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Discussion on: Does blogging really help your career?

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ferricoxide profile image
Thomas H Jones II

Oof... My posts tend to be full of attitude: frequently, what's caused me to write was something that was annoying to research and solve.

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jennrmillerdev profile image
Jen Miller • Edited

hi Thomas,
I think that's fine because we're expressing frustration, which is normal. We're not robots.

To me, regarding "frustration", I personally think there's a difference between:

"Spent 3hrs trying to center a div, I hate jQuery. I wish it was easier. This is how I did it. Wish there was a easier way...." kind of thing.

VS

"Here a stance about (insert tech, politics, dev community, best practices) and if you don't agree, then you are a bad person and need to change. Look at my likes and followers and see how everyone else agrees with me."

The thing is, I don't think a person should necessarily change who they are or how they write just for their career. Expression is a important part of each individual.

But when the question is, "will my blog help me in my career". If a candidate constantly extrudes arrogance, putting down those that do not agree, and one-way communication, I'm not sure it helps (in general) 😕.

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ferricoxide profile image
Thomas H Jones II • Edited

If you're the writing type, maintaining "personal" and "tech" blogs is generally a good idea. Preferably, doing it under unique userids to reduce the likelihood that you'll blog to one when you meant to blog to the other.

Then again, I generally try to maintain a fairly strong firewall between "work" me and "personal" me when it comes to online presence. In both cases, my attitudes will definitely still come across. It's mostly a topics-separation (my politics doesn't generally have bearing on how I approach technical things and technical stuff tends to bore/confuse the people that read my personal stuff). That said, "pure rant" (i.e., stuff that doesn't include "how I solved or worked around this problem" type of content) tends to go on my personal blogs.