Yesterday, I finished my 6th semester examinations.
For most students, that's the end of a stressful academic phase. For me, it's the start of something more demanding — placement season.
Here's a realization I've been sitting with:
Most people think placement success comes from knowing more. I think it comes from being willing to start over.
The Comfortable Trap
I've spent the last few years building projects, solving problems, exploring AI, and competing in hackathons. My DSA skills are solid — not exceptional, but not weak either.
The dangerous thing about being "decent" is that it's easy to stop questioning yourself. You rely on old knowledge, old approaches, old confidence.
Placement prep forced me to confront an uncomfortable truth: what got me here may not be enough to get me where I want to go.
So instead of defending what I already know, I'm choosing to play the game again — this time with experience.
The Context Nobody Talks About
I'm from Electrical and Electronics Engineering, not Computer Science. I don't have a curriculum built around software engineering, OS, databases, or networking.
That's fine.
Being outside the traditional path taught me something: when you don't have the roadmap, you learn to build one. Every project, every debugging session, every late night has shown me that progress is rarely about ideal circumstances — it's about consistency despite imperfect ones.
The Plan
For the next few months, I'm committing to six areas:
DSA — Pattern recognition and problem-solving under pressure, not just volume
Projects — Building things that strengthen engineering thinking, not just resume lines
Aptitude — Consistent practice over last-minute cramming
Communication — Explaining ideas clearly is as critical as understanding them
Building in public — Accountability creates momentum; feedback creates improvement
Networking — Opportunities find people who position themselves well
The Real Goal
Not perfection across any of these. Just Kaizen — 1% better every day.
The person who walks into interviews a few months from now won't be the same person who finished his exams yesterday. That's the point.
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