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Line by Line Rebuttal to Codesmith CEO dodging question about placement rates in a challenging market

r/codingbootcamp

u/FakeExpert1973 wrote (the comment Michael replied to):

As a former top engineer at Meta, was a CS (or equivalent) degree required to work there or was it common to see engineers without STEM degrees, or no degree at all?

u/michaelnovati replied · ★ FEATURED
Common: no, most engineers went to a top CS school They then looked at the best engineers at Meta, looked at the schools they went to, and then recruited from those schools. BUT, a number of "best of the best" engineers either didn't have a CS degree or went to a not well known school at all. The theory was the best of the best will find Meta or Meta will find them through acquisitions or because they like hacked into Meta and were offered a job. The best way to get in right now without a top CS degree is to get another job for 2 years and then apply for the Rotational Engineer program. At Formation, we've sent maybe 10+ people through there and it's super super ideal for non traditional grads with 2+ YOE at non-top tier companies.