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I just wrapped up season one of my Dev Chats series, where I interviewed a different tech professional every 1â3 weeks asking them about their role, career, and their unique experiences. It was really great hearing from the folks I had on, and I hope youâve enjoyed reading the interviews too!
We learned a lot about these folks, from how they got started, to how to get into roles likes through to how they mime typing. However, in this post, I want to summarise the career advice that came out of the interviews. What stood out? What was repeated? What can you take and use right now to improve your own career?
Be Yourself
The first piece of advice was about being yourself, being authentic true to yourself, and running with that. A lot of the people I spoke to had suffered a lack of confidence or drive at some point, but now, on the other side, they recommend that you look to work on those for yourself. And take some time out for yourself out once in a while, too!
âGod, Iâve started joking recently that itâs âdo things with the confidence of a white manâ (blatantly stolen from a tweet). Is that rude? Thatâs a bit rude. It isnât wrong though. Anyway, in all seriousness, I get asked this a lot, so I did a brain dump about it here.ââââMonica Dinculescu
âBe yourself. You donât have to act/look/behave a certain way to be an engineer or work in tech. Just be you, and bring your diverse and authentic self to the industry. I actually think my quirky brand has allowed me to stand out and have my voice heard more.ââââChloe Condon
This wonderful advice was echoed in interviews with: Juliet Brown, Vicky Brasseur, Ălafur Waage, Johna Rutz, Kristina Balaam, Cyris Chris Cloete and Carolyn Saund.
Go Get it!
This advice revolved around just starting work towards the thing you want, be it anything. Fear, confidence, and much more gets in the way of startingâââbut how many of these are real blockers versus imagined? Iâll let JD Trask finish off this section.
âTake action. This isnât limited to your career in software. I meet with so many folks who want to do something (get a promotion, ask out that person they like, start a business, renovate the bathroomâââthe list goes on). Stop waiting for permission, stop reading inspirational quotes on Facebookâââbasically, stop fucking around and do whatâs necessary to do it. Nobody will ever hand you things.ââââJDÂ Trask
Also telling you to go get it were Atta Elayyan and Cyris Chris CloeteâŠand me!
Ask For Help
A lot of people feel fear when wanting to ask a question, and this harms you in the long run. There is nothing to be scared of, and no reasonable person should give you negative feelings for just asking a question.
I think Rose summed this up really nicely, âAsking for help doesnât make you weak, it doesnât mean you donât deserve to be where you are, and doesnât mean youâre incapableâ.
This great advice which I canât recommend enough was also echoed by Kelly Vaughn, Carolyn Saund, Mike Jeffcott, Hannah Gray and Sami Peachley.
Never Stop Learning
It should be clear that in 2018, and especially tech, the only constant is change. New tools, technologies, and more are coming out daily while others fade into disuse. Thinking that youâve finished learning is career kryptonite, so please, keep learning.
âIt isnât possible to know everything. There will always be someone who knows more than you do. There will always be an expert whoâs done more than you have. Never stop learning. Never stop trying new things.ââââJess Dodson
âDonât plan your career, the world is changing to quickly. Embrace the challenges around you, take risks and see where you end up.ââââLaura BellThis whole idea is summed up by Katrina Clokie: âI think that those who are most successful are those who are always willing to learn.â
These clever folk also told you to never stop learning: Sarah Dayan, Bevan Arps, Laura Bell, Kristina Balaam, Andyy Hope, Joe Fabisevich, Carolyn Saund,Scott Hanselman⊠you get the point? Donât stop!
Teach What You Know
In addition to learning, you should teaching. An important role, for example, senior engineers, is to make more senior engineers. They do this by teaching, using their experience to help guide their less experienced peers. I loved it when Kelly said âIf you donât know, ask. If you do know, teach. We grow as a tech community by sharing. We all started out not knowing how to do what we do today.â These words couldnât be more true.
Finally, from Sarah DayanââââSenior developers, embrace the mentoring part of your position. Being a senior isnât only about a higher salary and staying away from the grunt work. If your company doesnât encourage mentorship or relies too much on you for the risky tasks and it eats up all your time, remind them the benefits of teaching: higher trust within the engineering team, juniors growing their skillset, and a better velocity at short, middle and long term.â
This advice was also echoed by Sarah Dayan, Andyy Hope and Hannah Gray.
Actively Work on Core Skills
As JD so concisely said, âCoding is the easy part, people are the hard partâ. Working on your core skills (aka soft skills), working well with others, and networking to meet others will provide so much benefit to your career. We have quite a beautiful saying here in NZ;
He aha te mea nui o te aoWhat is the most important thing in the world?He tangata, he tangata, he tangataIt is the people, it is the people, it is the people(Maori proverb)
These wise words were also covered by almost everyone interviewed in Dev Chats, so there must be something there.
Accept Criticism
Criticism and feedback are career foods. Theyâll help you grow in more ways than you can possibly know. I think Erica Sadun sums it up well: âCriticism is so valuable in terms of growth and development. I think people naturally want to defend themselves when theyâre criticised, and while a lot of criticism can be genuinely stupid (it exists), I think the vast, vast majority is is people helping you, and to push back against that help, without giving it due consideration is not in your best interest.â And more concisely, Aurynn Shaw said: âStop Being a Jerkâ.
Focus on Quality
Finally, make great products. Use your above skills of empathy to think about the user when developing great products. As Mike Jeffcott puts it, âTry to think about the end-userâs experience of what youâre building in their context as much as possible.â. Said even more simply was Nick Parfene, âStrive to make your users smile when they use your software.â
This advice echoed by Atta Elayyan, Vicky Brasseur and Sami Peachey
While Iâve picked some quotes here, Iâm sure all the folks I talked to during Dev Chats season one would agree with this advice.
I really hope you got something out of this. Read the full interviews and more by clicking any of the names.
Best of luck with your journey, Sam
Tech Career Advice from 30 Interviews was originally published in Hacker Noon on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.
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