u/jcasimir wrote (the comment Michael replied to):
I just want to say that this reporting checks out, to me, as a member of the industry. Particularly: * The six-month and one-year checkpoints are realistic. Most graduates know they are going into a long job hunt and approach it with caution and risk mitigation (ex: picking up p
u/michaelnovati replied ·
To me the discussion isn't so much what the norm is but is it work the cost for a random person looking at a bootcamp. And if it's now taken 6 months longer to get a job, that is an insanely critical piece of information to factor into a decision to drop $20K on a bootcamp.
Maybe it means it's not the end of the bootcamp model itself, but it might be the financial end if no one wants to pay to go anymore.