30 Years US Ivy League Professor Shares BEST Tips for MS and Job Search Success
Dr. Kumar, an Ivy League professor with 30+ years in industry and academia, shares real student success stories and actionable tips for Indian MS students on job search, building skills, and career success.
30 Years US Ivy League Professor Shares BEST Tips for MS and Job Search Success
Dr. Kumar, an Ivy League-educated professor with 20+ years in Fortune 10 companies and 12+ years teaching at a Research 1 university, shares real student success stories and actionable advice for Indian MS students navigating job searches, H1B challenges, and career building in the US.
Key Insights from Dr. Kumar
- Taught 2000+ students over 12 years at a Research 1 university
- 20+ years at Fortune 10 company before academia
- Ivy League undergraduate and graduate education
- Successful students become "engines of learning" - not shortcut seekers
- Technical skills are necessary but soft skills make the difference
- Master top 200 LeetCode problems and system design interviews
- Build genuine GitHub profile with original technical content
- 5,000 hours of practice required - start in third year of studies
The Core Message: "There is nothing more rewarding on the planet than to see young people that you have interacted with develop their wings and take flight. It's really a gift from God to watch the success of our youngsters."
π¨βπ« Dr. Kumar's Background
Dr. Kumar brings a unique combination of industry and academic experience to his teaching.
Professional Journey
- Origin: Mumbai
- Education: Undergraduate and graduate work at Ivy League schools
- Industry: 20+ years at a Fortune 10 company in IT space
- Travel: Worked in many different countries on cutting-edge projects
- Later career: Startup ecosystem, venturing, consulting in financial services
- Teaching: Adjunct for 15 years, Professor of Practice for 12 years
About 12 years ago, Dr. Kumar came across an opportunity at his current university - a position called "Professor of Practice" where industry professionals are invited to teach classes that pull from their experiences and help build bridges between academics and industry.
Why He Made the Switch
"I decided I could switch to doing this sort of more purposeful work which is aligned with my basic passion - education and teaching. I really love interacting with young students and sharing my experiences and watching someone develop."
π Success Story 1: Dave - The Engine of Learning
Dr. Kumar starts with the backdrop of the movie "Three Idiots" - everybody loves Rancho. Dave's story embodies that spirit.
Dave's Profile
- Came to university somewhat later in life
- Had worked in India for some years before pursuing master's
- Very specific focus and determination
- Wanted to learn how to do programming better and build better systems
What Made Dave Different
Over the two years Dr. Kumar taught him, Dave was constantly engaged:
Dave's Approach
- Curious to know how things worked in the real world
- Wanted to apply classroom and lab learnings to real-world scenarios
- Developed good rapport with professors
- Did extremely well in classes
The Results
Dave's Achievements
- Selected for university's capstone program (semester-long internship at banks or pharmaceutical companies)
- Graduated nearly at the top of his class
- Joined one of the Magnificent Seven companies
- About to be made a manager and sent on international assignment
- H1B picked in the first shot - no RFEs
πͺ Success Story 2: Vinayak and Tara - Grit and Determination
Vinayak's Story
Vinayak was a non-EECS guy - his undergraduate degree was in mechatronics or something similar. But from the moment he arrived, Dr. Kumar could see he was unnaturally talented.
Vinayak's Qualities
- Would pick up data structures and algorithms naturally - had a knack for it
- Very pleasing personality - a pleasure to interact with
- Always cheerful, willing to do anything asked
- Everyone was keen to help him because of his attitude
Vinayak's Results
- Got a job at one of the biggest retailers in the United States
- Selected for their very selective engineering development program
- Now working in a lab near MIT developing robotics automation
- H1B picked in the first shot
Tara's Story - The Mrs. B Comparison
When Vinayak graduated, his girlfriend/fiancΓ©e Tara applied to the same university. Her background was different:
Tara's Background
- Did CS engineering in India
- Worked at one of the Magnificent Seven companies in India - but in operations, not hardcore programming
- On day one, she said: "Dr. Kumar, I want to learn because I feel I could have learned a lot better in my undergraduate education"
What happened next reminded Dr. Kumar of Mrs. Rose Blumkin - Warren Buffett's hero:
The Mrs. B Story
Mrs. Rose Blumkin came to the United States on a refugee boat with nothing, didn't speak English, ended up in Nebraska. She was enormously determined - if there was no way to achieve something, she would find a way. If she couldn't find a way, she would make a way. Buffett said if he had to choose between top graduates of all business schools and top CEOs in the world, he would pick Mrs. B.
Tara's Results
- Landed a job at one of the biggest investment banks
- Now a Vice President there
- Dr. Kumar believes she'll become a CEO one day
- H1B picked in the first round
The Moral
Key Lessons from Vinayak and Tara
- Believe in yourself: You've got to want it - "I want to succeed, I have to succeed, I can succeed"
- No shortcuts: Don't take the easy way out, don't hit ChatGPT for everything
- You attract similar qualities: If you're dedicated, sincere, hardworking, you attract that in friends and life partners
π Success Story 3: Anand - Curiosity and Opportunity
Anand represents a different kind of success - one driven by curiosity and observation rather than pure technical prowess.
Anand's Background
- Origin: Small town a few kilometers from Visakhapatnam (Vizag)
- Family: One of the first children in his family to get a college education
- Father: In the fisheries business - very wealthy but not educated
- Education: Did engineering not too far from where he lived
What Made Anand Different
Anand wasn't perfecting his programming craft like the others. Instead:
Anand's Approach
- Had curiosity and observation skills
- Asked different kinds of questions about the software industry
- Asked about Dr. Kumar's work experiences in Far East, China, Malaysia, Singapore
- Was oriented toward understanding business, not just coding
Dr. Kumar's Guidance
Dr. Kumar gave Anand a specific suggestion: Get a Bloomberg certification using the university's Bloomberg lab (available to students in specific software engineering classes).
Anand's Path
Got Bloomberg Certification
Completed the certification as suggested
Got Job at Big Bank
Landed a job at one of the big banks in the New York area
Knew His Goal
From day one, he knew he wasn't keen to stay in the US - he wanted to do better than his father
Returned to India
A year or two later, went back to Bangalore
Built His Company
Today runs a software services company employing 10-15 people, doing very well
The Lesson
"Yes, to have good technical skills is very good. But you want to couple and marry that with an understanding of the industry and understanding of how to communicate with people. If you do that, you will end up doing really well."
β οΈ Cautionary Tale: Sreeves - The Shortcut Mentality
Dr. Kumar emphasizes that as a teacher, he's committed to helping everyone succeed. But Sreeves' story contains important lessons.
Sreeves' Mindset
- Came in with a fixed idea: "A master's is just a passport to getting a job"
- Would quote Bill Gates, Zuckerberg, and startup founders who didn't complete college
- Watched shows about Indian startup founders like the Kamat brothers (Zerodha)
- Keen to take shortcuts in classwork
- Didn't do well on assignments
Dr. Kumar's Response
Dr. Kumar explained the nuance Sreeves was missing:
The Truth About "Dropouts"
- Bill Gates: Published serious mathematical papers during his first two years at Harvard. His learning was extraordinary. He finally did get a degree later in life.
- Zuckerberg: Had written a music matching system before Harvard. Knew classical languages like Latin and Greek.
- Gates' quote: "All I want to do is wake up smarter the next day than the previous day"
- Zerodha brothers: Spent almost a decade deeply studying Indian markets before starting Zerodha
Key insight: They dropped out of college, but they never stopped learning. Sreeves confused "dropping out" with "not having any learning."
What Happened to Sreeves
The Outcome
- Graduated but struggled to find a job
- Reality hit during interviews - LeetCode-type questions on data structures and graphs that he never paid attention to
- Decided to go back to India
- Got a job in Bangalore, now doing reasonably well
- Now has a GitHub profile, is learning, doing other things
Dr. Kumar calls him a "late bloomer" or "somewhat delayed success."
The Consultancy Problem
Dr. Kumar points out it's not entirely students' fault:
The Apping Process Issue
Many consultancies in India help with master's applications by reducing everything to pattern matching: "Are you ECE? Have you taken this Python course? If yes, you can do MS in one year..."
The problem: The apping process to get an education is vastly different from the job hunting process. Consultancies leave an "undesirable aftertaste" - students think the way they applied for master's is how they'll apply for jobs.
π‘οΈ Deportation Concerns: Playing Center Court
Dr. Kumar addresses the real concerns about deportation that many students have.
The Reality
- It's real enough - news stories exist
- No cases at Dr. Kumar's university (Research 1 institution with strict academic standards)
- Universities are generally apolitical
- Rules around student visas have become stricter
Dr. Kumar's Advice: Play Center Court
Don't Play Close to the Edge
- Complete required credits
- Only take employment related to curricular or optional training connected to your field of study
- In cases at other universities, students were either close to the line or on the wrong side - doing things they shouldn't be doing
Practical Steps
- Recognize the limits of your visa
- Speak to your DSO (Designated School Official) / International Students Officer
- Don't do stupid or below-the-line things
- Focus on your studies
- Focus on what you came to America for - to study well and get a bright future
π― Actionable Tips for Job Search Success
Dr. Kumar provides specific, actionable guidance for students.
1. Build Your GitHub Profile
What This Really Means
A GitHub profile doesn't just mean a GitHub account - anyone can make one. You need to demonstrate high-quality technical content.
- Go to Kaggle competitions and well-known datasets
- See what papers have been published in that area
- Try to do something above and beyond what's in existing papers
- Work on projects, publish something original
- Start in third year of studies going into final year
2. Master LeetCode Problems
The Technical Screener Reality
Nearly all Magnificent Seven companies use a technical screener at the beginning of their interview process focusing on LeetCode-type problems.
- Become very familiar with top 200 LeetCode problems
- Develop confidence to crack these on your own
- Solutions are available, ChatGPT can solve them in 2 minutes - but on interview day, there's no ChatGPT
- Covers strings, searching, sorting, and many other topics
3. Master System Design Interviews
Why This Matters
One key pillar of job interviews is the system design interview where they ask you to build a "mini Amazon" or similar, requiring full-stack details.
Dr. Kumar runs informal Saturday afternoon sessions with students to work through LeetCode and system design problems. Students report that interview questions touch on these topics.
4. The 5,000 Hours Rule
The Math
| Factor | Value |
|---|---|
| Days per year | ~300 |
| Hours per day | 2-4 hours |
| Hours per year | 600-1200 hours |
| Years needed | 3-4 years |
| Total | ~5,000 hours |
Start in third year: Do 5-10 LeetCode problems daily or work through a data structures book on your own.
No Shortcuts
"Only when you do this sadhana and do it honestly, then you will get the blessings and benefits of that vidya. There's no shortcut here. It's just that simple."
5. Soft Skills Matter
The Sufficient Condition
Good technical skills are a necessary condition to be successful. But for a sufficient condition, you need:
- Technical skills
- Really good soft skills
- Being easy and pleasant to work with
- Colleagues can trust and rely on you
- Management can depend on you to get things done
π Indian vs US Education Systems
Dr. Kumar shares his perspective on both systems.
Indian Education System
The Challenges
- Relic/remnant of the Macaulay system left by the British
- Explosion in universities (5-6 IITs in earlier times, now 27)
- Supply-demand inefficiency - 200 million students, not enough qualified teachers
US Education System
The Advantages
- Universities have been around longer in a relatively young country
- Post-WWII connection between government labs and universities
- Created business/startup ecosystems (Bay Area, Boston) and financial ecosystems (New York)
- Different thinking model - students openly challenge professors in class
Dr. Kumar's Message to Indian Students
Don't Just Complain - Take Action
"I'm always very disheartened when young students point to the Indian education system negatively. India is 75+ years old. We came through extremely difficult times with British administration. Today this Bharat Ganarajya is blessed to have an aggressive, forward-thinking leader in Modi who is determined to transform India."
Resources available: NPTEL lectures, online classes, digital resources in your hand
The message: Take action to better your lives. Learn, do projects, achieve your potential. Don't keep pointing to the education system.
β Frequently Asked Questions
What is a capstone program?
A capstone program is where students with really good grades are selected for a semester-long internship at banks or pharmaceutical companies in the metropolitan area to do a guided project under faculty guidance. Being selected requires demonstrating strong capabilities, and it provides excellent recommendations and experience for job hunting.
Why do companies ask LeetCode-type questions?
Companies like Amazon require highly optimized distribution, logistics, and delivery. When you order a book, it shows up exactly a day later. This requires graph theory algorithms and similar skills. These companies look for people with mastery of these skills because it's their bread and butter.
What's the difference between apping for MS and job hunting?
The apping process is pattern matching (ECE background + Python course = eligible for MS). Job hunting requires demonstrated skills, original work, ability to solve problems under pressure, and soft skills. Consultancies that help with apping don't prepare students for this difference.
Ready to Build Your Career Path?
Dr. Kumar's insights show that success comes from genuine learning, consistent practice, and the right mindset. Whether you're an MS student in the US or planning to go, focus on becoming an "engine of learning" rather than seeking shortcuts.
Connect with others navigating similar journeys and get guidance from those who've been there.
Frequently Asked Questions
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