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Explore high-level tech roles in industry vs academia, focusing on building commercial solutions and technological advancements. Learn about pros and cons, corporate structure, and industry's advantages in technology. Understand the scope and considerations to pursue a career in the industry.
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Scope of Talk • This segment will focus on technology-driven SV type company • Many other types, obviously, which are not covered here, e.g.: • Business computing • Services • Mgmt consulting • Will talk about high-level technical-track position • Academia vs. industry is a false dichotomy: A career in industry is towards one end of a continuum
What is “1 + 1?” “ACME Industries wanted to hire someone to solve a Really Hard Problem for them…”
The Profit Motive • Purpose of Industry is to make money Dr. Eldon Tyrell, from Blade Runner: “Commerce is our goal” • Work must be targeted – whether directly or indirectly – towards producing a commercially viable “product” • Primary path to goal: • Assess best features of what technology is currently out there • Improve upon candidate technologies, or create new ones, until you produce solution that… • Successfully addresses needs • Maximizes cost/benefit • Satisfies time and resource constraints
Examples • Sequoia: extent-based file system • ADS: real-time obstacle avoidance system • Toshiba MRI: Overall system architecture and UI • Arris: pharmacophore modeling and drug design
Pros: • Get to build real systems • Work is applied and relevant • Satisfaction from seeing actual use • Higher sustained intensity (pro AND con) • Higher “quality” of product -> greater self-satisfaction • Teamwork
Cons: • Don’t have luxury of extended exploration for intellectual curiosity • Some restraints on publication • Trade secrets • Allocation of time • Dilbertian “pointy-haired” politics • Actually, simpler than in academia (i.e., motivation usually power) • Much easier to quit
Industry vs. Academia vis-à-vis Academic Freedom • Even in academia, intellectual freedom has constraints: • Grad students: must align area of interest to advisor’s specialty and grants • Professors: must align (or recast) research definition to fit available grants • Constrained (subtly) by community’s self-definition • Straying too far from community “mean,” or trying to break into neighboring discipline, can trigger turf wars. • Industry often reserves resources for “pie in the sky” ideas, esp. at larger companies
Some Random Additional Observations onCorporate Structure • Expect to change research areas • Technical Track vs. Management Track • Some companies implement this more successfully than others • No tenure • But tenure can be a double-edged sword • Some politics • Personal observation is that it is qualitatively different from politics in academia • more simple-minded, based more on power, less on standing, prestige, turf
Industry’s Technological Advantages • Industry often has superior technology, but is more secretive • E.g.: SoftAPR vs. FEATURE • Access to real data, often generated for your application • Availability of better resources • As long as need is appropriately focused
Conclusions • A job in industry should be a strong consideration if: • You like to build concrete solutions to real-world problems • You want/need the satisfaction of seeing people use what you build • You should consider a more research-oriented career path if: • You want the freedom to explore wherever your ideas take you • You get distracted easily :-) • There is a wide spectrum of career paths – find your spot!