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Career Presentation at IUBAT
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Career Presentation at IUBAT

حدث مع Sadiq M Alam
٦ ديسمبر ٢٠٢٥

On December 6, 2025, I had the privilege of returning to the familiar energy of a university campus, this time at the Uttara Campus of IUBAT for their Career Festival 2025. Standing before a room full of 2nd and 3rd-year Computer Science undergraduates, I was reminded of my own journey from BUET to the global tech landscape. My goal was simple but urgent: to pull back the curtain on the "Hard Truths" of the industry and equip these future engineers with a realistic toolkit for a rapidly changing world.

I began by challenging a long-held academic myth: a perfect GPA will not get you hired. In an era where 70% of jobs in Bangladesh are filled via referrals and the "Junior Trap" is real, a transcript is no longer a golden ticket. I shared my own background—spanning four continents and roles ranging from a PhD dropout at UCLA to a Research Scholar at the National University of Singapore—to illustrate that a career is rarely a straight line. It is built on "Proof of Work". I urged the students to stop building simple To-Do lists and instead focus on GitHub as their real CV, filled with clones of real-world platforms like Pathao or bKash.

The core of our discussion centered on the AI Paradigm Shift. I was blunt with them: junior developers are no longer just "code writers"; they must become "code reviewers" and "prompters". My message was clear: AI won’t replace you—people using AI will. We discussed how to use tools like Copilot and ChatGPT not to cheat, but to deliver value 3x to 5x faster. I emphasized that we don’t just hire people who are better than AI; we hire those who can harness it to architect solutions.

Beyond the technical, we delved into the Soft Skills Deficit, which remains the #1 complaint from employers in Dhaka. I encouraged them to practice explaining a project in 60 seconds and to handle code reviews without getting defensive. More importantly, I spoke to them about the "Passion vs. Expectation" divide. In a culture that often dictates career paths based on social or family pressure, I challenged them to find their "micro-niche"—whether it’s DevOps, cybersecurity, or AI tooling—and to commit to it for at least six months.

I closed the session by asking about their biggest fears and anxieties regarding their careers. The room was thick with the "Experience Paradox"—the fear of needing a job to get experience, but needing experience to get the job. My advice was to create their own experience by solving actual local issues, like micro-finance reporting or inventory management for export businesses. As I looked at the faces of these 2nd and 3rd-year students, I saw the next generation of Bangladesh's tech leaders. My hope is that they leave IUBAT not just with a degree, but with the grit to build, the skill to ship, and the courage to follow their own path.


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Are you a student or a recent graduate navigating the tech industry? I'd love to hear your thoughts on the "Junior Trap" or how you're using AI in your learning journey. Let's connect and build the future together.

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Sadiq Alam