Chapter VI
Principle 3
Directness
Go Straight Ahead
He who can go to the fountain does not go to the water jar.
—Leonardo da Vinci
A
fter growing up in India, Vatsal Jaiswal moved to Canada with the dream
of becoming an architect. Now, four years later, armed with a newly minted
degree and entering into the worst job market since the Great Depression, that
dream was beginning to seem very far away. Getting a foothold in
architecture can be difficult, even in good economic times. But just a few
years out from the market crash of 2007, it was nearly impossible. Firms
were laying off even experienced architects. If anyone was hiring, they
weren’t taking chances on some kid just out of school. Out of his graduating
class, almost nobody had found an architecture job yet. Most had given up,
taking jobs outside the field, going back for more education, or moving in
with parents until the economic storms abated.
Another rejection. Jaiswal leaves the offices of yet another architecture
firm, walking back to his sliver of the one-bedroom apartment he shares with
two roommates.
1
After hundreds of résumés submitted with no reply, he’s
moved on to trying a more aggressive tactic of going directly to a firm’s
offices, pleading to speak with whomever is in charge. Still, after weeks of
knocking on doors and making dozens of unsolicited office visits, there’s no
job offer in sight. He hasn’t even gotten a call back for a single interview.
Still, Jaiswal suspected that his struggles could be blamed on more than
just the recession. From the snippets of feedback he could pry out of the
places he applied to, he sensed that the companies didn’t see him as a useful
employee. He had studied architecture in school, but his program had focused
mostly on design and theory. He had been trained in creative design projects
that were isolated from the reality of building codes, construction costs, and
tricky software. Because his portfolio of school projects didn’t resemble the
detailed technical documents the architects worked with, they thought hiring
him would involve a lengthy training period, something few firms could
currently afford.
Jaiswal needed to come up with a plan. More résumé submissions and
office walk-ins weren’t going to work. He needed a new portfolio that could
prove he had the exact skills firms wanted. He needed to show them that,
rather than being a burden, he could get to work straightaway and be a
valuable team member from the first day.
To do this, he would need to know more about how architects actually
drew plans for buildings—not just the big theories and designs, which he had
learned in school, but little details of how they did their drawings, what codes
they used to represent different materials, and what the drawings showed and
omitted. To do that, he found a job at a large-form print shop, the kind that
does printing on the large sheets of paper favored for architectural blueprints.
Low paying and low skilled, a job in a print shop wasn’t Jaiswal’s end goal.
Still, it could help him scrape by financially while he prepared his new
portfolio. Even better, the print store gave him daily exposure to the
blueprints firms were using. That allowed him to absorb countless details
about how the drawings were put together.
Next, Jaiswal would need to upgrade his technical skills. From his walk-in
visits, he was aware that many of the firms he was applying at were using a
complex design software called Revit. If he could master its ins and outs, he
thought, he could be immediately useful in the technology-heavy entry-level
position he desired. At night, he pushed through online tutorials and taught
himself the software.
Finally, he was ready to construct a new portfolio. Combining his new
Revit knowledge with the knowledge of architectural drawings he had gained
while working at the print shop, he made a new portfolio. Instead of the
assorted projects from university, he focused on a single building of his own
design: a three-tower residential structure with raised courtyards and a
modern aesthetic. The project pushed his skills with software further, forcing
him to learn new methods and ideas beyond the basics of his online tutorials
and exposure at the print shop. Eventually, after a few months of work, he
was ready.
New portfolio in hand, Jaiswal submitted it again, this time to just two
architecture firms. To his surprise, they both immediately offered him a job.
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