Terratek: no offense taken. We learned some hard lessons about what didn't work for us- those lessons cost us a lot of money and brought a lot of suffering to our staff. We found an approach that works for us- hiring co-ops, picking the best and hiring them as fresh grads etc. That approach has worked very well for us for a decade now. All the concerns we hear from others about our approach- about having to mollycoddle millennials, or that they're dumber or less practical than previous generations of engineers, or having them leave after a few years of sunk training cost, or not being able to contribute meaningfully to the bottom line for years- some of that stuff may well be true elsewhere, but our experience shows that none of it is applicable to what we're actually doing. The co-op program gives us a filter which is 100,000x as effective as our best interview process. And that filter works both ways- there are great candidates who come up through our co-op program, who might make stellar employees elsewhere, but whose interests and aptitudes are different than what we need or can provide here.
We deviate from our plan from time to time, when exceptional candidates present themselves, but now we're MUCH more choosy when we do so because they have to compete against a much higher quality default outcome. Our approach wouldn't work for a firm smaller than a certain size, for sure. Others may have a different approach which works for them, and good luck to them with it.
I can guarantee that dswitherowME is going to face concern on the part of hiring managers about salary expectations after a few years, and in fact has asked for advice on how to overcome that concern in a covering letter etc. Aside from just honestly stating what was just said in their last post in a cover letter and getting others to read and edit it for effectiveness, my advice would be to try to find a 1st job through networking and personal relationships rather than by indirect means. The likelihood of making a connection which will give the prospective employer the comfort that you're sincere in this assertion and worth making a personal investment in, is much greater that way. I do wish you the best of luck. I don't know where you're from, or where you're looking for work, but maybe the labour situation is different there than it is here. Here, your situation would be very tough indeed.