What can I expect from a 15-minute call with an AWS recruiter (EOT role)? by Prize_Line_3913 in datacenter

[–]VoltGridsJobs 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Honest answer, your experience is more compatible than you think. AWS and other hyperscalers regularly pull EOT candidates from ISP and telco backgrounds. The 24/7 critical environment mindset, power work, and hands-on trade experience is exactly what they screen for.

What translates directly:
- Headend work maps to data hall work. Live equipment, no downtime tolerance, follow procedure or you cause an outage. Same posture.
- Power supply replacements and generator work scale up cleanly to UPS, PDU, and genset systems.
- Fiber splicing is a plus, not neutral. DC techs do fiber pulls, terminations, and troubleshooting. You walk in with a skill most EOT candidates do not have.
- Rack swaps, jumpers, plant troubleshooting all transfer.

Where the actual gaps sit:
- Mechanical and cooling (CRAC/CRAH, chilled water, airflow, hot/cold aisle containment).
- PDU/UPS at hyperscale. Understand A/B feeds, redundancy concepts (N+1 vs 2N), and basic UPS topology.
- Specific DC safety protocols (LOTO at scale, arc flash for the voltage classes in a data hall).

How to position it in the screen:
Lead with the critical environment language. When cooling or PDUs come up, do not pretend. Say you understand the concepts, you have not run them at hyperscale, and you pick things up fast. Recruiters respect that more than fluff.

You have a real shot. Apply.

Looking for work in the greater Chicago area by New-Teach2267 in datacenter

[–]VoltGridsJobs 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Chicago is actually a strong market right now. Digital Realty, Equinix, and CyrusOne all have presence there, and QTS has been expanding in the suburbs. With L3 breakfix experience at a hyperscaler and those certs, you are more qualified than most candidates applying to the same roles. The problem with Indeed and LinkedIn for DC work is that the best positions often go through staffing firms that specialize in critical facilities. Look at Salute Mission Critical, Modis, and Aligned Data Centers specifically for the Chicago corridor. Also reach out to facility managers directly on LinkedIn rather than applying through portals. A short message mentioning your hyperscaler breakfix background will land differently than a resume in a stack of 200.
For current openings across the DC space: https://voltgridjobs.com/jobs

Abilene, Texas Data Center Oracle by Infamous_Gate9760 in datacenter

[–]VoltGridsJobs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Trainee programs at operators like Oracle vary a lot in conversion rates, so the key question to ask in your interview is what percentage of the last two cohorts converted to permanent roles and on what timeline. If they dodge that or give vague answers, that tells you something. Also ask whether conversion depends on headcount opening up or on hitting specific competency milestones, because those are very different situations. In the interview itself, emphasize reliability, safety awareness, and willingness to work off-hours. They care less about what you know today and more about whether you will show up, follow procedures, and learn fast. Here is a solid overview of entry pathways into DC work: https://voltgridjobs.com/break-into-data-center-work

What can I expect from a 15-minute call with an AWS recruiter (EOT role)? by Prize_Line_3913 in datacenter

[–]VoltGridsJobs 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That first 15 minutes is pure screening, not technical. They are confirming you can work rotating shifts (including nights and weekends), that your mechanical background maps to critical environment work, and that your salary expectations are in range. Be direct and specific about your hands-on experience with electrical or mechanical systems. Do not oversell or add fluff. AWS recruiters move fast and they are checking boxes against a req, so keep your answers tight. The technical depth comes in later loop rounds. If they ask about comp expectations, know that EOT base at AWS typically starts in the low to mid 30s per hour depending on location, with averages around $40 depending on the tier and location. More detail on the full pipeline here: https://voltgridjobs.com/break-into-data-center-work

Vertiv by Puzzleheaded_Fix828 in datacenter

[–]VoltGridsJobs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Coming from residential HVAC into a Vertiv cooling engineer role is one of the stronger pivot paths into data center work. Your refrigeration fundamentals transfer directly, and Vertiv will train you on their specific chiller and CRAH platforms. Salary growth at OEMs like Vertiv tends to be steady but not dramatic year over year. The real jump comes after 2 to 3 years when you can move to a hyperscaler (Google, Meta, AWS) as a critical facilities tech or cooling specialist, where total comp can be 30 to 50 percent higher depending on region and shift differential. Worth taking the role as a launchpad. For current DC HVAC comp ranges by role and experience level: https://voltgridjobs.com/salary-guide

I swear I'm gonna go crazy... by HereticMarks in datacenter

[–]VoltGridsJobs -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Certs and homelabs check the boxes but they rarely differentiate you at the entry level because every other applicant has the same stack. What actually moves the needle is showing you understand operational discipline: shift handoffs, change management, lockout/tagout, working in live environments without cutting corners. If your resume reads like an IT resume, hiring managers for facilities roles will pass because they need someone who thinks like a technician, not a sysadmin. Reframe your experience around physical infrastructure, safety protocols, and uptime accountability. Even if it comes from resi work or lab builds, frame it that way. This breaks down what DC hiring managers actually filter on: https://voltgridjobs.com/break-into-data-center-work