vote up 4 vote down star
1

I'm just starting my career as a Software Developer. Any of you experienced guys wanna offer me any piece of advice?

Edited: At present I'm working on a WPF project and using C# to code. I chose to work on .net technology and seek to build up my career around it. Although I would be flexible about it.

I guess what I was looking for was may be some experiences from the veteran lots at SO, and this may not be the appropriate place to ask such questions, but it definitely is the place for finding the right guys!

flag
5  
I don't think your question is quite specific enough for this site. – driis Sep 23 at 17:56
May be add some more details regarding my current profile would make it more specific? – Trainee4Life Sep 23 at 18:06
No. You need a specific question. Just asking for advice isn't appropriate for Stack Overflow. – Thomas Owens Sep 23 at 18:12
If you say in what languages are you concentrating your efforts, some people would agree to reopen your question and answer with some book/blogs indications. – Jader Dias Sep 23 at 18:14
OK.. I'll try and be more objective the next time I ask something. – Trainee4Life Sep 23 at 18:27
show 1 more comment

closed as not a real question by Thomas Owens, geowa4, Russ Cam, Robert C. Cartaino, Firas Sep 23 at 18:09

6 Answers

vote up 6 vote down check

At the beginning/early part of your career, certifications matter more. If you can prove that you can code in Java or PHP or whatever, you can gain entry to entry level positions. Getting a certification at this stage will reduce the risk to a person who is considering hiring you, because they have no other way of evaluating your resume.

Later, your reputation becomes more important. You want to become known as an expert in... something. Lets say you like Linux... being "the" expert in Linux is hard... lots of competition for that title... instead become the expert on real-time Linux in toy race cars. That's a much smaller pond, and it is easier to be a big fish there. Determine what your interests are early and develop a reputation in that sub-industry. If I am starting a game developing company then I want a game developer, not a generic developer. If I am starting a finance software company, then I want a finance software developer, not a generic developer. Certifications become less important at this stage, when people are much more interested in your domain knowledge and reputation.

Who you know matters more than what you know. But if the people who know you do not respect you, it does not really help. Often, your co-worker today will be your boss at a different company ten years from now. You want to come across as professional and diligent. The business community has great difficulty determining who good programmers are, they will use things like "shows up on time" or "does not smell badly" as a proxy for "proficient in php". Just recognize that it works that way and act accordingly.

Your plan should not just be to get a job, but to find a job in which you will eventually become valuable. Avoid work where you are permanently expendable. And you really should change your nickname ;)

HTH, -FT

link|flag
Certifications matter? really? thanks for the advice =) – Jader Dias Sep 23 at 18:18
1  
clarified that my point was that certifications matter alot early on... but less later... – ftrotter Sep 23 at 18:27
vote up 2 vote down

Be prepared to keep on wanting to learn!

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Don't lose your life in the internets ;)

link|flag
Actually as the internet is our main source of information, and we need to keep learning, it's better to invest a bunch of time on it, which some people will see as lost time. – Jader Dias Sep 23 at 18:40
i don't see it as lost time. actually, i'm investing much time on it. but there is a line between investing and losing the time, and it's very easy to outstep this line – valya Sep 23 at 19:14
vote up 13 vote down

Change your nick

link|flag
:-).. actually there's something about it.. no matter what title one holds.. we all need to keep learning.. – Trainee4Life Sep 23 at 18:11
3  
For historical record his nickname was "Trainee4Life" at the moment he posted this question. – Jader Dias Sep 23 at 18:16
vote up 2 vote down

Stay connected to the programming world via blogs, podcasts, conferences (look for local, cheap ones if you can't get to the bigger, pricier ones), get involved in your local user group, lurk on such sites as this one and, of course, ask questions. Also, don't be afraid to answer questions, here or elsewhere. If you're wrong, oh well. Make it a learning experience.

Last, if you have time, start a blog of your own. Don't worry about quantity of posts. Focus instead on quality and usefulness. Writing blog posts can be a good learning experience unto itself.

OK, now that was all personal development. As far as professional/in-the-workplace sorts of things to do, some of the above applies: ask questions. Managers like to see you're engaged in the work. Question the norm, explore new ways of doing things, and don't follow the herd.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Be modest, patient and work on your soft skills.
You will most likely always be part of a team during your career.
Being able to communicate clearly and effectively your ideas will be instrumental to your success as developer.

link|flag

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.