đ Earlywork #60: 6 Lessons from Uni We Need to Unlearn
Reflections on the career-education gap from PM-turned-founder Amogh Sarda
Ello ello Earlyworkers!
Popping off in your inbox is Earlywork #60, a weekly cheeky newsletter sent every Tuesday that provides free resources + interviews on the careers of tomorrow, for 3.5K+ young Aussies & Kiwis in the tech, startup & social impact landscape.
If youâre not already part of the Earlyverse đđ, subscribe now to keep a pulse on our latest stories and conversations:
đĄWeekly Cheeky Tip
One of the most fascinating things for me about the world of startups is seeing people who didnât gel well with university education do super well in a more proactive, practical environment as a founder or early employee.
What skills or inclinations do these folks have that allowed them to thrive at work but not in school, and what does this tell us about our approach to education?
I was lucky enough to spar with Amogh Sarda, a product-manager-turned-startup-founder now building eesel, a search engine that makes it easy to find any work doc you need, to find out.
Hereâs what he had to say:
I studied Mechatronics / Comp Sci at UNSW, was a product manager at Atlassian & Intercom, and am now building an early stage startup called eesel.
Reflecting on my journey so far, itâs clear that the mindset you need to thrive in uni doesn't totally translate to the mindset you need to thrive at work.
Why does this discrepancy exist? What skills apply for one and not the other?
Here are the biggest differences Iâve seen between uni and work, and things Iâve had to unlearn.
𧹠#1: Uni is about following a rubric. Work is about making your own rubric.
University gives a lot of structure. Thereâs a clear end goal, the steps to get there are laid out, and whatâs âgoodâ and whatâs not is defined.
You can work backwards from this to figure out what to do, and feel a ton of confidence, stability, and validation for the progress youâre making.
The annoying thing about work (and life more generally) is that things are far more open-ended.
From graduate programs to career ladders, youâll of course see elements of frameworks but nothing will feel as comforting and laid out as the university days.
That sounds a bit disorienting, but this open space of options is the forcing function we need to form our own opinions.
You get to choose what you value, what âgoodâ looks like, and where you spend time. For instance, itâs in grappling with these choices that I built the conviction to work on eesel to solve problems I care deeply about.Â
There will be tough trade offs to make (career vs. hobbies, career vs. friends), but take ownership of this, and create the rubric you want for yourself.
âď¸ #2: Uni is about assigned tasks. Work is about unassigned tasks.
Uni teaches you to do well on an assigned project, but doing good at work is usually about going beyond that. The best way to stand out at work is to zoom out from the mindset of executing on âassignedâ tasks, and take a broader perspective on opportunities.
For example, a PM friend at Intercom was handed months of feature iterations to make Intercom GDPR-compliant. Rather than jumping on to deliver this, they were able to successfully challenge the need for the project in the first place.
Likewise, the best way to transition to a new role from your current one is to start behaving like your desired role before you get the title.
For example, I transitioned into engineering from product management at Atlassian, by working on customer feature requests ad-hoc in addition to my day job.
Demonstrate high agency and a resourcefulness to take control, and shape things for yourself. Iâd recommend giving this thread from Shreyas Doshi a read:
đ #3: Uni is about sprints. Work is about marathons.
Iâm generalising, but you can do pretty well at uni working in spikes just before an exam or assignment. Itâs not unusual to work unhealthy hours at the last minutes of the crunch, knowing that thereâs down time after.
Work isnât really like that. While you could have some project deadlines with an associated rush, thereâs no âend of semesterâ to work and thereâs pretty much always more to do.
You need to learn how to work sustainably, consistently, as opposed to working really hard in a short burst to just get that âoneâ thing done. This is especially the case in high pressure environments (building a company like eesel is definitely one of them!).Â
If youâre catching yourself working hard with the belief that youâll âchill laterâ, Iâd suggest finding a healthier balance today because âlaterâ could never come.
đ¤ #4: Uni is about hard skills. Work is about relationships.
Thereâs a focus in uni around hard, technical skills, and itâs often what youâre tangibly evaluated on. Work doesnât index as much on that, because teamwork starts to play a larger part.
Building technical skills and critical thinking are of course important, but building healthy work relationships is even more important.
Soft skills like communication, stakeholder management, and leadership are what get you promoted, more so than a specific hard skill like SQL or Python or Excel or Matlab or Figma.
Hard skills are still handy - especially in the early days, and especially so for technical roles - but think of them as means to an end to drive business outcome, and not an end themselves.
đ #5: Uni is about short-term learning. Work is about long-term learning.
The pressures of âone shotâ exams and getting a high âWeighted Average Meanâ definitely got to me at uni, and I somewhat ended up picking up courses I knew Iâd do well at.
If you extend this way of thinking to early stages of your career, you default to jobs by happenstance and it can be pretty unfulfilling (even if youâre doing well). e.g. continuing that internship just because you have it on hand and youâre okay at it.
You need to let go of short-term biases and free yourself from your existing circle of competence. Pick a job if it helps you learn the skills you want to learn.
At this point of your career, most of what youâll learn is to come ahead, so what you know today is nowhere as important as what youâd like to know.
đŞ #6: Uni is about output. Work is about impact.
If you put in the effort in uni, barring the odd misguidances, you get the associated results. Work introduces more layers and you can catch yourself working tons but still struggling.
Putting in the hours doesnât guarantee recognition and you actually need to be pragmatic about acquiring this. For example, when I was at Atlassian, there was a culture of internal blogging and as part of that, highlighting your teamâs work was a common way to build awareness of achievements.Â
When it comes to work, thereâs also an additional layer of having âtrue business impactâ. While this should ideally overlap with what gets recognised, internal incentives will be imperfect.
Your boss could expect you to do things that donât end up having impact, or you could do things that do have impact but don't get recognised. Itâs a reality of the modern workplace to be aware of, and itâs what drove me to work on eesel as a strict focus on impact is critical in startup land.
But not all sweat is equal. Thereâre probably things that can have high recognition and business impact, and not require as much effort. Hunt for those!
Thatâs all for now. If youâre keen to read more on these differences, check out Julie Zhuoâs twitter thread below, or feel free to reach out at @amoghito:
You can also check out eesel here.
đ Earlywork Community
đ The Buzz
Whatâs been happening in the community?
Earlyhome Co-Living Project Applications Closing Next Friday: If youâre a founder or side-hustler, apply now to co-live and co-learn with top Gen Z creators.
Land a Job Without Applying: Our new Talent search engine is live, helping young jobseekers across ANZ get showcased to top future-focused companies for free.
GameFi & NFTs Demystified: Our free fireside chat with Immutable and Pylon Labs is running next Tuesday evening; save your spot here.
đ Trending Topics
Our favourite reads and resources being discussed in the Earlywork community.
Why VC funding for women has been dismal and what we can do about it
Curiosity #3: Inside the future of vascular imagining w/ VEXEV
Silicon Valleyâs Naval Ravikant, Tim Ferriss back $45 mn investment vehicle for Indian founders
Sydney-based startup Upflowy raises $4M to optimize web experiences with its no-code solution
đđź Top Gigs
đŚ Strategy Analyst @ Fundsquire
Fundsquire is an Australian fintech startup, providing growth capital to innovative businesses through tailored, non-dilutive solutions in Australia, Canada, and the UK.
They're searching for a Strategy Analyst with 2-3 years experience in strategy or consulting roles to partner with the leadership team globally to act as the internal consulting function.
The main focus will be supporting the expansion and optimisation of Fundsquire products and markets around the world.
đ Apply Here
đ Strategy & Operations Graduate @SEEK
SEEK is one of Australia's leading tech companies, offering employment assistance for productive working lives and helps organisations succeed.
They're seeking folks for their 2-year Strategy & Operations Graduate Program, including four 6-month rotations across different areas of the business, such as across strategy, artificial intelligence (AI), product development, commercial excellence, internal start-ups such as Jora and Certsy, and overseas offices.
đ Apply Here
â¤ď¸ Customer Success Specialist @ Like Family
Like Family are a high growth tech company solving social isolation and loneliness. By providing affordable non-medical services, they build genuine long lasting relationships that boost confidence, increase independence and empowerment, and improve health and wellbeing.
They're looking for someone to provide their community of Members, Social Carers and Advocates with an excellent customer experience to convert, retain and turn them into advocates, leveraging calls, emails and online chats.
đ Apply Here
If youâre keen to browse our full directory of high-impact entry level roles, check out our Gigs by Earlywork jobs board:
If youâre hiring for early-career roles in tech, startups & social impact, you can share your role on our Gigs Board for free today:
Disclaimer: Earlywork received monetary compensation for the roles featured in this section. If youâre keen to have your roles featured in our newsletter & social media, check out our premium listing options here.
1ď¸âŁ đ đŞÂ One Minute Hustle
We are back once again with One Minute Hustle, a bite-sized interview with an emerging Australian young startup founder or operator.Â
This week, letâs get inside the noggin of a young founder democratising access to career networking opportunities for high schoolersâŚ
Naman Ganjekar, Co-Founder @ The Tech Connection
âď¸ What are you working on?
The Tech Connection is a not for profit organisation that aims to provide the opportunity for all senior high school students to network and connect with industry professionals in STEM.
We want to give these students the chance to meet other students with shared interests and passions, build meaningful connections and have the chance to gain industry experience.
đą Howâd you get started?
My Co-Founders and I had very similar ideas and one day we hopped on a call and just started talking about our problems with industry experience and networking. Since then, weâve been on this start-up journey and we all hope that we can give opportunities to these students.
đ¤ Why do you do what you do?
During my time in high school, I noticed a lot of inequalities between public and private high school students in terms of being able to network and meet people in industry and even gain industry experience.
From this, I started going out on my own to networking events and gained some much needed industry experience. Now, I want to share that with students so that they have a better chance at understanding what they want to do with their passions and career.
Keen to share your story, or know a young startup founder or operator we should feature next?
Share your deets below or send to your mate, and weâll get in touch!
Vibed with this piece?
đľ Shout us a cheeky herbal tea or chuck us a tip at earlywork.eth
Keen to learn more about what we do? Join the Earlyjourney and hit us up on:
𧥠Earlywork Community
đ¤ LinkedIn
đŚ Twitter
đ¸ Instagram
đś TikTok
đ Email
Ciao for now,
Team Earlywork (Dan, Jono & Marina)
If youâve got a fren who would find this helpful, spread the love and share it:
đ Earlywork #60: 6 Lessons from Uni We Need to Unlearn
Great issue guys! These reversals between work and university made me feel whole haha. Like punching the air while i eat dinner. Keep it up đŻ