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Upcoming meeting with a firm

I graduated with my MA in Global Sustainability and I am studying for the LEED Credentials exam.  I spoke with an architecture firm in my area and have set up a meeting to speak with them about the possibility of working for them.  I have no architecture background, which I was upfront about.  I'd love some advice about the meeting.  

They asked if I have experience in Revit. I, unfortunately do not.  The Geography department (for my undergrad) was small and I only had the chance to use ArcGIS, not AutoCAD or anything else.  With my technical background I am sure I'd be able to use a new program with relative ease. 

Thank you so much for any advice or input!

 
Mar 15, 16 4:56 pm
JLC-1

Focus on what you do know and can bring to the table, I worked for a large planning, landscape and urban design firm, and the environmental analysis was the starting point for any design decisions; and then the scrutiny of the development processes and how it could be tweaked or adjusted to minimize the impacts. I imagine that's what your degree is about?

Mar 15, 16 5:37 pm  · 
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ArchNyen

what technical background do you have? good luck in using Revit with "relative ease."

Mar 15, 16 6:55 pm  · 
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DeTwan

They are probably expecting some kind of proficiency at least with CAD. And it is hard enough for a proficient CAD operator to jump into learning revit.

All I can say is 'may the force be with you young padawan'   

Mar 15, 16 9:21 pm  · 
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JLC-1, yes that is what my degree was about.  I appreciate the helpful hints about how to pitch myself!

I have always wished I'd been able to use AutoCAD and now that ArchNyen and DeTwan have made it clear that Revit will not be an easy program to learn, I wish even more that I had some experience in using CAD. Thank you both for the warnings! 

Mar 16, 16 9:56 am  · 
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archiwutm8

asht,sexton AutoCAD is piss easy to learn and for Revit I can send you some resources + books to learn from. I used to train a wide array of people Revit and support them and honestly it isn't as hard as people make out.

Mar 16, 16 10:01 am  · 
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If the firm is worrying about your abilities in Revit, I'd venture a guess that they don't quite realize what your potential could be. It sounds like they are looking to hire you as another production drafter, not as a specialist in environmental analysis or sustainability or LEED or whatever. 

Mar 16, 16 11:59 am  · 
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distant

^ EDI: the OP did not mention the size of the firm where he's interviewing. If they're small or medium sized then they're probably not able to afford a "specialist" per se - so their concern is having employees who are versatile. That doesn't necessarily mean they're looking at the OP as a full-time production drafter -- they probably just want to be sure they can keep him productively employed when there's not a lot of "specialist" work to be done.

Mar 16, 16 1:23 pm  · 
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