Hello folks! Mani here. The guy who returned to India thinking 10 years of Silicon Valley experience would have companies fighting over me.
Boy was I wrong.
I landed in 2017 with an impressive resume. Got rejected for being “overqualified” seven times in my first month.
Overqualified. The rejection that sounds like a compliment but hurts like an insult.
Let me save you from my job search humiliation.
In this article...
The “Overqualified” Reality Check 📊
Being overqualified is a real problem. I thought it was a myth.
I sent my US resume to 20 companies. Got 3 responses. All mentioned “concerns about fit.”
“Fit” is corporate speak for “we think you’ll quit when something better comes along.”
Experience Level | Interview Callback Rate | Offer Rate | Time to Find Job |
---|---|---|---|
5-10 years | 25-30% | 10-15% | 2-3 months |
10-15 years | 15-20% | 8-12% | 3-5 months |
15+ years | 10-15% | 5-8% | 4-7 months |
I had 18 years of experience when I returned. Took me 6 months to find the right role.
Should have read this table before booking my one way ticket to India.
The Compensation Conundrum 💰
Salary expectations create barriers. Mine were in outer space initially.
I asked for 80% of my US compensation. The recruiter laughed so hard I thought she was having a medical emergency.
Experience | Expected Salary | Market Reality | My Salary Journey |
---|---|---|---|
15+ years abroad | 70-80% of foreign salary | 40-60% of foreign salary | Started at 80%, settled at 55% |
VP level | ₹60-80 lakhs | ₹40-60 lakhs | Rejected first 3 offers as “insulting” |
C-suite | ₹80+ lakhs | ₹60-90 lakhs | Eventually adjusted expectations |
I once walked out of an interview when they mentioned compensation range. The hiring manager later connected on LinkedIn and explained market realities.
I wish I’d been less arrogant. That company went on to be acquired for millions.
Solution 1: Strategic Resume Downscaling 📄
Tailor your resume appropriately. I didn’t. My resume screamed “I’m expensive and will get bored here!”
I listed every achievement, award, and leadership role. Created a resume that terrified hiring managers at mid sized companies.
Resume Element | Traditional Approach | Downscaling Strategy | My Resume Evolution |
---|---|---|---|
Job Titles | Highlight all senior titles | Focus on relevant experience | Started with “VP Engineering, Silicon Valley” |
Achievements | Comprehensive list | Selective highlighting | Listed managing 200 person team to apply for 20 person team |
Years of Experience | Precise timeline | Focused last 10-12 years | Eventually removed oldest positions |
I applied for a Development Manager role with a resume that said “VP of Engineering, managed $15M budget.”
The hiring manager later told me they assumed I’d leave within months for a bigger role. They were probably right.
I created different resume versions for different roles. Started getting more responses immediately.
Solution 2: The “Growth Company” Focus 🚀
Some companies specifically value senior experience. I discovered these too late.
I applied exclusively to established brands initially. Should have focused on growth stage companies.
Company Stage | Receptiveness to Senior NRIs | Value Perception | My Company Targeting |
---|---|---|---|
Startups (Series A/B) | Very High | “Been there, done that” expertise | Ignored these completely |
Growth Stage (Series C/D) | High | Scaling experience | Discovered in month 4 |
Established Companies | Medium to Low | May seem overqualified | Focused here initially |
I avoided startups completely my first 3 months. “Too risky,” I thought.
Then met a former colleague leading engineering at a Series B startup. He explained they specifically sought people with scaling experience.
His exact words: “We’re not scared of overqualified people. We’re terrified of underqualified people making scaling decisions.”
My entire search strategy changed that day.
Solution 3: Emphasize Learning Mindset 🧠
Demonstrate adaptability and learning orientation. I failed at this initially.
My first interviews, I positioned myself as “the expert.” Created impression of rigidity.
Interview Element | Poor Approach | Effective Approach | My Interview Evolution |
---|---|---|---|
Market Questions | “In Silicon Valley we did…” | “I’m curious how Indian market differs…” | Started acknowledging local expertise |
Learning Mentions | Focus only on teaching others | Balance teaching and learning | Eventually mentioned courses I was taking |
Adaptation Examples | No mentions | Specific stories of adaptation | Added cross cultural examples |
I bombed an interview by responding to every question with “At Google we solved this by…”
The interviewer finally said: “We’re not Google. We can’t do things that way.”
He was right. I was being inflexible and arrogant.
Later interviews, I balanced expertise with curiosity. Results improved dramatically.
Solution 4: The Strategic Step Back ⬅️
Consider intentional role adjustment. I resisted this initially.
I insisted on exact title match with my previous role. Created unnecessary barriers.
Experience Level | Traditional Path | Strategic Alternative | My Role Adaptation |
---|---|---|---|
Director/VP | Same level role | Senior Manager transitioning to Director | Rejected this approach for months |
C-level | Same level role | VP with growth path to C-level | Eventually accepted Director role |
Senior Specialist | Same level role | Lead to Senior path | Learned to focus on company growth potential |
I rejected a “Director” role because my previous title was “Vice President.”
My ego couldn’t handle the perceived demotion. The company doubled in size the next year and hired a new VP at double the original offer.
I learned role growth potential matters more than initial title.
Sometimes a step back enables two steps forward. My ego needed time to accept this reality.
Solution 5: The Consulting Bridge 🌉
Consulting can create transition pathway. I discovered this option accidentally.
I focused exclusively on full time roles initially. Created single point of failure in my search.
Approach | Initial Compensation | Long-term Benefit | My Consulting Discovery |
---|---|---|---|
Direct Employment | Sometimes lower than expected | Stability, benefits | Only approach I considered initially |
Consulting Contract | Often higher hourly rate | Company test drive, negotiation leverage | Stumbled into this in month 5 |
Advisory Roles | Board level compensation | Multiple income streams | Added these in year 2 |
I was 5 months into my search. Running out of savings. Getting desperate.
A former colleague needed help with architecture review. Asked if I’d consult for 3 months.
That consulting gig led to full time role. The company had “tested” my skills and cultural fit with minimal risk.
I now recommend consulting as deliberate bridge strategy. Not desperate fallback like in my case.
Solution 6: Focus on Problems You’ve Solved 🔍
Highlight specific expertise relevant to company challenges. I failed at customization initially.
My interviews centered on my impressive background. Not company’s specific problems.
Approach | Response Rate | Offer Conversion | My Problem Focus Evolution |
---|---|---|---|
General Experience | 10-15% | 5-10% | My initial low success approach |
Company Research | 25-35% | 15-20% | Started researching before interviews |
Problem Matching | 35-45% | 25-30% | Eventually highlighted relevant experience |
I walked into a fintech interview talking about my general leadership experience. Didn’t research their specific challenges.
The CTO later told me another candidate came in saying: “I noticed your payment reconciliation issues mentioned in your tech blog. I’ve solved similar problems twice before.”
That candidate got the job. I got a rejection email.
Now I research extensively and customize every conversation around specific company challenges.
Solution 7: Network Like Your Career Depends On It (It Does) 🤝
Networking opens hidden doors. I neglected this completely.
I relied on job postings and recruiters initially. The least effective job search methods.
Networking Method | Effectiveness | Response Rate | My Networking Journey |
---|---|---|---|
Job Boards/Listings | Low | 5-10% | Started here exclusively |
Recruiters | Medium | 10-20% | Added after first month |
Direct Network | Very High | 40-60% | Discovered after 3 months of failure |
I spent my first 3 months applying online. Generated 3 interviews from 120 applications.
Then ran into former client at coffee shop. Mentioned my search casually. He referred me to his company.
Got interview immediately. Offer followed. All from one random conversation.
Now I spend 70% of search time on networking, 30% on applications. Completely reversed my initial approach.
Final Thoughts 🧠
Actually, “expert” is generous. More like “guy who made every possible mistake before figuring it out.”
Being overqualified requires strategic approach. I learned through painful trial and error.
I went from rejection to multiple offers. Eventually. After enough “we’re concerned you’re overqualified” emails to wallpaper my apartment.
Adjust expectations. Customize approach. Network relentlessly.
And remember: In India, your experience has value, but not always in the ways you expect. Unlike me who thought my Silicon Valley background would immediately translate to identical role and compensation.
That expectation lasted about 48 hours after landing. Reality has a way of delivering swift education.
Got questions about navigating overqualification? Drop them in comments. My job search failures are your career shortcuts.
Sources and Helpful Links:
- Naukri Returning Indians Survey: https://www.naukri.com/blog/returning-indians-job-search-trends
- Michael Page India Salary Guide: https://www.michaelpage.co.in/salary-guide
- LinkedIn Global Talent Trends India: https://business.linkedin.com/talent-solutions/global-talent-trends
- Back to India Movement Job Search Data: https://backtoindia.com/job-search-statistics
- Mercer Compensation Reports India: https://www.mercer.com/our-thinking/career/total-compensation-global-survey
- Adecco Group Senior Professional Return Survey: https://www.adeccogroup.com/research-and-insights