Hello fellow Nukeworkers,
I can tell you that Nukeworker is a fantastic place to put your résumé. Below is a summarized account of the impact Nukeworker.com has had on my life.
November 2007: Soon to be getting out of the Navy, I post my résumé to ~10 jobs and work boards per day.
February 2008: I am honorably discharged from the Navy and have a few interviews already lined up for me.
March/April 2008: I have two job offers. One at a Nuke plant and another at a coal plant. I end up choosing the coal plant job, due to it being in my home town.
March/April-June 2008: After undergoing several separate instances of being shocked by voltages ranging from 120Vac to 480Vac, watching three coworkers get injured (hospitalized), and multiple accounts of tagouts that were improperly performed leading to mispositioning, fuel oil spill, and one of my previously mentioned shocks; I decide that the coal plant is not for me.
By this time, the responses to my résumé posting has dwindled to nothing but headhunters looking to put me in grunt work positions... Save one phone call. Florida Power and Light (now NextEra Energy) calls me, not one week after my wife and I make this decision. They found my résumé posted here, on Nukeworker.com.
July 2008: After a successful interview and accepted job offer, I am working as an Instant SRO candidate at Point Beach Nuclear Plant near Green Bay, WI. I've got a job that pays 50% more than my previous, a job that I can respect, and a job that is not actively trying to kill me.
July 2008 - May 2011: Working through the ILT SRO classes, audit and NRC exam. Often when I have technical or professional questions, I come here and find that I am not alone. I search through the forums and find answers that help me from day to day routine to pump wiring and resource data.
May 2011: After my NRC evaluation, I find out that I have passed all of my Simulator, JPM, and written requirements, and that I'm going to get my Senior Reactor Operator license. I reward myself by getting myself a Gold Membership here on Nukeworker.com.
Well, that's my success story, and I thank all you here for helping write it. I can think of no other group of people that will help a fellow out, just because he is in, or even interested in, a field of work. It is an amazing thing, and I'm proud to be a part of it.
-Bradley
PS - Just under my avatar is the same phrase I've had for the last three years. As The Doctor would say, "Look to the left."