Why three quick tips? Why not?! There are a lot of different tips and suggestions for getting a job as a developer, but these are three particularly great ways to stand out.
Why donuts? Because I like donuts. That's why! š©
1. Use everything you have to stand out.
I spent a lot of years doing the exact opposite. My resume was perfectly designed to be ānormalā it had all the right content. It was formatted cleanly and minimally so as not to offend. I followed every rule of professionalism I could find.
But something magical happened when I decided I just didnāt care. (sorry.. this is as close as we're going to get to a Harry Potter reference this time around...) Someone once told me itād better to have 90 people hate you and 10 love you than to have 100 simply not notice at all. I think thatās probably a bit extreme, but these days Iām all about showing personality and my unique traits. Iād someone doesnāt like it, maybe I didnāt want to work with them anyway! But, more importantly, it gives me a chance to be noticed!
2. Join your local tech Slacks
Get to know local developers and recruiters. Engage with them and let them get to know you! Again, you want to be noticed, donāt hide away and just watch.
(This isnāt just restricted to Slack. Local dev communities on Meetup, LinkedIn, Facebook, etc can all be just as good.)
If theyāre running events volunteer to help out, even if itās just cleanup after.
If newer developers are asking questions you can answer, answer them! If youāre embarrassed to answer in front of others, answer in private. Word will still get around that youāre helpful.
Have some opinions. If you donāt have any, spend some time researching a particular area of interest until you know enough to have one.
Which leads me to our last item....
3. Write more!
Writing articles (or making videos or podcasts) have three huge advantages.
In order to write something you need some knowledge. That likely means learning more than you know today. They say the best way to learn is to teach!
This also generates more content to gain more of that all important attention. Post your articles here on dev.to. Post them on LinkedIn. Share them in any of the dev communities you found.
Creating this sort of content also puts back into the community. The community supported you in your journey, by adding some back youāre doing your part to ensure thereās fresh content to support newer people.
That's three...
These three alone won't guarantee a job, but they can absolutely put you on the right track. Want some more tips? We talk about these subjects a lot on our podcast Getting Apps Done
Specifically it's worth checking out:
https://gettingappsdone.com/episodes/resumes-interviews-and-chainsaw-wielding-teenagers/
https://gettingappsdone.com/episodes/unicorns-in-business-suits/
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