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Jan Filips
Jan Filips

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The Ugly Truth: Being Good Isn’t Good Enough

Let’s face it—tech is full of brilliant people.

You write clean code, you ship features, you solve real problems. But when was the last time that alone got you:

  • Invited to speak at a conference?

  • DMs from recruiters with above-market offers?

  • Inbound freelance gigs or product collabs?

Probably not often. Because in 2025, your skills aren’t the only thing that matters.

You’re Being Googled, Like It or Not

Whether you’re applying for a job, launching a side project, or mentoring junior devs, people check you out online. LinkedIn, Twitter (or X, whatever), GitHub, maybe even your personal site.

If they see 82 followers and a dusty profile? That's a red flag—even if unfairly so.

Follower count = first impression.
Low visibility = low trust.

But I’m a Developer, Not an Influencer

Sure. You’re not trying to be a crypto shill or lifestyle vlogger. But that doesn't mean personal branding doesn't apply to you.

A strong online presence:

  • Builds authority

  • Increases network reach

  • Makes your projects discoverable

  • Opens doors to side income, OSS sponsorships, and job leads

And the fastest shortcut? Start by looking the part—which includes that follower number.

The Controversial Part: Buying Followers (Yes, Really)

Here’s the thing: algorithms and humans alike respond to momentum.

That’s why more devs are quietly using services like BragBooster to give their profile a kickstart. We're not talking fake engagement or sketchy bots. We're talking:

Real, niche-targeted followers

No passwords needed

Works on GitHub, Twitter/X, Instagram, YouTube

Delivered in minutes, not weeks

Think of it as UI for your reputation—not the whole app, but an essential layer.

Shouldn’t My Work Speak for Itself?

Ideally, yes. But we don’t live in a meritocracy. We live in a feed-based world where signals matter, and perception shapes opportunity.

Letting your GitHub commits speak for you is noble—but pairing that with a decent online presence makes your voice a lot louder.

Final Thoughts: You Don’t Have to Sell Out to Stand Out

You don’t need to become a content machine. But investing a little into your online clout makes everything else you do more effective.

Whether you’re launching a dev tool, selling a SaaS, or just looking for better career momentum—visibility is leverage.

Try it yourself:

Visit BragBooster and give your online presence the push it deserves.

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