DEV Community

Cover image for How much experience you had, when you got your first dev job?
Madza
Madza

Posted on

How much experience you had, when you got your first dev job?

Most of us have seen or heard about exaggerated requirements for entry-level positions, like 5 years of experience on the 3-year-old framework.

I wonder how experienced were you when you got your first dev job and if you remember how well did you meet the requirements for the position?

Oldest comments (40)

Collapse
 
_garybell profile image
Gary Bell

None. Well, I had a degree in Software Engineering. I was really lucky that I got a job 5-6 weeks after finishing my degree. Right place, right time kinda thing. All it asked for was an understanding of PHP, HTML, JavaScript and CSS. They didn't use a framework as such, but had their own for their own product.

I worked for them for years. It was a great product, and I'm glad the company is still doing well. The down side was I never really got exposed to "proper" frameworks until about 7 years ago, so it held me back a little bit in some areas. It does give me a big advantage for software planning though. My thinking is not constrained by the standards of specific frameworks.

When I am looking for an entry level developer, I want to know if they know some of the language, can think for themselves, and follow instructions. I don't care about framework knowledge, degrees or whatever mad requirements jobs have. Frameworks can be learned. Degrees aren't for everyone. Experience comes with someone taking that chance. I don't mind being that chance. Afterall, someone was there to take a chance on me once (and a few jobs since).

Collapse
 
madza profile image
Madza

I got a job 5-6 weeks after finishing my degree

That's really good and I'm happy for you πŸ‘πŸ’―

Collapse
 
rushankhan1 profile image
Rushan Khan • Edited

I don't mind being that chance. Afterall, someone was there to take a chance on me once (and a few jobs since).

You are a good person, I really appreciate your willingness to take a chance on people. The standards for entry-level developers are getting higher by the second and it is really comforting to see people like you.

Collapse
 
_garybell profile image
Gary Bell

I think a lot of companies want people with so much experience because they think it will lower their costs. What they forget is experience !== good. A lot of experience but no direction might get the job done, but it might also bring in a lot of bad habits. Especially in a junior role.

Collapse
 
killianfrappartdev profile image
Killian Frappart

I am learning development for a year now and no recruiter/company would care enough to read my resume. So, it is a really interesting question and I would love to read comments from more experienced devs.

Collapse
 
madza profile image
Madza

Exactly, thus the discussion πŸ˜‰ Together we learn πŸ‘

Collapse
 
jamesdengel profile image
James dengel

I got one directly after my degree, it was a graduate role, so they expected someone that would need shaping and more mentoring than a more experienced developer.

The general interview was centred around knowing some C, the basics, and then some general problem solving elements.

Collapse
 
madza profile image
Madza

Did you work with them as an intern before (while studying), so they took you right away after graduation? Or did you apply to a brand new company?

Collapse
 
jamesdengel profile image
James dengel

I applied directly to the company, they were looking to take on new graduats. They had an established intern format by the time I left (some 8 years later after working across products and working up to a team lead.) and then generally employed the interns but when I joined this program was in it's infancy.

I was very lucky (or they saw something they liked).

Thread Thread
 
madza profile image
Madza • Edited

Awesome to hear πŸ‘πŸ˜‰

Collapse
 
nirberko profile image
Nir Berko

I started programming at a very little age, about 12 years old, I'm not sure if I can count all of those years as experience but for sure it's helped me to get my first job 3 years ago. today I have about 3 years of work experience, in the fintech and cyber fields

Collapse
 
raguay profile image
Richard Guay

I graduated with a degree in Electrical Engineering and landed my first job designing a 53 parallel processor system for processing music call the Muse Console. My only experience was that I designed my own computer in 8th grade and wrote the operating system (as a TIL) in 9th grade and blew it up in college (I didn’t understand the need for a voltage regulator on my power supply. I found out quickly).

Collapse
 
rvxlab profile image
RVxLab

1.5 years of "experience". I got my first part-time dev job through my internship.

During my 2nd year of college I was required to do 20 weeks of internship. At the end of my internship my supervisor offered me a 0-hour contract as he was so impressed by my progress. During this time I did HTML, CSS, PHP and jQuery (this was 2012-2014)

By the time I left that company to do exams I had over 1 year of experience in the field.

Collapse
 
dmahely profile image
Doaa Mahely

What's a 0-hour contract?

Collapse
 
rvxlab profile image
RVxLab

A 0-hour contract in the Netherlands is a type of contract where you're not given any set hours and you can just come in and work whenever you want, can or are called for it and you get paid for the hours you did work.

Thread Thread
 
dmahely profile image
Doaa Mahely

Very nice!

Collapse
 
jordanrios94 profile image
Jordan Rios

In London there are schemes for young people called Apprenticeships that help them get into the industry without the headache of technical experience but with the education needed to talk into an interview and later on education through work. So my level at 19 years old I had was maths, english, 2 weeks of codecademy (HTML, CS, JS), and an ecommerce project (PHP, JS, HTML, CSS, MySQL) I built with treehouse that I showed off in interviews with my computer. It took me 4 interviews to get my technique right for expressing desire, confidence, and problem solving.

Collapse
 
howtocode_io profile image
Robert Guss

I had 5 months experience of teaching myself and doing some freelance work online.

Collapse
 
inzagio profile image
Trym • Edited

I started with an internship (no grad here) and transitioned into a one year contract, before finally getting a permanent position. I only had a few months of c# experience and javascript prior to the internship.
Ive been at the company since 2018 now, and still love it. I have also recently more or less been appointed with most cloud and devops related tasks within my department (12 ish devs)

Collapse
 
matjones profile image
Mat Jones

Directly after graduating from college. I had been an intern there for around a year before getting a full time position, and had also helped launch a tech startup while I was still in college, which was amazing experience.

Collapse
 
buriti97 profile image
buridev

one year

Collapse
 
egilhuber profile image
erica (she/her)

A whole lot of none! I was lucky and got recruited pretty fresh out of bootcamp. The company that hired me was pretty good at being aware of my skill level and gave me tasks that were challenging, but I could handle. The seniors were also great with helping me out if I didn't understand something or got stuck. My love of C# did give me a good leg up - it's much easier working with a language you know than lots of brand new stuff!

Collapse
 
shaneecdavis profile image
Shane Davis

None - I have no College degree what so ever. I was in law enforcement for 10 years and wanted career change. I went to Fullstack Academy and got a job as a software engineer shortly after completing that boot camp.

Collapse
 
dmahely profile image
Doaa Mahely

I had a software engineering degree, two Udacity Nanodegrees, two mobile apps and a number of smaller web projects under my belt, and still had a rough time landing a job! I'd say my 'experience' was a little more than a year when I got my first job.

Collapse
 
_hs_ profile image
HS

0, and I think I was quite OK. To be fair need to mention it was a guy hiring an extra dev to help out on PHP project with sys administration (it was not DevOps then). Built vanilla JS HTML and CSS with PHP scripts automating some sync processes and admin dashboard. Next job was real after about a year with previous job.