Big TECH Energy by Stemuli
The Part of Tech Careers Nobody Explains with Snap’s Lindsey Heisser
January 13, 2026
Everyone thinks tech careers are about being the smartest person in the room. Lindsey Heisser says that’s not how it actually works. In this episode, Lindsey talks about what really changes trajectories early on - seeing what’s possible, building confidence before credentials, and why some of the most overlooked students are actually the most ready. It’s an honest conversation about failure, mentorship and the moments that quietly change how people see themselves.
A Big TECH Energy by Stemuli podcast episode featuring Lindsey Heisser, Snap’s head of Global Philanthropy at Snap. 

Access this and more episodes of Big TECH Energy by Stemuli on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube.

The tech industry talks a lot about talent shortages, but Lindsey Heisser has seen a different problem up close: people who are capable, motivated, and curious - yet never shown where they fit.

In this episode of Big TECH Energy, Taylor and Lindsey share what they’ve learned from working with early-career talent at Snap and beyond. The conversation explores why confidence often shows up before credentials, how failure becomes useful only when you slow down enough to reflect, and why community college students are some of the most overlooked - and most prepared - people entering tech.

Lindsey also unpacks what real access looks like in practice: exposure to industry, honest conversations with families about career paths and pay, and moments that quietly shift how someone sees themselves. Rather than trying to “create” talent, her work focuses on helping people recognize what they already have - and giving them room to grow.

This episode is for anyone thinking about how opportunity actually works, how confidence is built early, and how small interventions can create long-term ripple effects in tech careers.

Topics covered include early career development in tech, community college pathways, workforce access, mentorship, confidence building and how programs like Snap Academies support entry-level talent.

Episode Highlights:

06:14 Why confidence is the real career differentiator 
Lindsey reveals that confidence is the secret ingredient that hiring managers and leadership rarely measure but always notice. It's what separates candidates who get the job from those who don't. While educational systems obsess over test scores, technical skills and GPA, they're ignoring the psychological foundation that actually determines career trajectory and promotion potential. Building confidence in early-career talent is the make-or-break factor that most corporate programs overlook entirely.

13:30 The write-it-down method for building resilience

Lindsey's framework for bouncing back from her startup failure is brutally practical: get quiet, reflect deeply, write down what sucked and why, identify wins and losses and extract specific lessons you can apply to the next challenge. Most people experience failure and spiral into shame or avoidance, missing valuable learnings that may be hidden in the collapse. By documenting failures methodically, you create a personal playbook that builds mental resilience for the next inevitable setback. Lindsey emphasizes that writing it down physically, not just thinking about it, is key because it forces clarity and creates a reference point you can revisit when facing similar crossroads.

20:02 Community college is the solution everyone needs

Lindsey reveals that Snap strategically targets community college students because there's a massive blind spot in talent development: opportunities exist for four-year universities and high school students, but community college students get ghosted, despite being among the hungriest, most resilient learners in the pipeline. This demographic has higher drop-out rates, less family connections to tech, and zero visibility into industry pathways, making them simultaneously the most overlooked and most impactful talent pool. By offering a paid nine-week intensive program with real mentorship, mock interviews and direct exposure to company culture, Snap has achieved 100% conversion from internship to full-time offers in their engineering track - a stat that sounds impossible until you realize no other Fortune 500 company is competing for this talent.

25:33 The “extra step” that unlocks generational wealth

When Lindsey called the mother of an accepted student to explain that designers earn high five to seven-figure salaries, she wasn't just recruiting one person, she was breaking a belief barrier that blocks entire families from accessing/ exploring opportunities. First-generation students from underrepresented backgrounds often don't know what's possible because no one in their immediate circle has done it; they need someone to explicitly translate career potential into possibilities of generational wealth. This "extra step" of having a real conversation with parents about industry salaries, career longevity and earning potential is what's missed in most talent programs that treat students as isolated units rather than family systems.

Resources

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