Programming or software engineering related fields, assuming you have the inclination/aptitude.
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Quality assurance. Especially if you have some IT background.
Udemy courses tend to be discounted to $9. Go use those and then take the agile certification.
Scrum master is another one you can learn and there's a low bar for getting that cert and then the higher levels.
Jira is a task application that's used a lot.. so look into a training for that application.
A thing to keep in mind is that a lot of tech companies still think people are more productive in the office and force you to come in, despite having metrics that say otherwise.
100% tons of those rto drives right now.
Shits stupid.
Following, because I'm gonna be unemployed soon and am also in my 40s and trying to figure out a new path to work from home. There's several YouTube channels dedicated to talking about work from home jobs (not all tech-related), but I don't know how reliable/truthful they are. Lots of customer service roles (not my cup to tea, personally).
Influencer for cosmetics. You only need to learn to smile and be as vain as possible
/s
/s
No, no, you have a point there.
I know. It means that I do not seriously recommend this.
Haha yeah I hadn't considered that. I guess there's always the various lines of work that involve doing something in front of the camera, if you're that kind of person for that job (I have actually honestly considered trying something like onlyfans in the past lol, but lurking in certain creator spaces on Reddit definitely dispelled the myth of easy money in that for me, seems like giving a lot of yourself for not a lot of reward unless you're one of the lucky few that blow up in popularity).
Most things computer based, provided you have a feel for it. If you are interested in Business Intelligence, you can learn to work with Microsoft Fabric and there are plenty of companies in the data field that are hiring, offering traineeships etc. Same goes for the more technical data engineering, software development, etc.
Source: am WFH data engineer.
I want to mention this disclaimer, though: right now, at least in tech roles, it's currently very difficult to actually land one of these jobs. Listings are getting hundreds of applicants per hour on some occasions. There's a lot of competition because of recent return to office mandates and layoffs, and it might be awhile before that changes.
I had thought of this area of work. Not averse to learning something tech related (although you wouldn't be able to tell going by the 3 times I've started and abandoned a programming course in my life), I just worry that being both a noob and almost 40 would count against me finding actual work. Plus, going by the other commenter, seems like a tough market right now.
On a side note, programming is something I would love to do in my downtime, to be able to finally make my game(s) lol.
I got my first job in programming at 35 a few years back.
Oh cool, that's definitely encouraging, thanks.
I should probably add that I don't have a relevant degree and I've since been promoted, so it can go okay!