Episoder

  • Talking Points:

    The disadvantage that Juniors developers haveFocus on the actual goalTake your career to the next level

    Quotable Quotes:

    "Through mentorship programs and developer events that I run, I recognize that the biggest disadvantage that Juniors developers have is not technical expertise""Tools, libraries, technologies, frameworks, languages, they all change so fast""The disadvantage that Juniors devs have is that they don't know how more Senior engineers and managers think""That's really what I hope [the how] these interviews have given you, a window into the minds of tech leads, hiring managers, and CTOs""Over the previous something 60 episodes we've also covered some specific techniques you could put into practice to immediately be seen and treated as more senior by recruiters, hiring managers and teammates""I also hope that if you've taken away nothing else is that your ability to code and create software is only valuable if you're using it to help others or make them more productive""Look past your tools, your editor, your programming language, and whatever framework is popular by the time you are listening to this""It should be the actual goal or result that needs to be achieved, that's what should've kept in your mind""Often the best solution involves no code at all""Thanks for listening, I hope you take your career to the next level, and let me know how it goes"

    Notes:
    David Guttman twitter

    twitter.com/davidguttman

    Junior to Senior Community
    community.juniortosenior.io

  • Talking Points:

    Open-source contributionsWorking with workflowsPromoting open-source projectsNetworkingFounder’s mindset

    Quotable Quotes:

    "Getting involved with open-source can definitely make your development more visible" - AP"A lot of the opportunities that I've had in my life often come down to networking, and open-source is no exception to that" – AP
    "I've always generally been a proponent of just being exposed to lots of different ways to thinking or ways of working, that makes you more adaptable" – AP"That was really kind of the start of it [open-source] for me, just having tools I was building and using myself" – AP "[Canonical advice for getting started on open-source] Find a smallish but still used project, use it, try to use it in something, figure out where the gaps are in either documentation or tests or examples […] and do a small (as small as you can) PR" – DG"[Another approach] Trying to do your own project and see what it's like to sort of packaging all up and trying to have like a very complete but again small project that checks all the boxes" – DG"Go talk to people, go ask" – AP"It doesn't matter how busy a person is if you very genuinely just ask [to connect with them]" – AP"Think about who may be the dream person that you’d want to go to for advice and then just try it" – AP"I think that just about everyone should care about the other parts of the business where you work" – AP

    Notes:

    Scarf

    about.scarf.sh

    Avi Press website

    avi.press

    Avi Press twitter

    twitter.com/avi_press

    Junior to Senior Community
    community.juniortosenior.io

  • Manglende episoder?

    Klik her for at forny feed.

  • Talking Points:

    How to find balance to avoid burning outFinding your career goal as a developerHow to help others and learn while having fun

    Quotable Quotes:

    "You should be pushing yourself, you should be learning new things" [instead of relying on an employer] - DG"Choose projects that you find fun” [to make your leisure time, your learning time] – DG"I could use that knowledge [how to push myself the right way, how to find motivation..] in helping other people, making them grow as well" - JM"I think I need [to develop] the skills that a CTO, a founder has" [to level up] - JM"With power comes responsibility" - DG"I think that's my biggest fear, to be in the same place [without any advance] for a very long period of time, I mean time is very limited" - JM"My goal is to have some kind of positive impact [...] at least do something meaningful" - JM"The second you are dying, you could say like well I did something great in life, at least my life was useful" – JM"At the end of the day if you are not capable, you probably won't go too far with your mission, that's my main concern" - JM"I think open-source is an amazing place to start [to somehow collaborate with others and help, to learn, to clarify your route]" - JM"Leave the world a bit better than you found it" - JM"My motivation to start in tech was actually to tweak stuff" [on games] - JM"I remember those times [when learned to code as a child] with a smile on my face, it's like you're having so much fun and you're not being pressed by a timeline" - JM

    Notes:

    Jose Mendoza's website
    josebmendozam.com
    Jose Mendoza's twitter
    twitter.com/JoseBMendozaM
    Js.la
    js.la
    Junior to Senior Community
    community.juniortosenior.io

  • Talking Points:

    Is it a problem if you personal GitHub is not showing a lot of activity? / Is it OK to have a basic portfolio site that has the basics? / How can you show that you are capable? How can you stand out from other people?How do I provide value to a company if I do not currently know all the in demand frameworks?How do you make an employer trust you enough so that they take a chance on hiring you?

    Quotable Quotes:

    "You don't need a GitHub that shows lots of activity""When a Hiring Manager is looking at you, you want them to get as good of an idea of what to expect, if you were on the job, as possible""If you have it on display, they [Hiring Managers] don't need to wonder if you are capable of it""You have more control [with a portfolio site] over what you want them [Hiring Managers] to see""You can be as creative as you want, and as distinctive and memorable as you want""The more clearly you show the value that you can bring if somebody hires you, the better""What really matters to a lot of companies is the value that their product, service or platform is providing to their users""Provide to them [companies] the things that help them make more money, save money or save time""One of the things that we are good at as engineers is learning new things, none of us were born knowing React or NodeJs or Vue or anything like that""Prove that you are not gonna cost more trouble than help you're gonna provide""Control that first impression of you [...] Demonstrate that you're capable in solving their problems, saving them time, helping them make more money""As an Engineering Manager what you are worried about more than anything else is that this person won't be able to do the work and in particular that they are going to be more disruptive than they are helpful""You just need to make them [Hiring Managers] very confident that you can come in, do the work that they need done, do the technical work, that you won't require a lot of baby sitting""You won't be distracting the manager a lot with questions or complains or whatever. You are actually capable of taking directions and doing the work, that you are not going to disrupt the rest of the team and that you are gonna be generally a nice person and ideally fun to be around, adding to the culture""One of the worst things that you can do is to get stuck on an issue for too long and not let anyone know""Before you ask any particular question take at least 15 minutes to try whatever you can to solve it and document what you tried and what the responses were""Remember that how you say things matters just as much as what you say"

    Notes:

    Junior to Senior Community
    community.juniortosenior.io

  • Talking Points:

    How could you become a successful developerApproaching mistakesChoosing a supportive environmentContributing to open-sourceTechniques to prevent mistakes

    Quotable Quotes:

    "Finding what you're great at" [to become successful] – JD"It's not all about just engineering" [but working with people, different teams] – JD"You're gonna fail and you're gonna screw up, sometimes big time" [Junior devs] – JD"From a management point of view, it really shouldn't be about the individual developer who makes the mistake and causes an outage, it should be more about the system that allows it to happen" – DG"Start contributing to open-source and get in some of your patches merged into the main branch and you'll be surprised how many recruiters try to hit you up on LinkedIn" – JD"Finding little tiny things that could be fixed so you get that adrenaline rush" [when starting to contribute to open-source projects] – JD"You gotta understand, maintainers are dealing with so much" [don't take things personal] – JD"You're able to move up because you learn from the past" – JD

    Notes:

    First Timers Only
    www.firsttimersonly.com
    Study: A Simple Surgery Checklist Saves Lives
    content.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1871759,00.html
    Justin Dorfman Website
    www.justindorfman.com
    Junior to Senior Community
    community.juniortosenior.io

  • Talking Points:

    Importance of networkingCommunicationManaging teamsHow to ask questionsUnderstanding the approachesDaily habitsAccountability

    Quotable Quotes:

    "I think both of them are essential for people coming out of bootcamps or colleges" [networking and communication] - AH"It's a huge advantage to have a conversation with somebody like that, in an informal setting before you head down the formal path of applying" - DG"Networking isn't about just getting a job, it's about making connections, it's about making meaningful relationships with people" - AH"If I wasn't a tech lead, if I was just an individual contributor, getting contacts, understanding the roles of my team-mates and communicating with my manager would be a primary focus for me" - AH"Focus on the process, on giving people contacts to the process and also being in a constant level of upwards optimization or efficiency" - AH"If you were in a 1 on 1 with me and there's an issue that you wanted to talk about, you have to think about what is the issue, what have I done to try to solve it, who I've talked to, what does the issue do, how does it affect the environment that we're in and is there time limit to this?" - AH"They are never going to get stronger if you keep lifting the weights for them" - DG"The ideal [question] is one that promotes confidence in your understanding about the issue" - AH"State the issue in a comprehensive way and list the things that you've tried in order to figure it out" - AH"Any question that you have is [a good opportunity] to show that you understand what the question actually is" - AH"To see somebody come in with 'everything is good' is not a good sign" - AH"Lead by example" - AH"I like to see developers create a plan for the day and that plan includes all of the different tasks that they are going to do" - AH"Owning your mistakes and learning from them is key" - AH"You just can't get better without making mistakes" - DG"Ask questions until you don't have to ask questions anymore" - AH"Skill does not come from ego, it comes from the work that you put in" - AH

    Notes:

    The Coaching Habit: Say Less, Ask More & Change the Way You Lead Forever

    goodreads.com/book/show/29342515-the-coaching-habit

    Time Boxing

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeboxing

    Pomodoro method

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pomodoro_Technique

    Js.la

    contribute.js.la/speak

    Junior to Senior Community

    community.juniortosenior.io

  • Talking Points:

    Difference between Senior and Junior engineerWays to gain experience quicklyCareer paths10x engineersSetting up the right mindset

    Quotable Quotes:

    "You can have one year of experience five times or you can actually have five years of experience" - ST"The more Junior somebody is, the more obsessed they are with their code following some sort of textbook perfection" - ST"The more Senior people tend to focus on is delivering value" - ST"The real art of engineering, specially in software, is how you respond to those evolving requirements, that's where most of the experience comes from" - ST"Going to a product-focused startup is a really good way to rapidly learn a lot of things" - ST"The actual titles aren't that important, they don't translate that well between different companies" - ST"At some point you become so good that writing the code yourself is a waste of your time" - ST"It doesn't matter how good of an engineer or a coder you are, a team of five people is always going to outcode you no matter what" - ST"Figuring out ways to get the same benefit without building the feature" - DG"Find people who have done that and talk to them" - ST"Having much more the consultant mindset rather than an employee mindset" - DG"If you are a developer, you have a superpower" - DG

    Notes:

    Swizec's blog

    https://swizec.com/

    Swizec's twitter

    https://twitter.com/Swizec

    Senior mindset

    https://seniormindset.com/

    So Good They Can’t Ignore You: Why Skills Trump Passion in the Quest for Work You Love

    https://www.calnewport.com/books/so-good/
    Junior to Senior Community
    community.juniortosenior.io

  • Talking Points:

    Building tools developers useLearning a new codebaseThe viability of open source careersWhat makes a good team memberAvoiding burn out

    Quotable Quotes:

    “Every line of code you change is going to have an impact somewhere and it's going to impact someone.” - JS“The amount of knowledge you have...will never define you, it's how you apply it, it’s how you recover from mistakes.” - JS“[How to learn faster] Figuring out what you don't know and knowing how to quickly identify the gaps in your own knowledge.” - JS“I don't mind helping...but I also want to see you putting in the effort yourself to figure it out.” - JS“[Learning new code bases] I fiddle and break things, and then figure out what broke.” - JS“If you're just spending all your time looking at code and thinking about code, you will burn out very quickly.” - JS“The people that I enjoy working with the most take a very humble approach to the code they write.” - JS

    Notes:
    James’ Twitter

    https://twitter.com/jasnell

    James’ Github

    https://github.com/jasnell
    Junior to Senior Community
    community.juniortosenior.io

  • Talking Points:

    Figuring out your career pathLearning to codeWorking in a team settingThe skill of communicatingWhat makes a good engineer

    Quotable Quotes:

    “Handoff your code so that somebody else can maintain it.” - GC“I strongly encourage all junior engineers to work in at least a mid-sized to a large-sized company.” - GC“One key skillset an engineer must have is communication.” - GC“The easiest way to do that [align yourself to the priority of the company] is align yourself with the bug priority list.” - GC“You don't want engineers who become complacent, they produce so many bugs.” - GC“That's very important, that you're always learning.” - GC“You should always be assessing yourself.” - GC

    Notes:

    Gene’s LinkedIn
    https://www.linkedin.com/in/genechuang

    Gene’s Github

    https://github.com/genechuang
    Gene’s Organization
    https://www.ctoslackers.com
    Junior to Senior Community
    community.juniortosenior.io

  • Talking Points:

    Code as a means to an endFocusing on the business problemBuilding business valueThe alignment of goals within an organizationNot being afraid to ask stupid questions

    Quotable Quotes:

    “In our culture, we build businesses...we happen to use code most of the time.” - SP“Do you want to succeed or have fun?” - SP“Culture is what you do, not what you say you do.” - SP“Make sure you really understand the problem [that your team is] trying to solve.” - SP“The best people are completely willing to ask stupid questions all the time.” - SP“I think that the biggest mistake of junior engineers is being intimidated [to ask questions].” - SP“Good [or bad] ideas can come from anywhere [from junior or senior].” - SP

    Notes:

    Seth’s LinkedIn

    linkedin.com/in/sethpurcell

    Seth’s Company Site

    constructor.dev

    Junior to Senior Community
    community.juniortosenior.io

  • Talking Points:

    Putting yourself in the user's shoesDoing your work and asking questionsInterview preparation Culture fit

    Quotable Quotes:

    “We don't want somebody that is just a doer without asking questions.” - ND“I want people to always be wanting to improve themselves and challenge themselves.” - ND“Be willing to...say, "I think this can be done better", but you don't want to dig in so hard that it becomes negative energy.” - ND“If I'm looking at developer candidates...I'm looking for…do they care about what we're doing? Are they interested in the work.’” - ND“[preparing for interviews] Do a deep dive on this company and understand what they're about.” - ND“Even if they might not have a job posting...reach out and say…”I would love to talk.” - ND“If you've spent the time to care about the company, there's more conversation [in an interview].” - ND

    Notes:

    Nick’s Company Site:

    funkhaus.us

    Nick’s LinkedIn

    linkedin.com/in/nicholasdies
    Junior to Senior Community
    community.juniortosenior.io

  • Talking Points:

    Building products people useGetting a job you can be great atBe in places where luck can happen to youHow to know if you are providing value

    Quotable Quotes:

    “If you're not providing value in your ecosystem, interacting with this person is not a good use of time or money.” - DS“If you're aligned with your managers, then you'll tend to produce value for them.” - DS“If you don't fundamentally care about who you serve, you should consider whether that's the job you want.” - DS“You need to be where luck can happen to you.” - DS“Is the product, is the team better for me having been here?” - DS“Constantly refactor. Don't ask for permission to refactor.” - DS“A good engineer is refactoring a little bit along the way, all the time.” - DS

    Notes:

    David’s Company

    Interna.com
    David’s LinkedIn
    linkedin.com/in/davidsubar
    David’s Twitter
    twitter.com/dsubar

    Junior to Senior Community
    community.juniortosenior.io

  • Talking Points:

    The different stages of a developerThinking about where you want to goFind what you enjoy doing early in your careerDo you want to be a manager or a single contributorLearning from costly mistakes

    Quotable Quotes:

    “Where do you want to go?” - SD“You want to grow and you want to think, how did they get to where they're at and make that happen.” - SD“At the earliest start be picky about what you're trying to do.” - SD“My biggest thing that I can ask you is to be a problem solver.” - SD“Keep encouraging yourself to take little steps ahead.” - SD“Your skill level has nothing really to do with your degree.” - SD"As early as you can try testing your own career with that kind of stuff [being a manager or single contributor], you'll find that way better." - SD

    Notes:

    Scott’s Halloween Party:

    nohomonsterbash.com

    Scotts LinkedIn:

    linkedin.com/in/decke

    Scott’s Email:

    [email protected]
    Junior to Senior Community
    community.juniortosenior.io

  • Talking Points:

    Finding missing information quicklyNot needing permission to pursue idealsWorking well with a teamGrowing through communityNot just being a pair of hands

    Quotable Quotes:

    “The worst thing that I think a developer can do is not surround themselves with tons of other developers.” - TB"It [NodeConf] really got me understanding how other programmers work and what they're doing.” - TB"To be a good engineer, you always have to be learning." - TB"Strike a balance, trust yourself. Do what you want and if that fails...try something else again." - TB"Being around people in your industry...it's gonna help you understand the greater picture." - TB“If you're always learning then the older you get, the more things you're going to be comfortable with.” - TB“How to talk to people and meet people, it's totally learnable.” - TB

    Notes:
    Tyler’s business site:
    polycade.com
    Tyler’s LinkedIn:
    linkedin.com/in/tyler-bushnell
    Polycade’s Instagram:
    instagram.com/polycade
    Junior to Senior Community
    community.juniortosenior.io

  • Talking points:

    Be creative as a developerSetting yourself apartChoosing the right technologyThe freedom of JavaScriptFinding your nicheSolve problems that free up time

    Quotable Quotes:

    “You should probably go down the road of the thing that's going to give you the most return.” - DB“It's very hard to find someone that can do that [be an illustrator] and also write code.” - DB“You should really not just reach for the latest and greatest thing because you saw it on hacker news” - DB“Learn something as deep as you can.” - DB“If you enjoy the design stuff that I've been talking about then absolutely focus on JavaScript, animations, and CSS.” - DB“It's very rare that you will change languages in your career” - DB“So it comes down to, what do you enjoy doing?” - DB

    Notes:

    Funkhaus website

    funkhaus.us

    Funkhaus Github

    github.com/funkhaus

    Drew’s email
    [email protected]
    Junior to Senior Community
    community.juniortosenior.io

  • Talking Points:

    Making your boss look goodHow to use your skills and passionsKnowing the pros & cons of toolsUnderstanding riskFocusing on the outcome

    Quotable Quotes:

    “If you want to advance your career...figure out how to make your boss look good.”“He [Jonathan’s senior colleague] thought about the outcome. What are you really trying to accomplish here?”“When...they understand a little bit about business outcomes, I'm like, oh, this person is smart, they get it.”“The world doesn't owe you a handsome income for engaging in your favorite activities.”“Back when you had an actual paper book you'd go way deeper into individual things.”“You keep your eyes on the outcome...then you can get there with minimal detours.”“...the new shiny tool, you want to talk to your friends about it, but your boss doesn’t care about that.”

    Notes:
    Jonathan's Twitter

    https://twitter.com/jonathanstark
    Junior to Senior Community
    community.juniortosenior.io

  • Talking Points:

    The complexity of mentorshipSurround yourself with good peopleThe hiring processKind honestyCulture fit

    Quotable Quotes:

    “I think it's much more important that you have a values fit.” - EH“From a kind place, tell the truth to people.” - EH“Always think about the client, put yourself in the client's shoes.” - EH“We're taught that when you're a candidate you can't address certain issues.” - EH“Judging...the ability to do a job from the interview process is such a tricky proposition.” - EH“When people are happy, everything is happier.” - EH“Make sure that you're not feeling things too deeply[in the interview].” - EH

    Notes:

    Erick’s Twitter

    linkedin.com/in/erickherring
    CTO at

    vynyl.com
    Junior to Senior Community
    community.juniortosenior.io

  • Talking Points:

    Communicating wellThe cycle of learning new thingsWhen to prioritize performanceClean codeEmpathy for the user

    Quotable Quotes:

    “This is a new challenge and it's hard. It becomes a lot shorter. - P“I think people optimize for what's going to look pretty...vs. what's going to look like a real instrument” - P“You're still keeping performance in mind, but you're not being hyper about it.” - P“There's also the speed of how the user perceives it. The perception of speed.” - P“Sometimes going too hard in the weeds makes code pretty gnarly.” - P “...if you make something easier, fundamentally you have exponentially more people doing that.” - P“Kinopio is, I guess, what I like to call a spatial thinking tool for new ideas and hard problems.” - P

    Notes:

    Pirijan’s Website:
    pketh.org

    Pirijan’s project:

    kinopio.club

    Junior to Senior Community
    community.juniortosenior.io

  • Talking Points:

    Watching mentors solve problemsVersion controlHumble communicationSelf-evaluationConstrained creativity

    Quotable Quotes:

    “You have a big story[frequent Git commits]...that’s what gets published, is a story.” - JH“You can always improve communication.” - JH“If somebody has that[holier than thou attitude], that would probably be like a big red flag.” - JH“Nobody knows anything at the start of this stuff, so we all learned.” - JH“You should know why you're participating in that company, on that project.” - JH“Every night or every week...ask yourself ‘How am I doing? Where am I going?" - JH“One week I worked on a Saturday because I felt like I hadn't met a goal...I got chewed out for it in the best way possible.” - JH

    Notes:

    Justin’s Twitter
    https://twitter.com/justinprojects
    Justin’s Latest Project
    24hourhomepage.com
    Junior to Senior Community
    community.juniortosenior.io

  • Talking Points:

    Developer advocacyWrite good documentationConfusing the solution with the problemDefine clear goalsLearning with joy

    Quotable Quotes:

    "Does this solve a problem that everybody agrees is an actual problem?" - EM"Whenever you've run into problems, it's probably a goal problem." - EM"When you don't know what you want a function to do it can be really hard to write that function." - EM"A lot of people just don't like to close off possibilities so they want to do everything all at once." - EM"You can't ever make yourself irreplaceable, you can only make yourself a single point of failure." - EM"You really have to practice being okay with feeling dumb." - EM"You should always be looking to figure out how you can bring other people into your circle instead of keeping people out." - EM

    Notes:
    Erin's Website:

    erinmckean.com
    Erin's non-profit organization:
    wordnik.com

    Erin's Twitter:

    twitter.com/emckean

    Erin's GitHub:

    github.com/emckean
    Junior to Senior Community
    community.juniortosenior.io