves, but rather about what makes you special at mixers.

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Mixers love Scrippsies!

When I first started attending mixers, it was the summer between sophomore and junior year.  I was only 20 years old, and had no idea what I was doing in these seemingly uber professional business spaces.  Everyone around me would talk about current jobs, services they offered, projects they were working on, and I’d stand around mute with nothing to add.  People seemed to be trying to find someone else who shared their interests or had connections they needed, and as a student I had no network to speak of, nor skills to share.  My status as a student made me feel useless, but what I didn’t realize was it also gave me an advantage.  Although I was lacking in things to give, I was also lacking in ulterior motives.  The instant I said I was a student, anyone I talked to knew I had nothing to sell.  It was great watching them drop their guard as they spoke passionately about their interests, when they realized you didn’t want anything except to listen and learn.

We have only a few short years to use this status to our advantage (maybe more if you go to grad school), so I recommend starting as young as possible.  The most important lesson I learned is that as a student at a mixer, people honestly want to help.  They want to tell you about how to find interesting events, about their work, about internships at their companies. They don’t mind that you don’t know anything, they can remember their own innocence as students, and want to teach you about their own lives.  There will occasionally be people who brush you off (you can see it in their eyes when they dismiss you as useless to them), but by and large the world is full of people who just want to share their own knowledge with you.  Sometimes a mixer can teach you more than any classroom, and following up with those people can build you a better network than you ever imagined.  So go out there and flaunt that student status, you’d be surprised at the knowledge you can gain just by admitting your own ignorance.

Perspective

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For the past five months I’ve been studying abroad in Ireland, taking classes in Psychology and Computer Science at University College Cork (you can read my adventures here).  Now, if you’ve ever met me, you know that I am super plugged in to the Los Angeles tech scene, and love nothing more than going to conferences and hearing about the latest trends in the market.  When I was accepted to my study abroad program, I almost considered turning it down because I was terrified of all the opportunities I’d miss by leaving the country.  I’m one of those people who picks a goal and heads toward it at a dead run, ignoring everything on the sidelines.  I was so dead set on being a rising star in the tech industry that the idea of deviating from my path for five months frightened me.  Luckily, I had my father to put it all in perspective. “Alicen, you’re only 20 years old and you’ve got the rest of your life to be chained to a desk, go explore Europe before you put those shackles on”.

Now, my father was being a bit harsh and knows that having a job can be fun and fulfilling if you find the right one, but he was completely correct that I needed to get out and explore while I still could, and Los Angeles would be waiting for me when I returned.  Sometimes when you’re twenty years old, five months can seem like an eternity, especially when we are told as young adults that the job market is awful and we need to be constantly padding our resume if we want any chance of having a career in life.  I feel like I’m constantly sending out internship applications, attending networking events, and updating my LinkedIn profile, praying that I’ll be noticed and have some type of job security in the future.  Forcing myself to let all of that go to leave the country for five months was terrifying.

I’m glad I went, because I believe that removing myself from the LA tech scene actually allowed me to find focus in a way I never would have been able to if I had stayed.  Instead of attending every event and being blinded by the glitz and glam of Los Angeles, I started noticing what really mattered to me.  In LA, there were so many details that I failed to see bigger pictures and trends in tech.  Ireland was like a breath of fresh air, a pause in my life where I suddenly had time to reflect and think critically about what I was doing, instead of working on pure impulse out of fear of missing out.  Even if I won’t always have the time to go to another country for 5 months, I’ve realized that I do need to take the time to pause and reflect every so often, or else I get so caught up in the details of moving forward I miss the bigger picture.