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Strong/Weak Reasons to do a PhD in Computer Science
Apr 21, 2021
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These are the things I wish I had known before deciding to go to grad
school. Obviously take these with a grain of salt, as they just
represent one man's opinion.
Strong reasons to do a PhD
I define a strong reason as sufficient reason on its own to do the
PhD. You only need one of these:
1. You want to work on something you can only do in academia
When I started my PhD, interesting job opportunities in crypto
companies were much more limited than they are now. Today, there are
countless companies working on end-to-end encryption, homomorphic
encryption, secure hardware, and many other breakthrough
technologies. My friend said something similar about the robotics
industry before Willow Garage and Google X's autonomous vehicle
program.
At that time, the best place to work on these emerging technologies
was in academia, where the ground-work was still being laid out. For
these specific fields, I'm not sure if that's the case anymore, but I
am sure there are other fields for which this property still holds
true. If you have a passion for such a field, I say go for it!
2. You love the research process
The research process is a very particular game of writing papers, and
your career will depend on your ability to publish to premier venues.
Every publication venue has their own (sometimes opaque) criteria
that they use to judge whether a paper is sufficiently novel to
include in their journal or proceedings. If you haven't already, read
lots and lots of papers from your favorite venue. There are
conferences for every field of computer science. Do you find these
papers absolutely enthralling and captivating? If not, you should
probably stop here.
If yes, find a professor working in that space and volunteer your
time. Don't limit yourself to just coding (that is only a tiny part
of the research process). Find a way to get involved in the writing
and editing process. Be there to wipe up the tears when the paper
gets rejected. Stick around for the many paper iterations to resubmit
to the next conference. Try writing a novel paper yourself. Does it
fill you with joy when some experts half-way around the world
consider your work good enough? If so -- a PhD might be for you. If
this process fills you with loathing, you might want to reconsider
spending the next 5+ years of your life on it.
Note: I did not talk about novelty or freedom. There are countless
ways to build novel software that doesn't exist yet (e.g. in industry
or open source communities), or get more freedom to pursue new ideas
(e.g in startups). The research process is a very particular process.
3. You want a shot at eventually becoming a professor
This is an obvious one, in the sense that for most schools, a PhD is
a hard requirement. If you love to teach and want to do it at the
college level, this is the way to do it. However, faculty positions
are an incredibly scarce resource. Just think about how many faculty
exist in your department and how often that changes (compared to the
students). It is significantly harder to land a faculty position. If
you do manage to land one of these positions, be prepared to
potentially relocated to a location you never expected, or at a lower
tiered school than you hoped for.
Weak reasons to do a PhD
I don't mean that they're bad reasons per se. Rather, each individual
reason on their own is generally not enough to keep you going through
the difficult journey.
1. [?] You want to earn more money
There is a high opportunity cost to doing a PhD. For top-performers
who plan to go into industry, you can often expect to make less after
a PhD, than if you had gone straight into industry after undergrad.
In other words, it will likely take you much less time with the same
amount of work ethic to get the promotions you would need to be at
the level you'd be interviewing for at the end of your PhD. For
example if you decide to go to Google, you'd probably start at L3
after undergrad vs L5 after your PhD. Plus, the skills you learn
during your PhD are often not the ones that will make you more
valuable as an engineer in company. Of course, there might be some
exceptions to this based on your expertise level and field of
expertise.
2. [?] You need time to figure out what you want to do with your life
PhDs require a lot of time and you will be doing no less work than at
an engineering job (often times more). Yes, you will be exposed to
new fields through classes, but I'd recommend folks to take more
classes in their undergrad or masters programs. When you become a PhD
student, you'll likely be expected to start working on papers on day
1. There is a chance you may find out that you want to do a PhD
during the PhD, but you can also figure this out elsewhere (like I
did during my first job after undergrad).
3. [?] You want those 3 letters after your name
No one is going to care that you have a PhD. It is not going to be a
determining factor in any job interview, except for professors (see
above). Especially in computer science and engineering, your skills,
ideas, and reputation will be your best assets. You can gain those in
or out of a PhD.
4. [?] Someone (e.g. parents/teacher) told you to do it
Your parents aren't going to write your papers for you. Your
professor or your peers aren't going to write your papers either. The
open secret is that the first author of most multi-authored papers
wrote 95% of the paper and a PhD takes a lot of effort and focus. The
motivation needs to be intrinsic. Doing this for someone else will
probably not motivate you enough to go through the grind when things
get tough.
5. [?] You're a masochist
When someone tells you how hard something is and how most people
fail, does that draw you to the challenge? My group used to joke that
the best PhD students are the ones that after being told they
shouldn't do one, continue to do it anyway. Marc Andreesen has said
the same thing about startup founders. They say these things to
elicit that feeling of, "do you think you're good enough for this?"
Don't fall for that trap! It is in their best interest that more
students/founders try and fail by casting a false dichotomy of
success vs failure. For any individual person, not going to grad
school may be way better for your career and falling for this
narrative is a terrible reason to commit years of your life.
6. [?] You want to learn new technical topics
In your PhD, you will spend a lot of your time reading papers. You'll
read some in group settings with other colleagues interested in the
same subjects, but you'll also read a lot on your own. I love that
PhDs give you the time to read and engage in deep discussions about a
topic with other like-minded folks. The PhD did teach me how to pick
a brand new subject, learn enough to become an expert at it, and
discover new insights.
However, I list it as a weak reason in itself because I think of this
as a life-long mindset that can and should be developed regardless of
where you are. As a thought experiment, if I wanted to do a career
change and start working in computational biology, would I do another
PhD? Of course not! I would read papers, find good mentors and
colleagues in the field, and start doing work in the space.
If you ask me if I regret going to grad school, I'll always answer no
and share reasons why the experience was valuable to me. Without the
ability to A/B test my life, I also won't be able to definitively
tell you that my life could have been better or worse. However as a
recovering masochist that went to graduate school because I thought
it was about "academic freedom", I really underestimated just how
difficult the journey would be, its impact on my mental health, and
the wide prevalence of depression (1, 2, 3, 4). I hope these tips
might help you recognize what your motivations are so you can make
better decisions for yourself.
If you agree or disagree with any of these, please leave your
comments below! I'd love to hear how others would think about this
decision.
Thanks to Ian Vo, Calvin Ardi, Dan Butler, Brandon Holt, Dimitrios
Gklezakos, Rahul Banerjee for their feedback!
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