Real Talk From "Blue Collar" to "Button Down": Your Path into ITCloud Mind Academy You don't need a fancy degree to break into tech. Honestly? Your "non-technical" job has already taught you more than you realize. Let's Be Real If you've ever worked a double shift as a server or spent all day on a construction site, you’ve already mastered the hardest part of IT: working under pressure. In the tech world, we use big words like "Service Level Agreements" or "Root Cause Analysis." But if you’ve ever had to fix a broken machine on the fly or handle a table of twelve hangry customers, you’re already doing that work. You just need to learn how to speak the "tech language" to get noticed. How to talk about what you already do 🛠️ You’re the "Family IT Person" If you’re the one fixing the Wi-Fi or setting up your grandma’s new iPad, that isn't just a favor—it's Technical Support.Put it on your resume: "Experienced in troubleshooting hardware and software issues, setting up home networks, and explaining technical steps to people who aren't tech-savvy." 🍔 Service Work is Help Desk Work Handling an angry customer at a restaurant is the exact same skill as helping an upset VP whose email won't load.Put it on your resume: "High-level customer service experience with a focus on de-escalation, rapid problem-solving, and managing dozens of requests at once." ⚡ Blue-Collar Logic = Tech Logic Working on an engine or a circuit board is just "Physical Coding." You’re following a logic path to find the break.Put it on your resume: "Proven ability to follow technical diagrams and use step-by-step logic to diagnose and fix complex system failures." 3 ways to get your foot in the door 1Nail the Basics Go for the CompTIA A+ or a Salesforce Associate cert. It’s like getting your driver’s license for the tech world. 2Show, Don't Just Tell Tell them about the old PC you rebuilt or the free Salesforce org you used to track your home budget. It counts! 3Update the Lingo Instead of "fixed broken sinks," try "performed diagnostic testing and emergency maintenance on critical systems."