The connections I was talking about are relatively low barriers. When I look for people, I would tend to look for UT users who I have interacted with over time, Users Groups members locally, posting on dedicated forums rather than Dice or Monster, etc.
>The only problem I have ever had with affirmative action is that it does not guarantee equal opportunity. While the intention is admirable, it does not apply correctly. To me, affirmative action should mean: two people of different race or ethnicity receive equal consideration and opportunity. In reality that does not happen. The individual from a minority with fewer skills, training, or abilities will take the position over the non-minority with greater skills, training, or abilities and almost never the reverse. Especially when it comes to higher education slots. I hope I didn't open a can of worms...
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>>>I think with most companies who respect the opinion of their current employees in almost any technical field, they will usually ask for personal recommendations before posting a job. That has been my experience anyway.
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>>And fwiw (and risking making this thread political), it's this issue that leads to a need for affirmative action. If most (or even many) jobs get filled through personal connections, and people from disadvantaged backgrounds don't have those connections, they're once again at a disadvantage. I think this is why so many of the "up from poverty" stories we hear include an individual or group taking an interest in a particular person. The mentor's connections substitute for the missing family/old school connections.
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>>Tamar
'If the people lead, the leaders will follow'
'War does not determine who is RIGHT, just who is LEFT'