The pragmatist perspective is the most compelling to me, in the similar vein to the conversations you and I have been having on this podcast about
tech competence, which is, coding is a part of the future that is happening, and therefore having some minimal, reasonable understanding of it just so you know what's going on in the world, I find that moderately compelling, which, again, doesn't mean you need to build software, but it might mean you need to understand conceptually what the difference between front end, and back end, and SQL, and Ruby, and these things are, but really at a
basic, bare
competence level, and even then it's kind of a «maybe» in my mind.
Based on our collection of resume samples for Lube
Tech, the most sought - after skills in the field are technical aptitudes, teamwork, customer service, time management, attention to safety, recordkeeping, and
basic computer
competences.