India's joining season is in full swing. Trains and flights to Bangalore, Pune, Hyderabad and Gurgaon are unusually full of nervous twenty-two-year-olds with new wheeled suitcases. Some are taking up offers they want. Many are taking up offers they will accept because the ones they wanted did not arrive. Almost everyone is asking, quietly, the same question: have I picked correctly?
I want to take that question apart, because it is the wrong one.
The fear is real. It is also pointed the wrong way.
The macro numbers do not help. Industry reports this year suggest only about 42.6 percent of graduates are considered job-ready, and major IT services firms have trimmed entry-level mass hiring by close to a quarter as AI quietly rewrites the bottom of the pyramid. Only roughly 30 to 40 percent of engineering graduates are placed through campus drives; the rest assemble their own ladder. None of this is news to you if you spent April watching half your batch get one offer and the other half get none.
But fear about which first job is the wrong target. Your first job is a sample. It is not a sentence. The variable that compounds, and ultimately decides the next ten years, is not the company name printed on the offer letter. It is the rate at which you become useful.
Optimise for velocity, not for identity
Spend your first twenty-four months optimising for four things, in this order: reps, proximity, feedback, and ownership.
Reps
How many real problems will you actually solve in a year? An analyst at a small firm who closes thirty messy projects will be sharper in twenty-four months than a peer at a brand-name firm who is the seventh name on three big slide decks. Volume of completed work is the most under-rated input to early skill.
Proximity
Who do you sit next to? At twenty-three, the people in the room you happen to be in are your second university. A mediocre role next to a brilliant boss beats a glossier role next to a checked-out one. Ask, in every final interview, who you will report to and what their last three hires now do.
Feedback
Does the work tell you, within days, whether you were right or wrong? Sales, building products, writing, litigation, trading, and certain operating roles have that quality. Many fresher strategy roles do not. Choose closer to the customer, the code, or the courtroom; wherever the world keeps score.
Ownership
Will anything bear your name? One small line item that you fully own, end to end, will teach you more than a rotational program of twelve passenger seats.
None of this requires choosing the right industry. All of it requires choosing the right shape of work.
Read the employer, do not only let them read you
The hiring market has spent two years reading you through aptitude tests, GitHub repos and structured interviews. You are allowed to read back. Two minutes of honesty from a current employee tells you more than two days reading a Glassdoor page.
Before you sign, find one person who joined the same role twenty-four months ago and is still there, and one person who joined and left within twelve. Ask both: what did you actually do in the first six months, and what made you stay or go. If neither call happens, you are not too humble; you are uninformed.
Take the offer where the work is honest about itself. A role that admits to repetitive client servicing in year one but a real shot at owning a portfolio in year two is more truthful than a role that promises transformation and strategic impact on day one. Be careful with brochures.
One unfashionable thing I would ask you to do anyway
Write things down. By hand or on a screen, but write. A weekly note to yourself, ten minutes, on what you learned, who taught you, where you embarrassed yourself, what you would do differently. Nothing performative. No one else reads it.
Over years inside institutions, I have watched many careers form and a handful go genuinely far. The single shared habit, far more reliable than raw talent, is a private practice of reflection that builds judgment quietly. People who arrive at thirty-five with judgment did not get there by accident. They earned it one Sunday evening at a time. Writing Journals, reflecting on what went right and what is it that's going wrong.
If you must hold a worry, hold this one: not that you picked the wrong first job, but that you will sleepwalk through it. Sleepwalking is the actual risk. Bad job plus alert person becomes a good career. Good job plus bored person becomes a long, unhappy LinkedIn.
Take the offer in front of you. Show up on Monday. Be the one who asks the most precise question in the meeting. The first job is not the verdict. The first decade is.
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