u/Best-Ad5032

Image 1 — [0 YOE] Landed a job offer after searching for 7 months! Recent graduate in aerospace engineering
Image 2 — [0 YOE] Landed a job offer after searching for 7 months! Recent graduate in aerospace engineering
Image 3 — [0 YOE] Landed a job offer after searching for 7 months! Recent graduate in aerospace engineering

[0 YOE] Landed a job offer after searching for 7 months! Recent graduate in aerospace engineering

Hey y'all!

I just graduated with a BS in Aerospace Engineering. 3.47 GPA. My resume is attached in the last image- no academic clubs or anything sweaty. Just lots of unrelated work experience and relevant coursework. I had one internship, mostly working with CAD, but my technical experience is unrelated to the job I ended up receiving an offer for.

Since October 5th, I have applied to (on average) 2 jobs a day. Most companies only seem to care about hiring a month or two out.

I applied using Indeed for about 75% of my job apps. The rest were all directly through company sites or other hiring sites (LinkedIn, Glassdoor, etc.).

Though I am an Aerospace major, most of the jobs I applied to were mechanical / design positions. I figured I'd start somewhere smaller and eventually make my way into the aerospace sector after a few years. The job I ended up getting is roughly a materials science position for a great company.

Don't give up hope, y'all! Just do your best to apply to jobs when you can.

Happy to answer any questions or provide more info!!

u/Best-Ad5032 — 21 hours ago

[0 YOE] Landed a job offer after searching for 7 months! Recent graduate in aerospace engineering

I just graduated with a BS in Aerospace Engineering. 3.47 GPA.

My resume wasn't anything sweaty- no academic clubs. Just lots of unrelated work experience and relevant coursework. I had one internship, mostly working with CAD, but my technical experience is unrelated to the job I ended up receiving an offer for.

Since October 5th, I have applied to (on average) 2 jobs a day. Most companies only seem to care about hiring a month or two out.

I applied using Indeed for about 75% of my job apps. The rest were all directly through company sites or other hiring sites (LinkedIn, Glassdoor, etc.).

Though I am an Aerospace major, most of the jobs I applied to were mechanical / design positions. I figured I'd start somewhere smaller and eventually make my way into the aerospace sector after a few years. The job I ended up getting is roughly a materials science position for a great company.

Don't give up hope, y'all! Just do your best to apply to jobs when you can.

u/Best-Ad5032 — 1 day ago