MegaSack DRAW - This year's winner is user - rgwb
We will be in touch
Just curiosity really, what is your job and how did you get to where you are now? Simple path or long winding road?
I'm now a clinical psychologist working with under 25's who suffer with depression and schizophrenia. It's been a long road to get here and it's only now that I've really pursued a career in the field I've spent most of my life studying. A degree in psychology followed by a masters in philosophy (didn't know what I was doing). Spent 12 months lecturing at a local college then back to university to complete a doctorate in clinical psychology so I could be eligible for chartered status. I was 28 by this time. Dossed for 6 months, then just stumbled on an assistant psychologist position in a clinical psychology dept until finally finding my feet and working as a clinical psychologist for the NHS (starting last year).
I never thought I would really get to this point despite my qualifications in the field but alas it seems to have panned out alright.
engineering
I blame Glossop job centre
wanted to do graphic design or architecture
they had a structural engineering technician job listed. they told me it was like architecture
they lied
I had it all planned out from a young age - good grades at school in the physical sciences, went to Uni and studied physics and astronomy, got a good degree, got hired on my first interview by IBM to be a mainframe systems programmer.
Then, after eight months sitting in an office, realised that I'd planned my life all wrong, and quit to start a bike business.
IT started in 1980 - so consider myself very lucky as I'd never heard of computers at school.
School career advice was - you're clever and given Glasgow + Strathcyde prospectives. Was looking at accountancy (*oh dear) and physics, bussed up for uni open day - accountancy - incredibly boring bloke in a suit, phyiscs - incredibly boring bloke in white coat, and can't quite remember why but was taken through computing - which was blokes in jeans and Ts running about looking happy - decision made.
Milk round - 1st job in London 1980, and then just moved when unhappy or made redundant (3 times), done London/contracting + abroad, now in a 35hr a week, 25 minute country road commute happy place
My decison making/judgement/astuteness got better with age, regrets - working hard for companies who didn't work hard for me, but lesson learned.
Off shore engineering - applications /technical and field ops
Did engineering at uni as i wanted a numbers based degree to provide broad options at the time
Went cycling round nz came back , mrs tr decided she wanted to be a teacher , had a choice of edinburgh or aberdeen.
Came to aberdeen worked in alpine and looked for a job that payed a living wage. Voila found my job. Like traveling and like doing hands on rather than office based engineering so side tracked into field work when mates that started same time as me went into full on apps roles
Yay
Lorryist.
Something very bad in a previous life.
firefighter......only looked into doing it retained to bump up my aerospace engineering wage due to overtime bans etc.
loved doing it retained, applied to go full time and got in first time.
now disillusioned with it and got one eye on emigrating to sunnier climes, but am at a loss as how to do this. ive done ITTT teaching english abroad course, and ILM management courses, but dont know if theyll help me yet.
Did a degree in geology at uni, as all I needed for my chosen proffession (officer in the royal marines) was a degree. Failed the entrance medical for my eyesight! Couldnt stand living back at home at all after uni so joined the RAF as an avionics engineer asap. Loved it, only ever worked 3 days a week due to running for the raf.
Left the raf dispondant after 7 years and worked for marconi comms in coventry, they went down the pan, so I got a job with EADS as a systems field engineer, I work with our and others navys, fixing satcomms systems when they break.
I hate my job, and am looking to totally retrain in something I love, sport or conservation related. On the plus side I have been to some amazing places with my job , and im free to live where i want. So went from Aviemore, to Hope, and currently in Ludlow.
Business Analyst in a bank.
Dropped out of Computer Science at uni, working full time in a bar. Got a job in a call centre for a mobile phone manufacturer, then ran a first line laptop support desk. Moved into a corporate online banking helpdesk, then into another ops area within the bank. I got on a scheme similar to a grad scheme (without the prerequisite degree) and haven't looked back since.
I wanted to be a Vet as a kid. Went to Uni and studied zoology to try get into the Vet school. Didn't happen so left and got a job in the bank working as a teller. Moved quite quickly into IT working in Business Intelligence. Continued with this and Dba work. Now Head of BI for a great company.
Luckily I found something I am good at and enjoy and it worked out.
Went from top grades in Maths Chem and Physics at A-level to an MEng at Queens in Belfast
Discovered clubbing and recreational substances in the early 90s - ended up working in bars / putting in double glazing on German building sites and ended up doing a sound engineering course in Manchester. Took the fall for running post-club after-hours drinking nights and wound up on a computer programming course
Now after 15 years in IT I architect and design supply chain solutions (ie make the computers do what the business wants their supply chain to do) for a major food retailer.
I've biked all that time starting on a Raleigh M-Trax with no suspension and cantilever brakes
Lawyer.
Boringly, I'm one of those people who can retain info for long enough to look good at passing exams. Did a degree in a subject that interested me (politics). Met Mrs North at university. One day she demanded to know what I was going to do with myself. At Durham the standard choices seemed to be accountancy or law.
I'm better with words than numbers so I chose law.
Worked in two of the biggest firms and now work for a telecoms company. Actually like what I do (even though it bores me to tears lots of the time), and now working out how to turn it into a commercial role.
Firefighter, spent some years travelling in the force then went into comms in first London then Belgium market went pop so went to Switzerland and did mountain guiding , had pre Christmas hol to see parents and saw ad for fire service applied and got in, took 9 months so did antenna rigging for orange til start date as money was good. Now currently looking for other jobs as its now rubbish and set to get worse
Left school after my A Levels..had enough of education at that point so didnt bother with Uni and not a clue what to do with my life. Got a job running our local pub, which i did for a couple of years until i started my training as a nurse. Graduated in 1999. Worked a mixture of A+E, Coronary Care, some work as a civvie nurse for the military and then some management before heading to the rigs as an Offshore Medic..which i sometimes hate (usually the day i leave the house), sometimes love (usually payday or the day i go home). Its certainly taken me places i never expected to work..Angola, Congo, Nigeria, South Africa, Ghana, USA, but currently working off bloody Shetland. I still do some occasional A+E work as well as i really enjoy it. I would love to retrain as a Physio/Sports Therapist but time, mortgage, bread knife and binlids mean not possible.
I guess my dream job would involve owning my own bike shop or working for the FC building trails..but the moneys crap and i suspect it becomes just 'another job'.
Run a pr firm in the events industry.
Qualified as a Glacial Geomorphologist after studying glacial retreat but in 86 no one gave a ferk about climate change so no jobs about.
Got on trainee programme with Maersk then via numerous roles in marketing with a number of companies, opportunity came up to set up a business in the Peak Park so grabbed it - that was in 1997 - still happily working away and riding lots.
Funny way life goes.
Winemaker.
Born & bred in Marlborough NZ.
After school & dead end jobs, I got into a viticulture course at polytech in 92 after school friends parents started one. Seemed to have a nice lifestyle.
After working in vineyard & wineries in NZ for a while, I moved to Tasmania in 2000. Got a job in a start up vineyard, moving to the winery in 04 & starting a degree in winemaking.
Now I've reached my goals of 20 years ago, i need a new challenge.
& my school mates considered me basically unemployable.
house husband
after a long and illustrious career as a professional layabout, I got a beautiful young professional woman up the stick during a night of drunken passion..
and here I am now..
Great thread, nice one 🙂
APF
IT Security manager
I slept my way to the top. It took me a long, long time to get here.
Multiskilled Technician in a food factory. (Mechanical/ Elec maintainance) as well as keeping lines running, we are involved with focused improvements to improve efficiency etc etc.
My Mum applied for an apprenticeship on my behalf (I wasn't in a hurry to get a job) I did well at the interview and got in!
That was 20 years ago and I am still with the same company.
Getaway driver. The money is good.
Orthopod. Hopefully a trauma and limb recon one when I grow up.
A-Levels, medschool, many years of working too many hours. Too many months and years of revising for exams and missing summers.
Nearly there. Best job in the world if you ask me. It's great.
Work in a gift shop. Married the owner and she needed cheap staff!
Used to paint cars. Don't miss the job but do miss swearing and dirty jokes.
Recruitment manager. Scraped a degree at a crap uni, went travelling, came home and found myself working in a hotel bar earning very little but having a grat time. My best mates dad is a telecoms PM and was meeting a recruitment company who consisted of 3 employees for some intrview prep, they said they wanted to hire a grad and would his son be interested, he wasn't but his best mate (me) was. That was 8 years ago, I'm still at the same company, we now employ 30 people and I manage a team of recruiters.
Recruitment can be the best job in the world but I can also be truly horrific. I do debate retraining and moving on but I do quite like it really.
Care worker.
I've been a pawnbroker, world's smallest doorman, years and years dealing with the legal side of insurance.
I prefer being a care worker.
Hong Kong based Regional Product Manager for a large US electronic manufacturer.
Left school at 16 with low GCSEs and became a trainee engineer (think apprentice without the company responsibilities, thanks Maggie) which got me up to an HND, then got made redundant an spent a few years pissing around and enjoying life.
Then became a CAD guy for a while which somehow got me into the AV industry and lucky enough that this job also got me to travel the world over the following 15 years.
In my previous UK job I meet the current MrsC in HK an then one thing lead to another and I ended up here a few years ago, now the only westerner in a company of over 250 spread over the region.
For a poorly educated Aldershot boy I got lucky, but still, like others also bored of my job and looking for something new....
lawyer
picked up good grades at school so was told to either study law or medicine. The thought of dealing with old people freaked me out, so I chose law. 6 years of law school, only tolerable by the fact that I also had a full time job and partied my back side off.
Spent six years working for a mahoosiv law firm and then realised that everything about it was so so wrong.
Was hired by a client last year, one of the biggest construction companies around, now spend most of my time setting up and closing large deals for a company that actually seems to value me. Only a handful of investment lawyers in the UK business, so a close knit team of people who actually know what they are doing (the opposite of big law firms!)
I'd still rather be doing something else though, it's mostly dull as hell 🙂
IT
Started v.small as a sole trader late 80's.. Through some lucrative contracts, grew in the 90's to a multi million operation. Leveled off for a couple of years then nose dived rapidly back down to single man operation again as most big firms moved IT in house or to the big players.. Cant beleive that after 25 years I'm pretty much back where I started hehehe
After spending my teens and nearly all of my twenties working as little as possible and doing as I pleased, I kind of fell in a health & safety role as I figured it was a growth industry. 8 years on I look after a number of different things for a big FE/HE college, health & safety being one element. I haven't really 'earned' my position through hard work, more a case of using and trusting my innate abilities. Which is kind of cool as I always thought they'd see me right and were far more important to trust than studying hard.
LBS "manager" (PA/lackie) via Maths degree, LBS, dole, a go at software, a go at loudspeaker design, voluntary work, more LBS, Law degree & work, left due to difficult bosses.
No frikkin idea what to do next, needs to not be a "wrong" choice.
Pretend architect specialising in all the technical and specific space planing requirements for stadiums and arenas.
3 A levels in art based subjects, foundation course in art, degree in furniture and related product design followed by a year or so of working in pubs and driving vans before getting lucky and getting in to architecture as a cad monkey. Few lucky breaks later and landed a job designing the seating bowl for the O2. Now spend my life doing the early stage stuff on competitions and feasibility studies for major stadium projects.
Building inspector - started out as draughtsman for consulting engineers but got fed up drawing straight lines. 3 years full time at tech college + further 4 years day release to get professionally qualified. Enjoy the variety the job brings & the fact that I'm out & about meeting all sorts, but it can be pretty confrontational sometimes. Always think I would like to do something completely different but I'm probably too old for that now.
Illustrator, artist, storyboards.
Left art college went to work in music shop, became manager at 18 loved the job but saw the retail side of the industry collapsing so at 21 went to uni to do art.
Buyer from famous gallery moderated my degree show and purchased all my work.
A few years in various jobs I hated.
Diagnosed with manic depression.
One year off.
Email off buyer from gallery about doing some work, job centre useless helping me set up self employed. But did it.
Introduced to famous pop star, started a relationship. She opened doors for me and got me to storyboard her bands videos.
Ended that as I didn't like being in public eye, stress.
Carried on with storyboards, do free lance and what ever else.
Trying to get a part time job to get me out the house a bit more.
Now IT network engineer. Was electrical engineer before that and started working life off as a floor layer.
Got to this stage by working my ass off and doing lots of reading which is funny as although I didn't mind school and i was reasonable well behaved, I just didn't try much.
Think I'm lucky as I enjoy what i do, I'm good at it ( just seems to make sense) money is good, you can do it most places of the world and it changes so there's always something new to learn.
Not sure I'd want to do another job.... Well apart from fighter jet pilot or racing driver 😉
On being offered 'economics, history and British Government' as A level subjects, decided to try and give these new fangled computers a go instead. Worked for big companies, small companies, two of my own companies and now just me.
Serial troubleshooter mostly outside of IT nowadays. It's an interesting and well rewarded filler for the more interesting things in life.
Wanted to be a Journo - quite glad I ducked that bullet 😉
Paramedic.
Didn't get grades at school to be a doctor, did IT at uni as my part time boss in IT support offered me £25k and a car if I came back with a Degree. Found I hated computers and quit uni and ran a bar instead. Decided I had to "do something with my life" thought the ambulance service looked like a laugh, applied, didn't get in. kept applying and finally got in on PTS (out patients mini bus) did this for a year, moved up to urgent tier, did this for four years, moved up to A&E, now work on an RRV, training for my practicioner qualification and hopefully soon applying to work on a bike....
Prison Officer.
Not a career choice but cos I screwed up twice (pardon the pun) earlier on in life & 'ended up' here.
If i stayed in my 1st job (council plant/vehicle fitter) I'd be retired now.
It's carp BTW.
Sparky, hate it. Mrs kerv and me thinking of selling up, moving to Wales and becoming bums.
Policeman.
Was never really in my sights, but after a Biochemistry degree and a year at Pfizer I got bored so went on one of those Operation Raleigh expeditions. Just mooching about doing odd jobs after that, when three wholly unconnected people told me that Hampshire Constabulary were recruiting and 'you'd be good at that'. Turns out I did have a knack for it, and after a number of years in England I moved up to Scotland, where I now spend my time trying to win all expenses paid extended holidays for thieves and deevs. Can't see myself doing anything else really. It's what I'm good at, and I can do it anywhere I want to live.
I wanted to be a vet as a kid but I wasnt clever enough and had a bad attitude to school so said all the teachers. So I was kicked out of school with a few GCSE's. Went to a sixth form did a bit of work redid some gcse's and got some decent a levels and went off to uni to do ecology. Left determined to change the world but that didnt realy happen. Worked in a lab, bummed around for a few years and went back to uni to do a masters then phd. Left wanting to to do research on farmland biodiversity. Did research for a few years and got very bored. I am nkw a teacher...how the **** did that happen I hated teachers and school but somehow love my job.
Reciprocating reproductive initiation technician.
Went through school with as minimal amount of effort as possible. Didn't really enjoy many subjects apart from computing and a small photography course. Left with 5 highers and no idea what to do other than I enjoyed doing a community radio show when I was in my early teens and knew I didn't want to go to uni.
Left home at 17 with my car and my dads trailer while he was away on holiday. Did an HNC in radio broadcasting while working for Macdonalds (had been working there since 15 anyway). Did work experience in radio and got a job doing news for a local station and decided it wasn't for me.
Got a job working for a tax dodging arse bucket who used to set up companies and then fold them. I lasted 3 months before telling him where to go. I didn't realise how dodgy he was until I started.
Landed a job in a call centre working doing tech support to pay my rent and beer habit. Then through persistence got a job in the same company doing telecoms support. Left after 5 years. Joined another company doing telecoms support and have been there (more or less) since. I love working with new technology and visiting sites, installing kit, troubleshooting, designing etc. I'm now about 60% telecoms guy / 40% network guy. I get paid well to do something I like. My only wish is that I get to combine more working outdoors with my job so i'm looking into VSAT training and wireless technologies to see where my next steps are.
Sorry, long story, not very interesting.
This thread turned out better than I'd hoped. Great stories and insight. Genuinely fascinating to see the paths people took and how and why they do what they do (currently).
I run a small loudspeaker manufacturing company.
Decided to join the army when I was 15 and went to their 6th form college to go on to become an officer in one of the engineering corps - in the process I discovered that although I'm good at leading, I'm not good at following and so stepped out of the system and went to a normal uni. Lucky escape considering I'd have left Sandhurst in 2001, just as it all kicked off... Started an e-commerce business in the dotcom boom after finishing my engineering degree, which didn't work out. Ended up in various sales jobs, gradually getting more corporate. Started building loudspeakers as a hobby, that turned into a business somewhat by accident and then I quit the day job a few years ago to do that fulltime.
Many, many levels of dullness. Including some interesting sounding dull things.
Left school not knowing what to do so went to college to do an HNC Computing. Finished that not knowing what I wanted to do so went to university to do a Computer Aided Engineering degree. After graduating went for a job as a Computer Aided Engineer, which put me right off the idea (shown desk where I'd be working - a 6-foot square windowless cupboard with a big, fat, beardy bloke). Hmmm. Riiight. Now what.
Luckily landed a job helping folk apply for EU R&D funding. The thinking being that the techie background would help understand what the projects were hoping to achieve. Over the years drifted over to be a consultant on the intricacies of EU public procurement legislation. Also learned how to write websites and do ISO quality things.
Now job is primarily a researcher/data analyst, but still sidelining in website stuff and quality stuff and IT stuff when needs arise. And now I'm starting a bookkeeping course. Because, you know, that's exciting sounding too.
I work as a tech op in a tv studio that broadcasts sky's at the races channel and coral tv/ladbrokes extra to all their betting shops in the UK 🙂 not the most exciting as i have no interest or horse or dog racing but the job is easy and great experience for live evs/audio/graphics work as well as avid editing on a regular basis which is hard to come by! Before i got this job i studied media production at uni (seem to be one of the few who actually got a job in the industry!) with no idea what i was gonna do after... Did a load of web design after uni before getting a tech op job at a shopping channel, before being head hunted via linked in for this job!
Property investor - my own portfolio in UK & abroad.
Always interested in it but had to do 15 years in boring but well paid jobs looking out the window in Central London to fund my new venture.
Left that 10 years ago & never ever looked back. Sadly you need a fair pot of money to get started in property so you have to be a wage slave for a while.
It's actually quite boring, lonely & repetitive but compared to working in an office no competition.
Fluffer
Went to art college, got a degree in technical illustration. Went freelance from college, was hard to begin with but slowly got my portfolio around London. Moved to London worked for Dorling kindersley building 3d front ends for their CDroms, moved back to Swanage set up a New media company with 2 other people, this was good for a few years, we got into animation, tv adverts and the like. We then got into the telecoms company's and were making the cd for all the big telecom boys that they sent out to get you to switch your ISP provider to them ( this was all pre broadband ). Left the company as I could see the bottom falling out of this area as broadband was about to kick off but the other 2 owners didn't want get back to the design side of things.
Start helping a mate who was fitting kitchens.....12 years on we have a good kitchen design/supply and install company.
A complete career change but a good one, no longer Gavin to deal with large company's who don't like paying.
Simon
I am a middle manager at a Big Utility, working on the Smart Metering programme, mainly involved in commercial and strategy work. I Worked my way up from the bottom, started taking calls in the call centre in 1997. All my peers are from either the graduate scheme or are ex consultants, but you can work your way up if you try hard enough.
Ski patroller in the winter, bin man and wannabee bike racer in the summer. Later a bike shop monkey in the summers. Somehow managed to sail a tall ship across the atlantic and gain a BEng which was to be my safety net for when I couldn't ski or bike any more.
Did a few seasons in UK and one in NZ, and then a bad Scottish season had me rethinking priorities so I joined the oil industry and started visiting bizzare parts of the world to stick metal down holes. Enjoyed the challenge and the travel... and the money which paid for ace toys and holidays. Swapped jobs a few times to broaden skills base before joining a super-major to get official training in sticking things down holes... so I could leave and set myself up as a "consultant sticking things down holes engineer". Currently enjoy my family, my work and my play.
Didn't know what I wanted to do, was told by a friend of my dad (a civil engineer) to come up with something quickly (at 13) otherwise you'll end up as a civil engineer (like my Dad) got into electronic music, theatre and other stuff, did a BSc. in music tech asa degree, did a bit of teaching (kayaking) as a summer job and lived in my car doing it straight after uni along side a bunch of one off music bits, a bit of mixing here, some mastering there, then my girlfriend went to do a degree in Nursing at Oxford Brookes, I got a succession of temp jobs, free lancing music editing and mixing, and did my MA, we got married had kids, needed some more stable income, so applied for teaching jobs in music tech, got a job at an FE college in Essex, got my teaching qualifications, worked there for 6 years, didn't much like the FE thing, applied for a host of university posts and got one, which is where I am now.
musician. studied violin from age 9, got to grade 8 at age 15, got offered a scholarship at cheethams age 12, turned it down (didn't want to board, hang out with rich kids). joined a band age 17, toured the world for 3 years, left, bummed about, had kids, various crap jobs, bought a house, went to college to be a joiner, did house up, divorced, now work for myself as a builder/joiner, when not playing or writing in my own studio. love it.
Researcher in computer science. Graduated with a Physics degree in the mid 90s and spent a few years working in shops and customer service type stuff punctuated by a year in Australia and a year in NZ. In 2001 got fed up with always being a bit skint and doing crap jobs so took a loan to a do an MSc in Computer Science. A few research jobs later and I'm about to have my PhD viva next week. Probably be a lecturer sometime in the next few years.
Enjoyed a lot of the stuff I've done but I'm now about 10 years behind were I could/should have been.
I oscillate wildly between healthcare and archaeology.
I'm one them folks that's pretty smart, but rubbish at exams. I always found school frustrating and smoked a lot of herbal remedies during this time and came out with C's at A-level.
Took a year out and went traveling not knowing what i wanted to do and during this time got a place at a good uni to study conservation and sustainability. Really enjoyed my degree and that it was based more on coursework than exam scores so did OK. Managed to do a sandwich year working abroad as well which was brilliant.
Finished my degree but was skint so didn't take up the option of doing a free masters degree (facepalm) and went to work at a local authority doing sustainability.
Did well and was acting up to a higher role but the cuts to council funding meant that was not made permanent and my wage got slashed.
Moved to a university but not challenged in my job and looking elsewhere. Wish I'd not gone into an office job after uni and worked outside doing conservation work like i trained to do
Failed to be clever enough to be a vet.
Failed A levels due to serious illness.
Did some more A-levels.
Studied Environmental Chemistry at uni, which failed to get me any decent employment.
Started doing clerical work for a college as a temp.
Now senior administrator at same college.
IT manager for a small family owned holiday firm.
No formal IT qualifications - did an English and History degree and fell into IT from a temp job in a BT call centre. Worked my way up and did around 8 years in the telecoms industry here and abroad and a further 9 years in rail in various quite specialised roles mainly relating to asset maintenance systems. Done everything from support to business analysis. Gave up quite lucrative job in London about 18 months ago to move to Devon.
New role is very general compared to what I did previously - pretty much look after everything with a plug and more, and have had to learn a hell of a lot. Also as busy as ever but have got a very short commute, work for a great company and we get to live in a stunning part of the world. Recently became a retained firefighter too, which I'm loving so far and is a nice complement to the day job.
Failed all my exams at school. Was planning on going into the hotel and catering business but joined the RAF as a police dog handler, signed up for 9 years, bought myself out after 3.
Worked on fish market for a bit, then joined my dad in driving taxis, which materialised into a family business that let me work a bit, travel a lot. got heavily involved in Triathlons when they first started up over here, this involved having two years of having someone drive my taxi while I trained and raced at a reasonable level, made it into the top 20 of a few races, gave up when the money ran out.
Then taxi business went bust and lost everything so planned on travelling around the world but met what was to become my first wife who said I needed to get a real job, so started working as a volunteer with social services, which led to working as a nursing assistant in mental health. Went back to college and did and access course to start nurse training. Spilt up from first wife. Qualified as a mental health nurse and now working as a community nurse with children and adolescents in mental health. Sometimes fun always stressful.
IT sales channel account manager. I clubbed baby seals in a past life.
spent the last 6 month of school life in a naughty boys home in the north east.
came out and got a job delivering roof tiles and coal. bloke put me through for my class 2 licence. but i ****ed about after that, and went away for a while again.
got a job as a blacksmith at a train builders, which was ace until the axe fell.
drove for parcelforce, hodded plaster, drove a big mofo crane at a steel works.
been selling satellite/aerial and cctv for the last 13yrs.
so far in my life of crap jobs, i have neer had to sign on, which i am proud of.
No idea what to do at school as crap at maths and English, went to do an aptititude test to become a car mechanic (under pressure from family to get a proper job) finished the test in half the allotted time and sat there looking at all the idiots in the room and had an epiphany moment and realised that this was not for me.
Managed to get into art college to do a 2 year btec in graphic design and then went to another art college to do a BA and ended up specialising in photography.
Left and sent 6 months as an admin assistant in the department of transport to pay off my £500 overdraft 😀 all the while staying at various friends and relatives sofas/spare rooms as there was not enough money to flat share and pay the overdraft off.
Then started assisting various photographers doing all sorts from big advertising shoots to fashion editorial, went to some amazing places and met some amazing people from all walks of life, ate a lot of posh lunches too.
Worked my way up the ladder and started doing more lucrative work for photographers like lighting cars/still life for those who didn't know their arse from their elbow, all the while picking up various photography jobs for design and advertising clients, got a break with a worldwide campaign for kinetiQ which paid extremely well and kick started the move from assistant to photographer.
Picked up a few clients in the furniture world by accident which have been good clients for a fairly long time, I like dealing direct with them (instead of agency) and have a good working relationship.
I shoot all sorts but mainly still-life and location so the work is varied, recently shot a campaign for huffington post of portraits of their famous bloggers so hope to shoot more people. (cherie Blair, dawn porter and some music bloke called Labrinth)
Do a fair bit of retouching for a couple of other photographers and am involved in a moving image shoots so hope to find time to get a reel together for some directing work for online, tv would be nice but hard to break into.
Reading that back makes me realise how lucky I am as I wouldn't last 5 minutes in an office/I.t job with a boss and 2 weeks holiday a year as my soul would be crushed by boredom.
Sorry didn't realise that would be so long 😳
I'm a 'specialist engineer' if my job title is to be believed. In theory I do remote server support for a large "managed network services" company. In practice I tend mostly to deal with escalation cases and get drafted into areas I know nothing about in order to work out what the hell's actually going on and then find someone who can fix it. Ie, something comes in that no bugger knows anything about, they give it to me.
Was a girlie swot at school, but by the time I got to University the wheels had come off and I bombed a Computing HND that I was totally disengaged from. In hindsight I should've done a degree.
First IT job was tech support for Time Computers, which was a baptism of fire as the company ostensibly didn't give a toss about anything. Staff turnover was about 200%, I left after about four years and was one of the longest serving members of Tech staff they had.
Since then I've been a "programmer" - internal web dev - an IT Manager and internal systems / infrastructure support. I tried my hand at contracting for a while but couldn't get enough clients to be worthwhile long term. I also spent about a year building kids' playgrounds during a dry spell in IT jobs - the soft play things with ball pools and such that were all the rage at McDonalds for about ten minutes. Bloody hard work but kinda interesting.
Had placed to study engineering or Hotel management, took the Hotel route as haven't a scooby about physics. Have worked in contact catering and hotels/events business for 22years now run a venue in Edinburgh, almost joined the Navy and also walked away from an economics degree course at Heriot Watt. not sure if I am happy as such but make a good living and don't seem to have as much stress as before. Would like my own pub.
Wanted to be a vet, spent lots of time at school cleaning kennels, mucking out horses and getting covered in poo on farms. Was lucky enough to pass the exams and get a place at Uni.
Love it. Started in mixed and now small animal only, kind of miss the yarns from the farmers etc but on a day like today being inside and warm has its own appeal. Can be stressful and its a vocation rather than a job that you leave at 5pm and don't worry about till the next day
Now doing management stuff too which brings different stresses but has its own rewards. Can't think of another job I would like to do but am slightly envious of Medic friends payscale and pensions. Then sometimes you look up and are glad its the dog/cat you are having to examine rather than its owner. 😀
Started college to do A levels but dropped out after 12 months as I hated it, joined the RAF Police, did 6 years, left that, worked as a Debt Manager (2yrs) for a large finance company before joining the Old Bill. Been doing that for 16 years.
Left school in 1985 and did 4 years studying to get a HND in the audio video industry. Worked at the BBC sound engineering at wood lane in London before getting a job in a video production company in Manchester. When the firm went under I somehow got into selling shoes as a market trader, which I came to hate over the next 2 or 3 years. Applied for the cops and what do you know? 17 years on and it turns out I'm fairly competent at it. Been a detective for 15 years and spent almost 6 years on the major incident team, mainly working on murders. Got promoted 3 years ago and can't see myself doing out else.
I don't actually know
Senior Consultant Simulation Modelling & Software Sales
Long way from where I started
Grew up on a family farm so always had that route open.
A Levels Maths Chem & Physics
Decided Chemistry would be a good solid career path (idiot)
2 years of degree before I failed and left after screwing up resets
Working in my year out job which turned into longer as they were closing down so weren't taking more students.
Got into Air Monitoring (by accident/needed a job)
Moved on in that for 3 years until leaving 1 company that were a nightmare.
Ended up to air monitoring in R&D at Sellafield.
Picked up loads of projects in R&D before getting involved in some computer modelling work. Swapped departments and did that for 7 years.
Missus wanted to move back to Oz so ended up here brief chat with the guy distributing the software I used to work in and here I am. Currently doing about 3 days per week from home in the sunshine 15 years after leaving school to be a chemist.
Work for DICE game studio on the Battlefield franchise (and other stuff).
Got here by working in IT for far too long!
Degree in Electronic Engineering.
Few contract jobs as a Junior Project Engineer (not degree related).
Couple of years as a Business Analyst implementing an ERP system.
Year for a call centre company doing Client Relationship work and Management Reporting.
Six years as a Compensation & Benefits Consultant, which I'm sticking with. It's innovative, analytical, diverse, interesting, changes day by day, I work with great people and the pay is pretty good.
Photographer - weddings, dogs and a wee bit of commercial stuff.
Did well at school - excelled at languages and got English, Russian and French Highers. Discovered drugs and loose women at the start of my last school year and dropped out and down, hard and fast.
Spent many years doing really crappy jobs in retail, catering and driving before an injury forced me to hit rock bottom. Came out the other side with a totally clean slate and started over at 29 years old. Went (back) to college, then uni, became a photographer. Still doing it. It ain't glamorous and I'm mostly skint but I love it.
Worked for Birdseye for the last 5 years (field account manager for coop) now I'm training to do what I always wanted to do and become a teacher.
Hopefully this time next year I'll be enjoying a job I love.
Railway signaller,
Spent my teenage years obsessed with wanting to join the RAF as aircrew, so spent 4 years in cadets and went to Biggan Hill at the ripe age of 17! Passed the aptitude tests and medical, all went wrong at the panel interview, I didn't play cricket or go to opera or theatre, so sent packing due to not having depth of caracter. Went home and joined RAF as a telecomms tec, stayed in a full 2 weeks and bought my self out, never seen that coming! Went home and had a job in the railway within 2 weeks and started as a signaller, never knew what a signaller was but hey I had a job happy days! Still at it 23 years later with probably the best view in the UK "if you like Ben Nevis and that sort of thing" not planning changing anything, all going well will retire from it one day!
PJ.
Work in the bike trade. Loved bikes since I was a kid. Worked for giant when I was in Germany, used to do Xc races in Black Forest and Switzerland... Am so lucky, turned my hobby into my life 😉
I work as a chocolatier for 3 days a week, been doing this for 6 odd years and i also work in a bike shop as mechanic/bike sales etc for 3 days a week, been doing this for the past 3 months but i've fixed/repaired all my bikes, including moto-x since the age of 8+ (now 40-gulp!) as i've always been mechanically minded thanks to my upbringing, i guess i was born with a silver socket set in my mouth rather than a silver spoon.
I left school at 17, got very good O' grades and Highers but nae fear of me going to college or uni at that point as i just wanted a job and money so got apprenticeship as vehicle mechanic, did that for 5 yrs, got bored so worked at a newly setup local wildlife park for 2 years as animal handler/feeder - loved it, left that to go to college/uni and studied Mechanical Engineering/Electronic Engineering/Cad for 4 yrs. I got a good pass despite doing the absolute minimal work on my part and was immediately offered a job at Gates power transmission, i didn't apply for it but my old thermodynamics tutor put my name forward and i got a phonecall one friday afternoon offering me the job. I started work the following monday testing and designing Power transmission belts (timing belts) to destruction, sometimes on a variety of exotic engines in the test bay's but mostly on rigs where we measured various parameters, it was the best paid job i've ever had (36k & bonus scheme at 25yrs old) but it bored me shiteless and i don't do, nor like factory work so i left after a year to go on walkabout in Africa for 10 odd months, came back and got offered a job in a local fibreglass factory as mech engineer/cad engineer but i only lasted 6 months as the job entailed me delegating to knuckle dragging, football loving, lager swilling ****tards so i quit, i realised i just wanted to get out and ride my bike when i wanted without the hassle of a full time job so i did without a "proper job" for 8 yrs but in that time i was sort of self employed and helped out now and again wi various mates who run their own small businesses, some house renovations, some electrical, some mechanical, some plumbing, some blacksmithing, basically a bit of everything. And finally i was asked to help out one of my mothers old work colleagues as she had set herself up as a small artisan chocolatier and i thought "why not?, it's something new to learn", so that was 6 yrs ago and i'm still doing it 6yrs later along wi working at a mates small bike shop, there's only the two of us but we build nice bikes and are very good mechanics if i do say so myself, Ibis, Lapierre and Cotic's make up the vast majority of our custom and sales.
I've never even thought about a so called career?, not interested in money or chasing it in the slightest, i've had plenty in the past but the type of job i had to do to get it was demoralising so years ago i made the choice to always do what i want, when i want and if i dislike what i'm doing i stop and do something else. I'm lucky as i don't have kids or anyone else to worry about so i can be pretty selfish in my lifestyle choices but that suits me perfectly.
Sparky, hate it. Mrs kerv and me thinking of selling up, moving to Wales and becoming bums.
Not all it's cracked up to be,as with all jobs you find yourself stuck in a groove.
I've done all sorts over the years. I disliked school and didn't do as well as I should have. Worked in retail, hospitality, bike shop and programmed in IT for a while before my brain temporarily went into melt down.
Currently a sometimes employed photographer, but more often than not, my days revolve around looking after our kids and keeping a messy house.
Grateful my wife loves having a proper job, and that our kids look like they'll do better than both of us.
Oil refinery shift operator or (shift availability technician)to give it its proper title. started out as an apprentice steel fabricator and other heavy engineering work followed. Then got involved in the oil industry which was what I always wanted to do but thought offshore was where it was at but the job I was offered was refinery based and I really like it now I would only go offshore if I had to the T&Cs are great 15 years and still enjoy it.
