I do think he's a bit alarmist about the horrors of 12 years of graduate school and no job. I held no lofty illusions in graduate school: my personal goal in my PhD program was to get a job when I got out. That was it. That meant focusing on resume-building. I graduated knowing very little but got four job offers. I used the next 10 years to build my experience and knowledge before anyone noticed that I really didn't know what I was doing. Funny thing is I then moved from a university to a national center focusing on practice instead of theory, and now I'm moving into the private sector. The experience I've picked up in the past 3 years removed from academia have made me so much more qualified for the job I've left that I would now rank as a highly-desirable candidate should I decide to return to academia. So is the PhD overrated? Absolutely. Private-sector experience can be much more valuable, especially when seeking jobs further down the road. The PhD does opens doors and can serve as a stand-in for experience early in a career. I think you can judge the quality of a professor by how highly he or she regards his or her academic credentials... and it's an inverse relationship.