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Getting hired is a skill, and it is not the same skill as data engineering. This short orientation reframes the job search as a process you can run deliberately — with a funnel, a timeline, and a strategy — instead of a frustrating game of submitting resumes into the void. Do this well and the months of learning you've put in turn into an offer.
The uncomfortable truth
Being good at the job is necessary but not sufficient to get the job. Every year, capable engineers stay unemployed longer than they should because they treat the search as an afterthought — applying randomly, with a generic resume, no portfolio, and no interview practice. Meanwhile, less skilled candidates who run a process get hired faster.
That's actually good news: the job-search skill is learnable and you're starting it deliberately. This course is the process.
You have something most bootcamp grads and self-taught applicants don't: a real, working, documented platform (your capstone) that you can demo and discuss in depth. Almost everything in this course is about putting that asset to work. If you haven't finished the capstone, do it before you start applying — it's your single biggest differentiator.
The hiring funnel
Every job search is a funnel. Understanding it tells you where to spend effort:
Each stage filters people out. The chapters of this course are organized to get you through each one — so when something isn't working, you can diagnose which stage is leaking and fix that specifically.
The map of this course
| Chapter | Funnel stage it serves |
|---|---|
| 01 · The Job Market & Roles | Targeting — which jobs to go for and how to read them |
| 02 · Portfolio & Presence | Top of funnel — being findable and credible |
| 03 · Resume & Applying | The screen — getting past the six-second look and the ATS |
| 04 · Interview I — SQL & Coding | Technical screens |
| 05 · Interview II — System Design & Behavioral | Onsite / final rounds |
| 06 · Offer & First 90 Days | Closing — and starting strong |
A realistic timeline
Set honest expectations so you don't quit at week three:
- Weeks 1–2: Polish the capstone and portfolio (Ch.02), write the resume (Ch.03), set up LinkedIn. Don't apply yet — apply with a weak resume and you burn opportunities.
- Weeks 3+: Apply steadily (quality over spray-and-pray) while drilling interviews (Ch.04–05) in parallel. Treat the search like a part-time job: consistent weekly effort.
- Reality: A first data role often takes two to six months of active searching, with plenty of silence and rejection along the way. That's normal, not a verdict on your ability. The people who get hired are usually the ones who didn't stop.
You will hear "no" — or more often, nothing — many times before a "yes." Every senior engineer has a graveyard of rejections behind them. Track your funnel, learn from each round, and keep going. Persistence is the single biggest predictor of landing the role.
Mindset for the search
- Run a process, not a vibe. Track applications, stages, and outcomes in a simple sheet. Data engineers, of all people, should instrument their own funnel.
- Quality beats volume. Ten tailored applications with a referral beat a hundred generic ones into the ATS.
- Interview skill is separate and practiceable. You can be a great engineer and a rusty interviewer. Drill deliberately (Ch.04–05).
- You're closer than you feel. Imposter syndrome is near-universal. Your capstone is real evidence you can do the work — trust it.
✓ Check yourself
- Can you name the stages of the hiring funnel and which chapter addresses each?
- Have you set a realistic expectation for how long the search may take?
- Is your capstone finished and ready to show? (If not, that's job one.)
Exercise — Build your job-search tracker (10 minutes)
Create a simple spreadsheet with columns: company, role, date applied, source (referral/board), stage, next action, notes. This is your funnel dashboard — you'll add rows as you apply and move them through stages.
There's no single right answer, but the discipline matters: candidates who track their search apply more consistently, follow up more reliably, and spot which funnel stage is leaking. Treat your job hunt like a pipeline you're operating — because it is one.
Next
Before you can target jobs, you need to understand the landscape — the roles, the titles, and how to read what a posting is really asking for. → The Job Market & Roles