Sequel to the article I wrote last month where I chronicled my first 30 days as an aspiring software developer, series of events have taken place since I wrote that article. I have been contacted by industry experts who were interested in my journey and encouraged me to keep pushing my limits. Lane Wagner, the Founder of boot.dev reached out and urged me to write more and publish often to reach a wider audience.
One fine weekend, while preparing to go on a short walk with my wife, I received a notification on my phone. The darndest thing about this notification is: it stood every chance of halting our walk that evening. I paused to take a glance at her nicely dolled-up face for approval to check the notification. She grudgingly approved and swayed out to go attend to other pressing needs. Alas, the notification was from a recruiter I spoke to a couple of days ago.
In retrospect, a colleague at work saw the article I wrote and forwarded a link to me urging me to apply for a junior developer role. I took a quick glance at the job description. I understood that clear and concise writing skills will determine if your application will be perused or tossed in the recycle bin. I wrote my application like my life depended on it and hit the submit button.
48 hours later, A recruiter from the firm reached out to me indicating she likes how my character reflects in my writing.
She echoed, "I would like to schedule an interview with you at the earliest, let me know what day and time work best for you".
I looked up my calendar and picked a time that would work for both of us considering she is based in Pune, India (4 hours, 30 minutes ahead of my local time).
On the scheduled date, we spent time discussing the following:
- If I am a good fit for their company culture.
- An introduction to who they are, their products, and services.
- Why I desire to pitch my tent with their firm.
- What am I bringing to the table.
We had a good time talking and it was quite memorable with some bants to pass.
48 hours later, I got a mail from her moving me to the next stage. I will be speaking with the hiring manager (the tech guy) at this stage. As a newbie in Software Development, I have read various articles that state what the hiring manager looks out for in Junior Developer - most important is the ability to work within a team. Hence, having good collaboration skills, curiosity, inquisitiveness, and an ability to learn new technology within a short time is essential.
Well, these are qualities I possess as someone who recently pivoted into Software Development.
We set up a meeting date. I made sure camera, lights and backup wifi are all poised for action.
I stepped out of the house into the salon for a haircut, at least, never to be caught un-fresh.
The sound of Victony ft Tempoe "Soweto" song was reverberating in the salon - it is the most sonically laced song I have heard since Akon's Lonely. The flute from the song dislodged the series of interview answers I have stacked in my head. I really wish I could help it at that time. As many times as I try to suppress the tone from going into my head, I find myself nodding helplessly to the sound of the flute.
I hurriedly left the salon for home as soon as I was done.
I did some background checks on the interviewer and calibrated my mind back for the interview session. I made sure I got into the meeting first. I was tapping my feet on the floor while waiting for the hiring manager to join the call. Maybe I was a bit nervous as this is my first interview as an aspiring software developer. With the camera panning into my face, I could literally see dinky sweat on my pores. I leaned back on my workspace and reminded myself how much I have learned over the past 30 days.
Few minutes later, the hiring manager joined in. He was upbeat and vivacious. He looked a happy man.
"Angela"? He mentioned in amusement, raising an eyebrow.
"Oh no! This is Emeka. Seems my wife had a brief Zoom meeting a few days ago prior to this session" I refute.
He understood and urged me to proceed with the interview. It was a fairly mid-interview, it majorly centered on the products and services of the firm. Well, I felt pretty good coming out of the session with him. Maybe I was delusional, considering how recruiters nod in affirmation of whatever nonsense you are spitting.
You get it, right?! Exactly.
Thing is, I know when I go all in for something I desire. In this case, I was confident I gave it my best shot.
Few days later, I saw a mail in my notification from the recruiter (the lady) in Pune, India. The preview of the mail doesn't look promising. I was hesitant to open the mail. I summoned courage a couple of hours later to see the content. Your guess is as good as mine.
A REGRET MAIL!
I was dispirited, I felt I deserved to be given a chance. However, the objective is not to give up but to keep putting myself out there while learning the cores of programming.
Last month (October) was unassumingly peculiar. I was threading a new terrain and I needed all the advice and mentoring I could get both from those closed-by and those remotely farther from me. The impact of getting a mentor as a burgeoning Software Developer is underrated. You could go as far as Antarctica to bag someone who could give you a listening ear - someone who would listen while you vent your frustrations for not identifying a bug - that right there is golden.
I am honored to meet this amazing fellow Gideon. Funnily, He will get to know that he is officially my mentor from this post. Naturally, I am an inquisitive person who wants to know the "Why" & "How" of different concepts. I mapped out questions I needed answers to on Notion. I understand these questions can be looked up on search engines, but I did rather want to hear him explain it in his own term while citing real-life examples.
Here comes November. I can't wait to spread my wings and soar as high as possible while envisaging what lies in wait for me on this new journey of becoming a world-class Software Developer.
I would like to know how long it took you to start applying for a junior role and what the experience was like. Someone will surely learn something from it.
PS: I want to connect with as many newbies as possible on this long road to becoming a Software Developer.
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Top comments (2)
Keep up the good attitude and keep learning and practicing! Fellow newbie here, I followed you on Twitter 😁
Thanks Tracy for reaching out. I followed back. I will do well to keep a tab on your growth as well. 👏👏