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Recent BCA Grad seeking roadmap: How can I pivot from a non-tech job to a high-paying Generative AI role in 4 months ?

I graduated with my BCA in 2025 and am currently stuck in a low-paying job that doesn't utilize my degree. I want to pivot into Generative AI because I know that is where the growth is.

My Current Status:
Education: Bachelor of Computer Applications (2025).
Current Skills: I am actively learning Python and have a strong interest in AI/ML.
Availability: I work full-time but can dedicatedly study/practice for 4–5 hours every day.


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Sandeep’s Answer

Hello Tejas,

Moving into Generative AI in 4 months is challenging, but it is possible if you stay practical and focused. Instead of aiming straight for a high-paying role, target entry-level or trainee positions like GenAI Intern, Junior AI Engineer, or Python Developer with AI exposure. With your BCA background, interest in AI/ML, and 4–5 hours of daily study time, you already have a good starting point.

In the first half of your preparation, focus on Python, basic machine learning, and simple NLP concepts. After that, shift to hands-on Generative AI work using tools like LLM APIs, prompt engineering, and building small applications such as a document chatbot or resume analyzer. Try to complete 3–4 solid projects and upload them to GitHub/Bitbucket. Projects matter much more than certificates and help employers see what you can actually do.

In the final month, get ready for jobs by improving your GitHub, practicing how to explain your projects, and applying daily especially to startups and internships. Your first role may not pay very high, but Generative AI careers grow fast. If you perform well, you can move into better-paying roles within a year. Stay consistent, focus on skills, and avoid hype.
Thank you comment icon Thank you for taking the time to help. Tejas
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Parag’s Answer

As a 2025 graduate, you've stepped into the job market at an exciting time when "AI execution" is taking center stage. In 2026, companies are looking for people who can do more than just chat with AI—they need experts who can connect AI to actual business data.

Since you're transitioning from a non-tech role, you might feel a "credibility gap." But don't worry, you can close it in just four months. It's not just about being "good"; it's about being noticed. High salaries in this field aren't tied to your BCA degree anymore; they're about proving you can create "Agentic" systems—AI that gets things done.

The timeline is challenging, but dedicating five hours a day can transform you from "stuck" to "specialist." Instead of just watching tutorials, dive in and start experimenting with code. You've got this!

Parag recommends the following next steps:

Month 1: Kill the "Basic" Python Most people fail because their Python is weak. You need to move past loops and logic into Object-Oriented Programming (OOP) and Asynchronous programming. AI frameworks like LangChain are built on these. Spend your 5 hours daily building scripts that automate boring tasks at your current job or scrape data from the web. If you can’t handle a JSON file or a complex API call, you’ll struggle later.
Month 2: The "Brain" (Transformers & Embeddings) Don't get lost in heavy math, but you must understand Vector Embeddings. This is how AI "reads." Spend this month learning how to turn text into numbers and store them in databases like Pinecone or ChromaDB. By the end of this month, you should be able to build a semantic search tool—something that finds information based on "meaning" rather than just keywords.
Month 3: RAG (The Industry Standard) "Retrieval-Augmented Generation" is what companies are actually paying for in 2026. It’s the tech that lets an AI look at a company’s private PDFs and answer questions without hallucinating. Use LangChain or LlamaIndex to build a "Chat with my Documents" app. This is your "bread and butter" project that will get you through the initial interview door.
Month 4: Agents & "The Proof" This is where the high pay is. Learn to build AI Agents—bots that can use a browser, check a calendar, or send an email on their own. Use frameworks like CrewAI or AutoGen.
The Job Hunt Hack: Don't just send a resume. Spend your final 2 weeks recording 2-minute "Loom" videos of your agents working and post them on LinkedIn. In 2026, a recruiter seeing a video of a working AI agent is 10x more likely to hire a BCA grad than someone with a generic CV. Target "AI-first" startups or legacy companies in finance and healthcare—they are currently desperate for this specific skill set.
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Aneesh’s Answer

AI and automation are growing fast, and you're right—computer engineers' goals will change over time. Software engineers will have new roles with AI integration. Besides learning about Generative AI, understanding the basics of Machine Learning will be helpful.

Key Skills to Develop:

1. Python Skills (You're already working on this)
2. Basics of Machine Learning
- Differences between supervised and unsupervised learning
- Common algorithms
- How to train and evaluate models
- Check out free courses on Coursera, YouTube, and Khan Academy
3. Basics of Generative AI
- Learn about Large Language Models (LLMs)
4. Cloud Basics
- Choose any cloud provider like AWS, Azure, or GCP
- Use the free tier options (e.g., AWS Free Tier)
- Explore GenAI services like Amazon Bedrock or Azure AI Foundry
5. Generative AI Tools
- Learn how to use tools like OpenAI APIs

Extra Tips:
Look for more free resources from cloud providers. AWS Skill Builder, for example, has many free courses. Try hands-on examples. Finally, aim to get AI or Machine Learning certifications from cloud providers.
Thank you comment icon Thanks for the advice. Tejas
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Kaavya’s Answer

Other than what was mentioned above, if you have an interest in AI, try building the below.

The "Proof of Work" Portfolio: Use GitHub and Tableau Public (since you have an interest in data) to build your portfolio. Using prompts, record 1-minute loom videos of your AI agents working and post them on LinkedIn.

Target "AI Implementation" Roles: Don't just look for "AI Engineer." Look for "Product Engineer," "Solutions Architect (AI)," or "Technical Consultant." These roles value your BCA/IT background and are often the gateway to high-paying specialized roles.
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Michael’s Answer

The self-awareness that you're expressing regarding a need to make a change is an excellent first step. It's also great that you want to commit extra effort to enable your furture.

Fortunately, there are excellent resources to help. Here's an article on free university education programs: https://www.analyticsinsight.net/artificial-intelligence/free-ai-courses-offered-by-top-universities

We are still in the early innings of AI and the talent requirements are under-served. You have a great opportunity ahead of you.
Thank you comment icon Michael, thank you! Tejas
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Rob’s Answer

Great question! Based on what we are seeing in the tech space including cybersecurity as well as cloud migration, automation and AI, I would suggest getting experience in prompt engineering. We see this as an extremely fast growing area and one where people don't have a ton of experience. There are numerous ways to start with tools such as https://vercel.com/ and Claude development platform as a couple of examples. Hope this helps.
Thank you comment icon Rob, thank you! Tejas
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