Quitting A Six Figure Google PM Role To Do This | Dev Stories

Video Statistics and Information

Video
Captions Word Cloud
Reddit Comments
Captions
i was ready to walk away from what is a very very comfortable great job knowing that i felt like i had a larger calling and a bigger calling to like make sure that my work and everything that i was doing was really helping move africa forward and move the tech ecosystem there forward i think in general we live in a society that is focused on money and prestige and just the attainment of like self-status and i think ultimately it's really important to stay grounded in the notion that like what happens when there's no money like what happens in a scenario where like you know all that is taken away like are you going to be happy with the decisions you made are you going to be happy with the ways in which you made other people feel or the impact that you had on this world hey everyone welcome back to my channel so today we're doing the second episode of the deaf story series i'll be interviewing one of my childhood friends adesola who recently left her job at google as a pm to do something totally different if you're interested in seeing more videos like this make sure to tap that like button and leave a nice comment down below let's get started hi my name is adesa sinusi my first computer science class was actually a summer program i had done a couple summers prior i had the opportunity to do the lead computer science institute program at caltech it was a three-week program we got like an introduction to computer science and we learned how to make games with python and from then i decided that i was definitely going to take a computer science program at my high school when i got into uh college i was ultimately thinking about two i think majors so i was really considering economics which would sort of serve like my business interests and um and i was thinking about computer science as well and ultimately what it came down to was just what i felt like would be more of a challenge but also what i felt like would really push me and that's sort of what ultimately led me in the direction of computer science being a black girl studying computer science at harvard was definitely challenging for some reason i had the impression going in that it would be far more diverse there were very few black girls in any of my classes and so that was definitely challenging you know there were definitely instances where definitely felt like imposter syndrome or there were instances where i just felt like you know maybe i didn't necessarily have the confidence to do everything i needed to do so tips for excelling or studying computer science as a black girl i think the biggest thing is just one find a support system i was very fortunate enough to be very plugged into the women in computer science club at harvard [Music] and then i think the other advice i'd give is really just having like the confidence and believing in yourself i think a lot of times the biggest battle with computer science is actually the mental battle of just saying like hey i can do this or you know i've been stuck on this bug for hours like i'm going to figure this out i think computer science in general i think one of the amazing things about it is just how it makes you think and just sort of like the ways in which you begin to just analyze and break down complex tasks into small things and so i think it was that fundamental analytical thinking and that problem solving that ultimately like helps me think critically about the product management role so the summer after my sophomore year i had the opportunity to do the engineering practicum program at google now called i think the step program and it was sort of like an introduction to like a software engineering internship after i did the engineering practicum internship um i made the decision not to continue forth into a software engineering internship by next summer and that was mainly because during the internship i really learned a lot about just what it's like to like do software development day to day and also like what i wanted my work dynamic to be i learned that it wasn't really like the day-to-day of what i wanted so often times i was at my computer for quite a long time i was very insulated in my project didn't feel like i got to get a full understanding of what the team was working on like the long-term strategy the long-term vision that's when i learned about the product management role in general and just learned like how it can be a bridge of sort of like business and technical interests and how it was serving those questions that i was asking of like you know what is the broader like how does this fit into a larger puzzle so after i graduated from college i started at google full time in the associate product management program it's like a two-year rotational program where for one year you're on like one specific team and for the next year you get to join a different team at google and you are functioning in the product management role and you know you sort of are given mentorship and support you're part of this broader community and basically it's a program to introduce and help you build your skills um in the product management space how was the epm program yeah so um apm program was great it was such an amazing experience of course like it was just a lot of great moments of learning and mentorship and then got to do this really amazing trip between the first and second year of the program that were revisited four countries and so i got to go to tokyo taipei singapore and berlin and it was just such an incredible experience of just learning about the tech ecosystem in different places and just understanding things more from like a global lens rather than just like silicon valley i think the pandemic for a lot of people forced people to kind of slow down and do a lot more reflection right so you know i wasn't traveling anymore i wasn't sort of like going into the office all the time and really like immersed in the google scene and um so i think a lot of that reflection just made me think like okay what do i really like if i'm sitting at home and you know working from home all the time like what work do i truly want to be doing what's the impact i'm trying to have i think ultimately why i chose to leave google is because i really wanted my work to be a lot more targeted and focused like on the african tech ecosystem and i really wanted to just feel like the work i was doing was helping the most vulnerable and helping i would say the most in need and so in a lot of ways i had always sort of nursed an interest in like the african and i would say more specifically the nigerian tech ecosystem for a long time and so i think in a lot of ways the pandemic did accelerate my thinking around this um and accelerated just my thoughts around like you know i want to i want to get back to nigeria i want to do work in nigeria i want to be part of the booming tech ecosystem in nigeria i want all the skills and the sacrifices that my parents made and whatever to map back to nigeria and so i think it really just pushed me to say hey like you know life is short um you know we don't necessarily have we you can't predict what's going to happen tomorrow you can't predict what's going gonna happen in five years but what you can control is what you're doing now and what you're spending your time on and the pandemic really just you know made me think i want to spend my time working on tech in nigeria and it came became super clear it was a loud loud voice in my head and you know from there it just pushed me to you know start networking to start looking for opportunities and ultimately find something that i was really excited to work on so why the nigerian tech scene specifically what was there what was it about nigeria that you felt like that was the place you wanted to be of course i have the personal connection you know being born in nigeria and having just been you know raised even though i was raised in america being raised with very strict and serious nigerian upbringing but i think what inspired me about the tech scene specifically there is just the energy and the passion and the grit that everyone has starting a company in that environment is difficult from the regulatory pressure to the day-to-day challenges of the environment to like the amount of capital you need to get started um and so i think in general just seeing everyone be able to kind of get through those challenges and really just think about the broader impact and be part of that larger movement is just super inspiring and so super excited to get immersed to learn to grow and to just understand more and think about the ways in which i can get involved and help i spent almost three years at google and then ultimately made the decision to leave and join a fintech based out of lagos nigeria called okra where we are thinking about helping businesses across africa just better serve their customers in terms of financial solutions why did you decide to go to okra so i guess thinking about okra it came down to like two main reasons for me so one was just the people and then the second was just sort of like the mission and the problems that they were trying to solve so everyone i spoke to was just really inspiring really smart really wanted to just work on tough problems with them and i was particularly inspired by the co-founder and ceo um farah and she is just um it was so one amazing that to see uh female and black ceo in that context and in the text scene in general but also um she's just super intelligent super down to earth and you know really you know is thinking just about the true vision and the problems and the impact that she can have i think the decision to leave google and enjoying okra and move to lagos nigeria um yeah in a lot of ways um it could be a risk it is a risky decision right google is a very very i would say like great place to work great benefits great compensation all of those things um and you know leaving that for a very early company um you know can always be just a very very just i would say daunting experience and while it's risky there's a lot of peace i feel about this decision because in a lot of ways it doesn't feel like a decision that is self-serving in nature or really for me i always thought like i wanted to potentially live in different countries around the world and so i think this is the first step in saying hey i've always thought about living in lagos i have that strong sort of like personal tie i have that sort of like cultural connection um how like let me take a chance and just like kind of follow follow the voice in my head you know there's been numerous challenges numerous difficult points um at different points in my life you know at the age of 24 i have lost both of my parents and you know i when i think about those moments um you know it can be easy to give up it can be easy to say you know woe is me and you know i've faced these challenges that you know maybe other people haven't faced by my age like you know i can have a very very like negative outlook i think on life but i think what keeps me going is just just truly feeling like there's a higher calling a higher purpose a higher uh movement at work that's beyond me that's greater than me and it's more powerful than me so ultimately i kind of put it this way too when i was talking to people my former co-workers when i left google you know i said i think it's a privilege and it's sort of like a blessing to know the type of impact you want to have in the world i think you know the world that we live in you know oftentimes it can be money or it can be sort of like other influences that push people to do certain things and i think having a very strong conviction of how you want to have impact that is not tied to you know influences from specific people that's not necessarily tied to like making money and making the most money i i think it's a blessing and so you know i was ready to walk away from what is a very very comfortable great job knowing that i felt like i had a larger calling and a bigger calling to like make sure that my work and everything that i was doing was really helping move africa forward and move the tech ecosystem there forward [Music] you
Info
Channel: Bukola
Views: 40,056
Rating: 4.9686275 out of 5
Keywords: being a software engineer, bukola ayodele, computer programmer, how i became a developer, how i became a software developer without a degree, how to learn code, how to teach yourself programming, learning to code, software developer, software development, software engineer, software engineer career, harvard cs, black software engineer, black program manager, google PM, google software engineer, great resignation 2021, great resignation, great resignation boom
Id: 9dBnTbXgzes
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 12min 29sec (749 seconds)
Published: Sun Oct 03 2021
Related Videos
Note
Please note that this website is currently a work in progress! Lots of interesting data and statistics to come.