active questions tagged jobhunting - Stack Overflow most recent 30 from stackoverflow.com 2009-12-01T10:56:41Z http://stackoverflow.com/feeds/tag/jobhunting http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdf http://stackoverflow.com/questions/582890/what-do-you-think-about-it-recruitment-and-staffing-firms 1 What do you think about IT recruitment and staffing firms? mmattax 2009-02-24T18:15:36Z 2009-12-01T00:10:53Z <p>what do you think about IT recruitment and staffing firms in the software engineering industry, is it hurting or helping our industry? If you search a career site for anything IT related nearly half of the results are staffing companies...what is your take on this?</p> <p>Personally, I feel like they are making software developers a commodity that they can "sell" to other businesses for their benefit. </p> <p>I'm curious to what others in the industry think...</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/522294/how-many-interviews-is-it-taking-you-to-get-a-job 5 How many interviews is it taking you to get a job? LuftMensch 2009-02-06T21:39:39Z 2009-11-17T18:38:33Z <p>I've received 100+ recruiter calls in the last month, had about 10 tel screens, 5 in-person interviews. Finally landed a short-term gig. This was in the Seattle market for C#/.Net. What has your experience been? </p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1731152/job-requirements-what-does-kernel-developer-really-mean 5 Job Requirements: What does "Kernel Developer" REALLY mean? Jim Dennis 2009-11-13T18:57:41Z 2009-11-13T19:21:24Z <p>I couple of months ago I was jobhunting. Since my resume is still out there I'm getting an average to two phone calls and four e-mailed messsages per day inquiring if I'm still on the market.</p> <p>Most of these are calling for Linux kernel developers. However I've found that the term seems to be over-used; or at least that it covers a somewhat more vague range of skill sets then one would expect of a requirement that sounds so specific.</p> <p>In my case I've written one device driver (a trivial little watchdog driver for a Quanta motherboard), occasionally helped with a few others (mostly MTD/flash ROM), done a few minor patches to <code>init.c</code> and wrangled lots and lots of patches from one tree into another.</p> <p>I don't consider myself to be a kernel developer.</p> <p>These days the vast majority of the recruiters who are calling me have just about zero technical acumen ... they are apparently doing simple key word searches and blindly calling anyone whose resume matches >n of their req's keys.</p> <p>However, it feels like the term: "kernel developer" (which in modern recruiting parlance seems to be synonymous with "Linux kernel developer") can mean any of the following:</p> <ul> <li>Someone whose primary job responsibilities would be to develop and maintain a set of kernel patches (probably out-of-tree) for some proprietary hardware, or specialized application. (Probably what most of us, as engineers would think the phrase would mean)</li> <li>Someone whose primary responsibilities would be focused on merging patches from the community and possibly other sources into an "in-house" or distribution-specific code base (which most of us would likely describe as a <em>configuration manager</em>)</li> <li>Someone who's going to develop new network protocols, new filesystems, new security features (or LSM modules), new instrumentation, etc. (Isn't the community already doing that all the time?)</li> <li>Someone who knows C <em>sans</em> C++ and the difference between a system call and a library function</li> <li>Someone who knows how to rebuild a kernel and change some settings</li> <li>Someone who knwos how to use the <code>sysctl</code> command</li> </ul> <p>So my questions:</p> <ul> <li>What does "kernel developer" really mean?</li> <li>How could we, as a community, promote a clear standard for what the term means?</li> <li>What would you consider the minimum requirements for putting "kernel developer" on your own resume?</li> </ul> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/857044/how-should-i-recruit-a-maintenance-programmer 6 How should I recruit a maintenance programmer? GH 2009-05-13T09:44:53Z 2009-11-04T07:04:43Z <p>Our software team is growing and we need to get some focus on developing new features rather than being distracted by supporting our existing customers. </p> <p>Most of the team would rather not talk with real customers, don't want to travel, and prefer to work on the new features. This leaves us very short of good programmers to maintain the product. We have tried various forms of rotas, scheduling bug fixes and multi-tasking, but these generally fail as we just don't have enough people.</p> <p>We do have 1 or 2 people who are happy to work on maintenance and support and are happy to travel to customer sites to get the job done. So:</p> <ul> <li>How do I recruit some more people like this?</li> <li>Do I need a specific job title? </li> <li>Would anyone apply for a maintenance programmer role? </li> <li>If I don't change the job title will I just get even more people applying who only want to work on new features, or who accept the job and then leave when they decide they want to chase the latest features?</li> <li>Is travelling the world to visit customers and solve their problems seen as a benefit of the role or something people would want to avoid?</li> </ul> <p>Any help or advice would be greatly appreciated. </p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/483573/what-to-do-with-a-bad-job-reference 11 What to do with a bad job reference? David 2009-01-27T14:25:30Z 2009-10-30T05:46:04Z <p>I worked for a company for 18 months as a full-time consultant developer doing R&amp;D and architecture design and the things I wrote for this company literally runs the company. I'm still good friends with most of the senior development staff but considered the anti-christ by the company owners. My crime, refusing to sign a non-compete agreement.</p> <p>Now maybe not so mysteriously while looking for new contracts and positions, all of them have followed the same pattern: "Wow your a perfect fit for what we're looking for, lets schedule an interview" then dead silence. It doesn't take a rocket scientist to know that something is scaring these potential employers away and since I haven't killed anyone lately my only thought is that I'm getting slammed when they call my prior employer.</p> <p>What the hell do I do? Do I tell potential employers my concerns, change my resume to not include the companies name ( losing a year and change of important milestones in my professional development) or start the ball rolling of hiring an reference PI and lawyer?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1457720/which-is-the-best-first-job-an-it-entrant-can-have 2 Which is the BEST first job an IT entrant can have? rboorgapally 2009-09-22T01:36:27Z 2009-10-29T13:14:01Z <p>Hi,</p> <p>This is to all the experienced IT professionals out there. I need some advice so that I can target the right job rather than look for some job. I am interested in enterprise software development in general. I have a masters degree in computer science. Like any other entry level IT aspirant, I am looking for good job growth, nice perks and also job security (which doesn't go away in recession :)). </p> <p>System and data base administrators earn well, but there seems to be less number of jobs. Web development pays less and is mostly outsourced. Enterprise architects are doing well. Are there good number of openings for system programmers? </p> <p>I think one obvious choice is to choose between a software development company and some company which has a IT department. My consultant cousin says that majority of the enterprises use software packages like SAP which have good demand. I think recession affects these guys more. But they seem to earn more. Which is the right job in an enterprise IT department?</p> <p>In short, what advice would you give to an entry level IT professional so that he can move up the ladder working with increasing pay till he retires at 60 ?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1634491/part-time-programming-job-does-it-exist 12 Part time programming job - does it exist? Kate 2009-10-28T00:22:56Z 2009-10-28T01:16:48Z <p>Is there such a thing as a 30 hour/week programming job? Well, I know there is, because I'm currently working at one. But it's a dead-end job, and I'm looking to move on. I had a recruiter almost hang up on me today when I told her that I'm looking for part-time work. Until I told her that, she was very interested in my resume; I do, after all, have some great experience.</p> <p>You want to know why I insist on part-time? It's simple - I have a small baby at home and a son in elementary school - and the after-school or after-babysitting arrangements a full-time position would mandate are just horrendous. I really enjoy programming and don't want to give it up. But I'm starting to wonder if I'm chasing after a dream or if there is such a thing as part-time work in this industry.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1625697/one-afternoon-to-do-networking-what-do-you-all-suggest 1 One afternoon to do networking, what do you all suggest? [closed] nbv4 2009-10-26T16:14:44Z 2009-10-26T16:33:35Z <p>My background: I have a 4 year college degree, but not in computer science. I graduated in 2006. I was one of those people who taught themselves BASIC when they were 10 and have always been into programming. For reasons I regret, I decided to take another path after I graduated from high school. I now find myself unemployed with a useless degree in an industry I absolutely hate. Back in 2007, while still working in the industry I now loathe, as a "get back into programming as a hobby" project, I started writing a webapp in PHP. One thing lead to another, and 2 years later and 5 or so complete rewrites later that same project in out in the wild, and has turned into a full blown 30,000LOC GPL project that hundreds of people use, and is quite popular. It has sort of become the OpenOffice to the proverbial MS Word but for the category of software mine does(which is very niche). I also have started one other webapp, which is not as popular, as well as a few Django reusable-apps. All in all I have about 90,000 lines of GPL code out there on GitHub and various other places that I welcome any employer to look over to see what I'm capable of.</p> <p>For the past few years I've been trying to get a job as a programmer, but I've been having no luck. I'm a linux person through and through, which I thought would help me, but in my area (central Ohio), <em>LITERALLY</em> 100% of all entry level jobs around here either require .NET. I'm in a position here that is the inverse of a lot of entry level people. I have absolutely zero academic qualification, but a buttload of real life stuff. </p> <p>So anyways, I'm going to be in New York City for a Friday, Saturday, then going back on Sunday. While I'm there I want to do as much as I can in terms of networking. Should I just open up a phone book and look for "software" or "computer job recruiter", then just go down the list and visit each one? Should I even try visiting places on Saturday and Sunday, or will they all mostly be closed?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1621813/getting-a-job-as-a-fresher 0 Getting a job as a fresher. [closed] JMSA 2009-10-25T19:27:19Z 2009-10-25T19:39:58Z <p>What are the top 5 (or more) programming(or programming language) skills should I acquire to find an entry level programming job quickly as a fresher?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/724174/where-are-all-these-entry-level-jobs-in-computer-science-that-i-keep-hearing-abou 20 Where are all these entry-level jobs in Computer Science that I keep hearing about? trout 2009-04-07T04:52:38Z 2009-10-23T02:23:04Z <p>I'm assuming I'm not the only one with this question:</p> <p>Every week or so I hear about some new Industry honcho talking about how nobody majors in Computer Science any more, and how there are many more positions available than there are grads to fill them, despite the economy.</p> <p>So where are these entry-level jobs that I keep hearing about but never find? Is this all a bunch of hooplah made up by CEO's so they have a bigger pool to choose from?</p> <p>I'd be happy with just about anything at this point: a government job, a small startup, a junior job at a large corporation... however, Craigslist and Monster just turn up a meager assortment of IT jobs that ask for 20+ buzz-words that no college student will ever pick up, as do the career sections of corporations' websites. </p> <p>What do other CS grads do? Move to Silicon Valley? Am I looking at the wrong websites? I had assumed that graduating with a CS/Math degree and a high GPA in a sizeable city would snag me a good job, but I can't even find any entry-level jobs to apply to. I go to a small college so there aren't really decent career fairs. (Also, I'm in the Twin Cities, if anyone knows about the scene here!) ;)</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1552415/working-for-free 3 Working for free truncate 2009-10-12T02:25:08Z 2009-10-12T21:18:10Z <p>Finances are making me take an extended period off of my college education. In my current state, I don't feel fully qualified to be employed by an iPhone software company. While I work on getting things back together, I'd like to try an work for a software company for free in my local area (I'm going to college out of state and have to move back as well). The economy has forced employers to be very picky about who they hire, if any at all. Since I'd like to continue refining my abilities, I was wondering on what the consensus is on working for free. It can't be considered an internship, as I would no longer be in school..., I guess an apprenticeship is more appropriate. </p> <p>Like I said, I don't think I'm qualified to be paid for my services, and I don't want to be. I just don't know how to ask, or if it's even appropriate to ask them to show me how to develop software in the real world. My thinking is that they would be willing to get some work done for free and if I prove myself, they could hire me. If not, there was no major loss. They get some free development, and lose a bit of time helping show me the ropes. I get either a job, or valuable experience that I need. The other alternative is that I try to work out things by myself on the iPhone platform, but that sounds terrifying. </p> <p>I appreciate any input the community has to offer.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/770841/how-important-is-phd-research-topic-to-getting-a-job 8 How important is PhD research topic to getting a job? thornate 2009-04-21T02:33:18Z 2009-10-12T17:59:20Z <p><em>EDIT: This has been closed and I realise that I may not have been specific enough with the original title. I ask two questions here: The general one (Does a PhD help get a job?) which has been asked elsewhere, and the specific one (Is it possible to get work outside of the specific research field?). Assume I've already decided going to do the phd. I'm just stressing about the research topic.</em></p> <p>Well, I'm one year out of university (Mechatronics engineering and Software Eng double bachelors), worked for a few months then got retrenched (yay economy!). It's looking less and less likely that I'll get a job worth having with the job market as it is, so I'm thinking about going back to uni to do a PhD. I figure that by the time I'm done, the job market will have improved and hopefully I'll have something on my resume that is more attractive than spending three years doing customer support for accounting software. </p> <p>So, my question is to people who've done PhD's. Would you say that they were worth the effort? How important is the research topic to future job-seeking success? The idea I have is a computer-sciencey/neural-networks/data-mining thing which I think is very interesting, but not a field I want to be in forever. My potential supervisor claims that employers don't care so much about the topic of the research but rather the peripheral skills that are developed through a PhD; time managment, self-restraint, planning and whatnot. </p> <p>How does this mesh with people's real world experience? I'd appreciate any advice before signing my life on the line for the next three years.</p> <p><hr /></p> <h3>See also:</h3> <blockquote> <ul> <li><a href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/52254/should-developers-go-to-grad-school">Should developers go to grad school?</a></li> <li><a href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/326159/best-reason-not-to-hire-a-phd">Best reason not to hire a PhD?</a></li> <li><a href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/717992/how-to-find-an-entry-level-job-after-you-already-have-a-graduate-degree">How to find an entry-level job after you already have a graduate degree?</a></li> </ul> </blockquote> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1190802/what-exactly-constitutes-a-working-knowledge-of-c 6 What exactly constitutes “a working knowledge of C++”? Brian Surowiec 2009-07-27T21:41:27Z 2009-10-07T11:01:12Z <p>I’ve seen job listings recently for positions I’d like to apply for, the problem though is that they usually have a working knowledge of c++ listed as a job requirement. The jobs are doing .NET/C# development for internal applications but their retail applications are all c++. I don’t have experience in c/c++ and am wondering what exactly a working knowledge should include so I can learn some of this before applying.</p> <p><strong>Update</strong></p> <p>Now that I'm reading the comments I realize I should have mentioned a bit more about the actual work. The main one I’m interested in does video games with the xbox 360 as their main platform so that should give an idea as to the version of c++ is being used (I’m guessing VC++ 8/9?). The position is, from what I can tell, internal apps along with data collection &amp; processing which I’m guessing is for game stats, match making etc. Some of the qualifications listed are:</p> <ul> <li>3+ years experience with c# &amp; sql server</li> <li>Experience in WCF or .Net web services</li> <li>Understanding of database performance and tuning</li> <li>Familiarity with Windows server platforms</li> <li>Working knowledge of C++</li> </ul> <p>By the sound of it the c++ requirement is probably more for reading existing code for integration then writing new code. Thanks for the great answers. It looks like I’ve got a lot of good reading ahead of me now.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1498054/too-much-coding-at-a-job-interview 5 Too much coding at a job interview Shawn 2009-09-30T13:16:58Z 2009-10-04T20:24:57Z <p>I am In a situation where for an interview I have been asked to code For half a day and create a web based gallery with tagging, search, uploading, rating and so on. I'm starting to worry that I can't possibly fulfill the requirements in the alloted time. Does this mean I'm not good enough or is it a test designed not to be beaten?</p> <p>Edit: after talking with the developers there I believe they are quite genuine and after seeing some of their work I do believe they are know what they are doing. I also don't believe they just want some free 4 hour gallery as I have seen some of the galleries they have made and they are impressive </p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1447282/does-applying-through-job-boards-like-indeed-com-simplyhired-com-or-dice-com-v-s 2 Does applying through Job boards like indeed.com, simplyhired.com or dice.com v/s applying at company's career website really help ? [closed] Rachel 2009-09-19T00:07:15Z 2009-10-04T15:37:45Z <p>Dear Stackoverflow Readers, </p> <p>I am writing this question to discuss what are the proper ways to find programming job of interest and my question is </p> <p>What is success rate of getting job by</p> <ol> <li>Applying to job boards like indeed.com, simplyhired.com or dice.com </li> <li>Applying directly to the career site of company</li> <li>Working with a recruiter to obtain full time opportunity. </li> <li>Doing Social Networking with Friends or LinkedIn. </li> </ol> <p>Please rate above 4 ways and suggest what other approach would you take while looking for Fulltime opportunities as a Programmer. </p> <p>Thank you very much for the useful information as it really helps. </p> <p>Thanks.</p> <p><strong>Note:</strong> This is important question from career/job hunting point of view and so I have voted to reopen it and we need 4 more votes to reopen it and so if you think that it is good question and would be useful to other fellow developer's who are currently in job market than I urge you to vote in favor of reopening it. </p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1474108/what-was-your-first-programming-job-like 6 What was your first programming job like? nbv4 2009-09-24T20:57:26Z 2009-09-30T23:47:26Z <p>When you landed your first job programming:</p> <p>1) Which language was it in? How well did you know that language? Did you know it well enough to write a book on it, or did you barely know how to do "hello world"? I imagine most people graduate from a CS program knowing one language pretty well, and a few other languages just kind of well. Is this correct? Was your first job using the language you knew best?</p> <p>2) What was your general level of understanding in relation to the kind of programming that job required? For instance if the job was working with GIS systems, how well did you know GIS stuff? Were you an expert, or did you not know diddly squat? If you hardly knew anything, did the company train you? Or did they expect you to know pretty much everything already when you joined?</p> <p>3) where were you located, and where was this first job of yours located? Did you, lets say, go to college in Colorado, live in Colorado at the time, but get your first job in Florida? If you did get your first entry level job in a way that required airline travel for the interview, did that company pay for your travel? What was it about you that made them select you and not some other entry-level applicant that was local?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1479684/what-position-to-take-in-applying-for-programming-jobs 0 What position to take in applying for programming jobs? [closed] Eric 2009-09-25T21:29:57Z 2009-09-25T21:44:58Z <p>I know many of you have had experience with this. For a software engineer/Sql developer who would like see what other jobs are out there should one speak to his current employer beforehand? I would think not to in case you don't get any job and you have to look at your current employer in the face every day knowing that he knows you aren't happy with your job. Are should you search for a job and not tell your current employer? But wouldn't they contact your current employer anyway to see if you are worth holding a position at their company?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1475558/how-to-stay-afloat-in-todays-job-market 2 How to stay afloat in today's job market? tsilb 2009-09-25T05:23:04Z 2009-09-25T19:22:39Z <p>How are people finding jobs in today's job market, where there are many applicants per position as opposed to years ago when it was the other way around?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/128062/how-to-find-remote-off-site-work 15 How to find remote, off-site work? jacko 2008-09-24T16:03:38Z 2009-09-19T18:24:39Z <p>I'm looking for ideas on how to find off-site work, preferably short-term and/or part-time. Completely remote access, other side of the world type stuff that I could do from my house for a bit of extra income. Places like rent-a-coder seem a little to low brow, with a lot of the winning bids being ridiculously undervalued (I imagine due to location of the winning tender). </p> <p>Does anyone know if other sites exist, or have other methods for finding such work?</p> <p>Edit: I've also found these questions which have lot of good links for freelance websites:</p> <p><a href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/25177/sites-for-getting-freelancer-jobs">Freelance job sites</a></p> <p><a href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/78396/finding-freelancecontract-coding-projects">Finding Freelance projects</a></p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1422191/leveraging-hobby-experience-to-get-a-job 9 Leveraging hobby experience to get a job Bernard 2009-09-14T15:13:07Z 2009-09-14T16:42:19Z <p>Like many other's I began programming at an early age. I started when I was 11 and I learned C when I was 14 (now 26). While most of what I did were games just to entertain myself I did everything from low level 2D graphics, and binary I/O, to interfacing with free API's, custom file systems, audio, 3D animations, OpenGL, web sites, etc. I worked on a wide variety of things trying to make various games. Because of this experience I have tested out of every college level C/C++ programming course I have ever been offered. In the classes I took, my classmates would need a week to do what I finished in class with an hour or two of work.</p> <p>I now have my degree now and I have 2 years of experience working full time as a web developer however I would like to get back into C++ and hopefully do simulation programming. Unfortunately I have yet to do C++ as a job, I have only done it for testing out of classes and doing my senior project in college. So most of what I have in C++ is still hobby experience and I don't know how to best convey that so that I don't end up stuck doing something too low level for me.</p> <p>Right now I see a job offer that requires 2 years of C++ experience, but I have at least 9 (I didn't do C++ everyday for the last 14 years). How do I convey my experience? How much is it truly worth? and How do I get it's full value?</p> <p>The best thing that I can think of is a demo and a portfolio, however that only comes into play after an interview has been secured. I used a portfolio to land my current job.</p> <p>All answers and advice are appreciated.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1419113/advice-for-a-student-planning-to-take-co-op 2 Advice for a student planning to take Co-Op John Skull 2009-09-13T23:20:59Z 2009-09-14T00:05:55Z <p>I've been studying programming at a local college for 1 year now and I also do a lot of studying at home. This semester, I just realized that I have more than enough credits to be able to apply to our <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cooperative%5Feducation" rel="nofollow">Co-Op</a> program.</p> <p>I have no idea what kind of job I'll possibly find or get while searching for one and since I'm trying to get experience and learn at the same time while getting paid, I am in no way going to be picky about the job.</p> <p>What I know right now is some basic VB.net, Java, C++, XHTML, and CSS. I have built small tools here and there that I personally use and I guess that's basically it. </p> <p>Can I get some advice on how I could be more marketable to employers? Are there particular concepts of programming or IT as whole that I need to be familiar of before applying for one?</p> <p>Thank you! </p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1387814/java-vs-net-job-hunting -1 Java vs Net - job hunting [closed] Avi Y 2009-09-07T06:26:51Z 2009-09-07T09:41:06Z <p>Hi, I am a long time java developer. I love the language and I love its philosophy. I read java magazines almost daily.</p> <p>Every day there is a new java technology out there. It is very hard to keep track on all of them and its impossible to have experience in all or even most of them. So at this point you are probably wandering: so what?! pick you favorite technology and go for it, so what if there are many other technologies,what is the problem?!</p> <p>Well let me explain to you the problem, recently I was looking for a job after the last start-up company I have worked for went out of business and I can say about myself that I am a pretty talented developer. Every interview that I went there was always a technology they were using that I didn't have the chance to work with and let remind you that in these days the market is full of software developers. The answer was always the same: we know that you are very talented and experienced developer but we are looking for a person who knows struts and not JSF or a person who knows spring and not EJB and we work with inteliJ and not with Eclipse.</p> <p>I mean, I really don't have a problem learning new stuff, I even like it. But still when the work places have a lot of developers to choose from they will probably prefer a developer which knows exactly the technology they work with.</p> <p>On the other hand, I have a few friends which are .Net developers (and let me tell you, they are not better than me if I may say so). But they didn't have the problem finding a job, and why? Because in .Net you don't have thousands of technologies. There is one big Dictator - Microsoft, and I have to say - it seems it has its advantages.</p> <p>My question is therefor, what do you think? Isn't it more useful to have one body which determines the standards?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/415075/have-recruitment-agencies-ever-held-back-your-career 5 Have recruitment agencies ever held back your career? Gary Willoughby 2009-01-06T00:53:59Z 2009-09-04T22:44:09Z <p>Over the last few months i have been looking to change career from graphic artist to web developer. I used to be a senior web developer during the dot com boom, overseeing a few juniors but decided to follow graphics a little more and left software behind as a career.</p> <p>Now it seems looking for a new career in web development, i need 'n' amount of years of commercial experience. I realize things are a little different now from when i used to develop sites 8-9 years ago but i never stopped programming and have many projects i could use to show a potential employer as a portfolio. I consider myself a better programmer than i have ever been and i can analyze, design and develop projects with a much greater scope than ever before. I have also written a book on software development (although application/games development) which doesn't seem to stand me in good stead either.</p> <p>I have always used the standard web dev tools (PHP, MySQL, Python, Javascript, X/HTML, etc) i've even made sure i have experience using the latest frameworks and approaches such as jQuery and Ajax, etc and have lots of beautiful sites coded from scratch by hand (using only a text editor) that validate correctly to w3c standards.</p> <p>When i speak to recruiters they dismiss everthing and say i need the <em>commercial</em> experience. Is there any way i can combat this attitude? I will continue to pursue my choosen profession, but i would be grateful of any advice.</p> <p>After 5 months of looking to join the software development industry i have had only one interview. It went well and i was offered the job there and then, but declined gracefully because of a lot of travel which i didn't realize was part of the job.</p> <p>How can i get more interviews? Do i need to start putting my foot down with the recruitment agencies and demanding they at least give me the benfit of the doubt? Would this even get me anywhere? or have the opposite effect?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1223117/what-should-go-on-a-resume-for-a-software-developer-still-in-college-looking-for 5 What should go on a resume for a software developer still in college looking for a job after graduation? Daniel A. White 2009-08-03T15:52:58Z 2009-09-03T17:46:53Z <p>What are some things that should be on a software developers resume? I'll be graduating in December and I am starting to look for jobs now and I wonder how I can beef up the standard resume.</p> <p>Here is what I have so far (and in this order).</p> <ul> <li>Name</li> <li>Contact information</li> <li>Objective</li> <li>Education</li> <li>Relevant experience</li> <li>Technical skills <ul> <li>Programming Languages</li> <li>Concepts</li> <li>Frameworks</li> <li>Software</li> </ul></li> <li>Other experience</li> <li>Interests and hobbies</li> <li>"References are available upon request"</li> </ul> <p>Two other things.</p> <p>For my email address contact - I have Gmail and they have that daniel+something@... should I include that +something to make it easy to filter and not get junked?</p> <p>What about length? I know 1 page is standard but should I include more if I'm posting to a site like Dice?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/432066/max-pages-for-a-software-engineers-resume 17 Max pages for a Software Engineer's resume? matt_dev 2009-01-11T01:00:11Z 2009-09-03T17:42:50Z <p>I opened up my CV earlier today for a brush up and noticed that it had crept into the four page realm. Granted, I've been an engineer for over 10 years now and I've moved state-to-state 3 times so I do have a lot of baggage. How-ever, being in the position of hiring myself a couple time during my career I've always kind of raised an eyebrow to resumes which are that long. It's never kept me from actually reading them, but there's definitely a little bias set from the start of reading.</p> <p>Couldn't find many other good threads on this topic as it pertains to a programmer's resume. Here's an so-so <a href="http://forums.whirlpool.net.au/forum-replies-archive.cfm/1107260.html" rel="nofollow">thread</a>...</p> <p>What do you guys think is the max?</p> <p>If less then four, anyone have any good tips on trimming it down?</p> <p>-Matt</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1345813/what-is-most-valuable-certificates-to-achieve 1 What is most valuable certificates to achieve faya 2009-08-28T08:58:00Z 2009-09-03T17:33:12Z <p>Hello,</p> <p>I have seen many software developers cv's and talked to people who arrange interviews about which certificates are most valuable and give great advantage over other candidates on the job, but none of there answers were the same. So which certificates are best to pass? Which ones will really stand you up from the gray candidate mass? </p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/290115/how-did-you-land-your-work-from-home-development-job 6 How did you land your work-from-home development job? spoulson 2008-11-14T13:42:04Z 2009-08-27T19:11:58Z <p>Jobs offering developers the flexibility to work from home are rarely published on job sites. So how is it that you landed your work-from-home gig? Is it worth it?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1339150/any-good-australian-specific-programming-job-boards 5 Any good Australian-specific programming job boards? [closed] Chris 2009-08-27T06:15:41Z 2009-08-27T06:25:54Z <p>Hi, Are there any good Australian-specific programming job boards that anyone knows of?</p> <p>I don't mean the big ones eg seek or careerone, since they're jammed full of recruiters' fake jobs that are only intended to get you on their books (as an aside, <em>why do they do that?</em>)</p> <p>I mean, like those small job sites that have real jobs from good employers for whom developers are key and valued to their business.</p> <p>Good examples are the SO job site (jobs.stackoverflow.com) or the 37signals one (jobs.37signals.com) <em>BUT</em> these only seem to have American or UK jobs.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/584441/things-to-consider-before-applying-or-signing-an-offer 5 Things to consider before applying or signing an offer bLee 2009-02-25T01:48:52Z 2009-08-27T00:28:56Z <p>When you apply for companies, what is on your checklist before you actually send them an application/resume/cover letter?</p> <p>I know that we can all go see if the company is on Fortune 500 or any other ranks, but those ranking system cannot tell me too much. </p> <p>I sometimes get good vibes when I visit companies, but that also does not tell me too much about the company until I actually work there for few months.</p> <p>I'm just wondering how other people judge some companies as "good" or "bad" to apply for. Or, I want to know things that people do to research a company. </p> <p>Additionally, when you get multiple offers, how do you decide which one to accept?</p> <p><strong>Edit</strong> The main reason I ask these questions is because as a student who is looking forward to graduation and going through the process of job hunting, interviews, and signing offers, I believe this is something very crucial for students. I've actually asked many students the same questions, but the answers did not convince me. Hence, I thought it would be really great to ask the Stackoverflow community because people here are full of experiences and probably gone through the process multiple times.</p> <p>Answers I get from students are...</p> <p>salary, location, project, potential to growth, health benefits, past experiences (through internship), and industry (such as wireless technology, web services, firmwares, etc.)</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/48618/job-hopping-etiquette 12 Job hopping etiquette Paul Tomblin 2008-09-07T17:56:24Z 2009-08-24T17:37:25Z <p>I need to get out of a bad situation at my current work - I like the work, but they've been jerking me around with contract extensions coming at the last minute. I've been offered a job at a different company that doesn't look as interesting, but it's a chance to learn a few technologies I was interested in learning. It's "6 months contract to permanent" - does that mean that if I decide it's hopelessly boring and quit after the 6 month contract period that it won't reflect too badly on me and ruin my reputation in the town? What if I quit earlier than that?</p> <p><strong>Edit</strong> I should mention that I don't think there will be one right answer, so rather than accepting one answer, I'm going to vote up the good ones.</p>