How to Land a 100K/yr Tech Job - 10 Strategies

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  • Опубліковано 1 тра 2024
  • Do you want to land a high-paying tech job writing code? Working for a great company requires more than just programming skills. Let’s explore 10 proven strategies that make your personal brand more appealing to employers, especially as as a self-taught developer.
    #tech #jobs #learntocode
    🔗 Resources
    Follow me on Twitter / fireship_dev
    Connect with Jeff Delaney on LinkedIn / jeff-delaney
    Great Resignation www.inc.com/jessica-stillman/...
    Check out @DorianDevelops story • How long does it take ...
    Get tips from @DThompsonDev • "Why should we hire yo...
    📚 Chapters
    00:00 Working in Tech
    00:49 Tech Jobs Outlook 2022
    01:27 1. Strong Mindset
    02:47 2. Location Matters
    03:33 3. Master the Twitter Game
    04:52 4. Connect on LinkedIn
    05:27 5. Git going on GitHub
    06:30 6. Build One Epic Thing
    07:15 7. Build in Public
    08:20 8. IRL Networking
    09:14 9. Get a Mentor
    09:50 10. Become a Good Fit
    🔥 Get More Content - Upgrade to PRO
    Upgrade to Fireship PRO at fireship.io/pro
    Use code lORhwXd2 for 25% off your first payment.
    🎨 My Editor Settings
    - Atom One Dark
    - vscode-icons
    - Fira Code Font
    🔖 Topics Covered
    - How to get a tech job
    - What tech hiring managers look for
    - Find a coding job in 2022
    - Tips for junior programmer job seekers
    - What is the great resignation?
    - What is the outlook for tech jobs in the future?
    - How to get hired as a self-taught developer?
  • Наука та технологія

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,6 тис.

  • @Fireship
    @Fireship  2 роки тому +688

    If you're into memes and shitposts follow me on twitter twitter.com/fireship_dev

    • @masternobody1896
      @masternobody1896 2 роки тому +14

      thanks now i can get a job at google

    • @devstuff2576
      @devstuff2576 2 роки тому +2

      I am convinced, You are a mind reader. I think it and bam, you make a video about it.

    • @postingbmwm3
      @postingbmwm3 2 роки тому

      Why do you change the tone of your voice when switching to your “outro”?

    • @dreamerLevel
      @dreamerLevel 2 роки тому +2

      tech twitter == average web developer.
      even if i had 10 billion $, a tech twitter guy would have made me feel like i had achieved nothing.

    • @theabhayprajapati
      @theabhayprajapati 2 роки тому

      litterly he sad that : 'bob want stare the computer screen hole , and googling who to run code ."

  • @DorianDevelops
    @DorianDevelops 2 роки тому +6624

    It's hard to explain how awesome it feels when a UA-camr that you think highly of gives you a shout out in one of their videos!

    • @Ataraxia_Atom
      @Ataraxia_Atom 2 роки тому +69

      Hell yeah buddy you deserve it

    • @business_central
      @business_central 2 роки тому +20

      Well deserved man! Was about to jump to your channel to congratulate u!

    • @diegazo5556
      @diegazo5556 2 роки тому +5

      You rock Dorian. And fireship is god :P

    • @DriveandThrive
      @DriveandThrive 2 роки тому +6

      Both of you are my favorite tech youtubers so kind of cool.

    • @jamalsheriff1928
      @jamalsheriff1928 2 роки тому +4

      Congratz man !!!!!! i love ur video i was so happy that you got a shout out

  • @beaker8111
    @beaker8111 Рік тому +1135

    I landed my first dev job from a company that originally rejected me. When I responded that I appreciated the time they spent interviewing me and asked what I could do to be a better candidate when I reapplied, they changed their mind and asked me to interview.

    • @N0Xa880iUL
      @N0Xa880iUL Рік тому +228

      Guilt tripped haha

    • @benjamindavis2475
      @benjamindavis2475 Рік тому +13

      Good job

    • @lonewolf3706
      @lonewolf3706 Рік тому +208

      This exact same thing happened to me just 3 weeks ago. There was this company that rejected me for not picking up my phone when they called.
      I responded to their rejection email by thanking them and all kinds of sweet talk. Next thing you know they reverted their decision.
      At the end of the day I had to reject them cuz I landed another job right after but you guys get the idea. Try to always be kind and respectful

    • @fhudufin
      @fhudufin Рік тому +229

      @@lonewolf3706 imagine rejecting someone and then you take them back and they reject YOU

    • @andrew3606
      @andrew3606 Рік тому +87

      @@fhudufin Thats what you get for rejecting someone for missing a phone call

  • @bobthemagicmoose
    @bobthemagicmoose 2 роки тому +2434

    One major tip that's extremely important and doesn't just apply to tech: replace cynicism with optimism. I bombed a ton of interviews trying to show how smart or "real" I was with some thick cynicism... about competitors, former work environments, etc. But people don't want that, and if they do, you likely won't want to with with them. Find optimistic perspectives on everything. Don't lie, just change your attitude, and if you don't have something nice to say then give a way to pivot the discussion to something positive. This isn't just about interviewing... it's about your entire modus operandi.

    • @bobthemagicmoose
      @bobthemagicmoose 2 роки тому +111

      Also, after bombing an interview I reached out to the interviewers and said "hey, I'm new at this, can you offer suggestions about how I can improve my skills?" And then practice other ways you would talk about xyz.

    • @MiguelAngel-fw4sk
      @MiguelAngel-fw4sk 2 роки тому +59

      Your pfp really fits your message.

    • @sarahjeannexd
      @sarahjeannexd 2 роки тому +87

      I always directly ask in an interview "What concerns do you have about me or my experience?" It's a terrifying question, but it has always helped me.

    • @hvr8463
      @hvr8463 2 роки тому +16

      Good point. Its not always about nailing the coding challenges, but also being a personality that can fit in the possible new work environment. If you can say negative things about your current and previous working places, you can say the same of your future working places.

    • @shady4tv
      @shady4tv 2 роки тому +15

      This is such good advice but I will say... easier said than done. It's very hard to have a positive viewpoint when you've had nothing but soul crushing rejections saying you are not good enough or smart enough. But you just need to chin-up and power through it... being positive and confident is a huge attitude employers want to see. It sounds corny sometimes but it's sooooo true. You need to train your thinking to see the positive in EVERY negative.

  • @christoferberruzchungata2722
    @christoferberruzchungata2722 2 роки тому +808

    Getting a job in tech can be a soul crushing experience. Rejection after rejection, you have to keep going, keep practicing, and getting better. It took me 4 months to land an internship that eventually became a full time position, and those were the 4 months that I doubted what I was doing, whether this was the right profession, and whether I was smart enough. So yeah, it is not rainbows and unicorns, but you have to push through all of that. Best of luck in your journey getting a job in tech!

    • @N3c777
      @N3c777 2 роки тому +6

      Did you have a degree in computer science when you were applying?

    • @ahbarahad3203
      @ahbarahad3203 2 роки тому +29

      Just 4 months ? That's rookie numbers, your patience wasn't really tested

    • @christoferberruzchungata2722
      @christoferberruzchungata2722 2 роки тому +3

      @@N3c777 Yes, I did

    • @christoferberruzchungata2722
      @christoferberruzchungata2722 2 роки тому +11

      @@ahbarahad3203 lol! If there’s is a handbook that shows how many months you need to have your patience “tested” send it my way 🤣

    • @gamingwithasif6563
      @gamingwithasif6563 Рік тому +1

      @@christoferberruzchungata2722 bro hows it going and how much u making now?

  • @nodemodules
    @nodemodules 2 роки тому +438

    Just bombed a tech interview two hours ago. This gives me hope.

  • @cjezinne
    @cjezinne 2 роки тому +76

    Im one of those 6 fig engineers. My advice to college students. Your internships are more important than your grades. Your goal should be getting top tier internship. I would sneak into bigger schools career fairs just to talk to recruiters.

  • @monawoka97
    @monawoka97 2 роки тому +792

    As an anecdote for how hard it can be to break into the industry - I got a 4 year CS degree on a full ride scholarship. Studied my ass off and constantly worked on side projects. Did multiple internships. Post graduation I couldn't find any job for multiple months. When I finally did my starting salary was 40k. Thankfully I'm now at a company I really like making around 120k. But holy hell is it hard to start out in this industry. Even with arguably perfect commitment, planning, and execution it's still exceptionally easy to find yourself at the tail end of a degree with few promising job prospects. There is a lot of competition. Do not fuck around.

    • @nicolasa.bermellferrer8025
      @nicolasa.bermellferrer8025 2 роки тому +2

      Any tips?

    • @monawoka97
      @monawoka97 2 роки тому +174

      @@nicolasa.bermellferrer8025 I would say do everything I already talked about above. Couple things I would probably do different in hindsight - quality over quantity in side projects. Interviewers will probably only look at 1-2 side projects anyways so it doesn't matter if you have 15 mediocre ones. Try to get just a couple really high quality ones. Internships are very useful. Make sure you're developing connections during your internship for later referrals and references. The coding interview game is stupid but it's important so make sure you are practicing programming challenges, data structures, and algorithms regularly during your education. It will pay off big time. Lastly I would say specialize. The Industry is big and there are a lot of jobs and languages and projects. Think about where you want to work (web dev, games, embedded systems, etc...) And make sure your side projects and internships align with that vision. Above all stay persistent. It's definitely a marathon and not a race. It may not feel like it but all your hard work builds on itself and enabled the next step. You are building something that takes a long time to make. Stay committed. Stay focused. Keep pushing. You got this.

    • @salasyk8708
      @salasyk8708 2 роки тому +9

      @@nicolasa.bermellferrer8025 don't go to college and waste a lot of your time only to get a big college debt, and a sucky job when you have a degree around. Get a better job youd still enjoy just as much.

    • @georgek7108
      @georgek7108 2 роки тому +6

      If I could superlike that comment, I would!
      It took me years to start getting paid well in this industry. Finished my Bachelor's, my Master's, built a decent GitHub repo and it is nearly impossible to change from what I do as a programmer right now to mobile Development.
      I'm almost out of options, considering a blood sacrifice or sth, idk

    • @universecode1101
      @universecode1101 Рік тому

      wow this is powerful

  • @harshulgaba9145
    @harshulgaba9145 2 місяці тому +12

    Bro predicted it ☠️

  • @DThompsonDev
    @DThompsonDev 2 роки тому +190

    Whoa! I am very grateful that I have said something that you found valuable enough to share and tag me in! I genuinely appreciate it!

    • @EddyVinck
      @EddyVinck 2 роки тому +7

      Keep it up Danny! 🔥

  • @Pogibakayo
    @Pogibakayo 2 роки тому +93

    I started watching your videos years ago while at a very underpaid part time web developer job. After grinding in a similar fashion to what you’ve describe in the video, I’m now at a much better job. I think it’s more than just the skills you teach. I think it’s also the pop tech culture references that makes it so fun and effective.

  • @jorgehernandez2938
    @jorgehernandez2938 2 роки тому +719

    I literally laughed out loud multiple times watching this. Thanks for giving a realistic point of view. There are too many rainbows and unicorn stories out there. It is going to take grit and perseverance. Side note (it took me 8mos to get my first tech job)

    • @mistah_mojo
      @mistah_mojo 2 роки тому +30

      8 months, that's it? that's nothing. I'm on year 2

    • @thewisetree2292
      @thewisetree2292 2 роки тому +14

      8 monthss?? Howww, just fuckingg how tell me. i m dying im the poverty.

    • @paaao
      @paaao 2 роки тому +5

      It's pretty funny that all these companies are in desperate need of tech talent, and the simple solution is to make tech a trade instead of relying on the inept culture of universities to turn out people who know how to do anything except memorize shit for tests.

    • @ade8890
      @ade8890 2 роки тому +28

      @@paaao Spoken like somebody who's never been at a university haha.
      You can't "memorize a compiler" for your compiler class. And you certainly can't memorize random discrete math problems, and hope you get literally the same exact problem on the mid terms. What you're saying might be true for some humanity/diversity class, but it certainly has never been true for STEM.
      I've seen suckers try to cram hundreds of equations on a notes sheet for physics, and still get f'd. Versus just knowing the basics, and deriving the solution (which is typically the pattern for all STEM degrees).

    • @ashiksaleem360
      @ashiksaleem360 2 роки тому +1

      @@ade8890 True to the core. Me being stuck at discrete computational structures for months now. cant figure out shit.

  • @tropicaljupiter
    @tropicaljupiter 2 роки тому +58

    "Learn from someone who wants you make you big" thanks for these words of wisdom

  • @UNKNWN96
    @UNKNWN96 Рік тому +182

    I've been on and off learning how to program for about a year or so now, I was lucky to get two mentors who are senior level backend and fullstack devs and they have really helped me a TON. I feel like by biggest enemies for me are consistency and imposter syndrome. I feel amazing when I build something that can work but feel like an absolute dog when I can't wrap my head around a concept in a timely fashion. It's really a journey that I am enjoying because it's helping me to become a stronger person. Learning how to persevere, stay motivated, adapt, etc. are all things I'm seeing myself getting better at.

    • @titantill4975
      @titantill4975 Рік тому +7

      Yeah, imposter syndrome sucks! Just continue to make things and get honest feedback from your seniors; I know it's lame to say validation from others helps, but it does.

    • @God-sz4pf
      @God-sz4pf Рік тому +1

      just one question
      how did you get to know these two mentors ...was it something someone else can try or did you know them personally beforehand

    • @vaishnavipatil2441
      @vaishnavipatil2441 7 місяців тому

      Hii,can we connect?

  • @bobDotJS
    @bobDotJS 2 роки тому +334

    My name is Bob, I owned a collection agency for 10 years. Years. I picked up software as a hobby and after about 2 years of taking it seriously, I landed myself a six-figure position as a software engineer making more than double my average salary I made when I had 15 employees.
    I'm a 2x college dropout and I live for software development these days. I'm happier than I've ever been doing this for work and I'm competent in at least a half dozen programming languages.
    The moral of the story, if you are passionate about software development, if you're a good self-teacher, you could be employed, doing what you love and making more than you ever thought you would in a very short period of time.
    Now I'm the guy who hires developers for my company.
    If you are passionate about software but working in another industry, just know that it's VERY doable to learn everything you need to know to work as a developer in under one year if you take it very seriously

    • @benjaminchipinde8274
      @benjaminchipinde8274 2 роки тому +5

      WORD!!

    • @RealisiticEdgeMod
      @RealisiticEdgeMod 2 роки тому

      Coding is by far the most common skill on the planet. Information techis by far the most competitive industry in the world. Only an imbecile believes you can make money with it.

    • @toppu10animes
      @toppu10animes 2 роки тому +4

      Facts, the same is happening too me and it already happened to my friend

    • @aa33366
      @aa33366 2 роки тому +4

      Which 6 languages you know?

    • @bobDotJS
      @bobDotJS 2 роки тому +10

      @@aa33366 JS/TS, C, Go, Bash, SQL, Python are all languages I'm comfortable with, I know Vue and React, of course HTML, CSS, JSX/TSX and then I know enough C++ and Rust to get by even if I've never used them professionally. I just don't like saying that I know a dozen languages because that's debatable depending on whether you'd consider me to "know C++" if I wouldn't put it on my resume.
      But I also like to think that I'm good at learning new languages. There's also Elixir and Elm. Elm sucks but elixir is cool.
      I know Deno but rarely use it and it's a runtime, not a language.
      Edit: totally forgot, I got my start with C#/.NET
      How about you?

  • @Vivek2062
    @Vivek2062 2 роки тому +5

    As Jeff mentioned in this video about mentoring, well I've been a Pro member at Fireship for 1+ year and since the day I joined their dev community (mostly slack) and asked any questions about my current development projects, many developers are out there in Fireship community which helps and genuinely gives you a roadmap on the problem you're stuck to, the point of this is that you've created such a wonderful community of developers and I'm glad to be a pert of it! and in a way you're my mentor! Cheers!

  • @RavMucha
    @RavMucha 2 роки тому +295

    I was rejected in +- 20 recruitments before landing my first dev job. Now I spend the day rejecting +- 5-7 job interview offers, usually get 1-2 offer letters monthly, more often than not I don't even remember why I got'em.
    My only strategy was to treat recruitment processes as a learning experience - learn everything U failed on the last time, eventually you'll have everything covered.

    • @DriveandThrive
      @DriveandThrive 2 роки тому +3

      Ironic. So hard to get the first job then you have to beat them off with a stick lol

    • @RavMucha
      @RavMucha 2 роки тому +16

      @@DriveandThrive yep, pretty much the case. 😅
      All's down hill once U get the seal of approval, changing your LinkedIn status to "Software Developer at ".

    • @joshuawalker7375
      @joshuawalker7375 Рік тому +1

      Did you have much of a presence on social media when you got your first dev job? If so, would you say that it had a significant impact?

    • @RavMucha
      @RavMucha Рік тому +18

      @@joshuawalker7375 not really, aside from stuffing my LinkedIn profile with everything I had about my programming skills and a bunch of basic portfolios (unless we count SoloLearn as social media, but that one's only for people that are actually learning to code). I did not do any Twitter "look at me, I'm a coder" campaigns or anything of the sort.
      Just a LinkedIn profile, CV, a ton of random online course completion certificates and a few websites to show were my weapons.

    • @joshuawalker7375
      @joshuawalker7375 Рік тому +4

      @@RavMucha Thank you for replying! I apreciate you taking time to help out the community.

  • @justin0613
    @justin0613 2 роки тому +36

    Just got my first job for 82k a year. Not 6 figures yet, but close 🔥

    • @josepablobermudez6283
      @josepablobermudez6283 2 роки тому

      Just a matter of time

    • @evols7028
      @evols7028 2 роки тому

      In what city ?

    • @justin0613
      @justin0613 2 роки тому +2

      @@evols7028 Dallas, TX

    • @antoruby
      @antoruby 2 роки тому +5

      82k as a first job?! This industry is spoiling the workforce...
      (insert my envy here as I had started way lower than that)

    • @josepablobermudez6283
      @josepablobermudez6283 2 роки тому

      @@antoruby and 82k is low compare to entry level jobs in the bay area, san francisco or NY

  • @allisonarnaud
    @allisonarnaud 2 роки тому +51

    Hey Fireship! not sure if you'll ever see this, but I've been watching your videos for a while now, and have learned so much from you as a novice developer. I recently got my first job as a software developer and I genuinely couldn't have done it without your content, you changed my life! thank you very much for what you do.

    • @joshuawalker7375
      @joshuawalker7375 Рік тому +1

      Did you have much of a presence on social media when you got your first dev job? If so, would you say that it had a significant impact?

  • @tyrellwellick5529
    @tyrellwellick5529 2 роки тому +4

    These strategies have been said before, but you've elaborated on each of them and explained how to use the strategies efficiently. Thank you so much!

  • @shaunliebenberg3332
    @shaunliebenberg3332 2 роки тому +3

    I absolutely love all of your videos! Even if it's a tech stack I'm not currently using it's always worth the time. Thank you for such quality content!!!

  • @liamneville3610
    @liamneville3610 2 роки тому +8

    I've been a fan of yours for years. Watched every video. You helped me land a job at a big tech company. This is by far the most impactful video you've made, far more valuable than most videos about any technology. Not to say any of those aren't valuable, but so so many devs don't know a lot of this.

    • @joshuawalker7375
      @joshuawalker7375 Рік тому

      Congratulations on landing a big one! I'm curious to know whether you had much of a social media presence at the time. If so, do you think that it made a significant difference?

  • @lordloneshadow7572
    @lordloneshadow7572 2 роки тому +1

    Both the information density and quality of this video are simply off the charts. Well done man.

  • @elpatotengu31
    @elpatotengu31 2 роки тому +1

    Hands down, you are one of my favorite youtubers in general, and sure the best for learning

  • @thisissyedbasim
    @thisissyedbasim 2 роки тому +35

    The quality of the video, the content it teaches and the overall production is really helpful, and cannot be appreciated in words!
    It’s 🔥
    Thank you Jeff

  • @chaitanyajharbadem-1740
    @chaitanyajharbadem-1740 9 місяців тому +3

    Sometime I think its easier to just start your own company rather that looking for a job

  • @MrBullterrier
    @MrBullterrier Рік тому +3

    This is awesome. The parts about networking and using social media were always a bit nebulous for me. Thank you for shedding some light onto the matter! 🙂

  • @Kevin_Zed
    @Kevin_Zed 2 роки тому +3

    So good, I needed something like this. Detailed but not over my head, thank you.

  • @RaviolistRavioli
    @RaviolistRavioli 2 роки тому +4

    This video is more valuable than gold, thank you Jeff!

  • @shiyason213
    @shiyason213 Рік тому +4

    0:12
    > For some reason, he wants to stare at a screen all day, googling error messages wondering why is code doesn’t work.
    You sum up our lives so eloquently!
    💯

  • @joewalker681
    @joewalker681 Рік тому

    Huge thanks to FireShip for this video; I stumbled upon this a few months ago and just recently landed my first job in tech, and I wouldn't be here without this video

  • @ray941644
    @ray941644 2 роки тому

    This is one of the best videos I've watched. Extremely helpful from freshers to experienced overall !

  • @nanotichorizon9644
    @nanotichorizon9644 2 роки тому +337

    Jeff! Love your videos man, Got the pro membership the other day. You're one of the best if not the best content producers for modern tech dude!

    • @Fireship
      @Fireship  2 роки тому +41

      Awesome to hear that, thank you for joining the team!

    • @hectorg362
      @hectorg362 2 роки тому +2

      What pro membership?

    • @nanotichorizon9644
      @nanotichorizon9644 2 роки тому +6

      @@hectorg362 In the bio of the video there's a link for a discount on your first month. It's truly worth it. One course on stripe and you can build a basic ecommerce app. There's literally no fluff or B's just straight into the topic with quick and precise breakdowns. Only downside is the courses are slightly out of date, but if you're a developer you should know how to update your packages api to the newer standard.
      The content is so dense and precise you'll have to rewatch the course a few times (One course can take a week to fully understand but that's equivalent to 4-5 months of research and development. So I consider each project a portfolio enhancer.). Honestly only three groups that come close to fireship are Flux, Sebastian Lague, and The Tech Train guy. If they all came together there would be an insane quality of content being produced across the engineering board.

    • @universecode1101
      @universecode1101 Рік тому +1

      Pro? Is it amazing like the videos?

    • @nanotichorizon9644
      @nanotichorizon9644 Рік тому +1

      @@universecode1101 I would say even better. Jeff goes deep on the tech and how to use it in a production grade app.

  • @shinmessiah
    @shinmessiah 2 роки тому +4

    Your content is gold Jeff, never change. Top tier memes are an added bonus.

  • @seaarg
    @seaarg 2 роки тому +1

    Jeff @Fireship, I have +25 years of experience coding. I've enjoyed this video as if I were just starting. Your channel is pure gold.

  • @saent_bass
    @saent_bass 2 роки тому +1

    I appreciate your positive views on people almost as much as I appreciate all the tips. ❤️

  • @edwardselirah4764
    @edwardselirah4764 8 місяців тому +6

    I started applying for remote FE dev beginning of 2023..I have been rejected till now.
    The rejection started from TA interview, then I worked on it.
    It moved to assessment test, then worked on it.
    Sometimes I get the email, "You passed the test but there are too many applicants so we could not go along with you"
    I have been able to passed the assessment stage to the technical interview stage
    I have not yet crossed this stage.
    I will keep working on it till I cross that as well.
    I am not giving up!
    Thanks for the video

    • @tima1301
      @tima1301 5 місяців тому

      how are things? Can you tell me if you've landed a tech job yet?

  • @ananthdev2388
    @ananthdev2388 2 роки тому +7

    bruh this guy has mindreading powers no cap, i was wondering how i could land a good paying job and this video drops. huge W

  • @ricardorompar
    @ricardorompar 2 місяці тому +1

    It's crazy how you made a video 2 years ago that speaks to me directly in the present moment. This video is gold. Let's make it happen!

  • @shahirabdullah5438
    @shahirabdullah5438 2 роки тому +1

    One of the most efficient and valuable youtube videos about tech jobs. Thank you so much.

  • @rayzecor
    @rayzecor 2 роки тому +20

    I have found that one of the most important things is to constantly be thinking about your next project. Make something interesting, not a to do app.
    That's what got me hired, I had a unique Laravel project that sparked my employer's interest

    • @maruisca
      @maruisca Рік тому

      But how could I find a project ?

    • @rayzecor
      @rayzecor Рік тому +2

      @@maruisca I'm sure that every now and again you've discovered something you wished existed. Make creating this thing your goal

  • @itilin
    @itilin 2 роки тому +1

    Great video man. Even though I already have experience in programming I found lots of useful. Thanks a lot!

  • @agha-mou
    @agha-mou 2 роки тому

    This video is awesome, and you won't realize how awesome it is until you watch it three times in a row! Great work!

  • @0tiii
    @0tiii 10 місяців тому +3

    its so weird seeing how 50k is considered a low wage in the US, or better the US wages in general seem absurdly high. I am a Full-Time Software Engineer out of Germany with ~4 years of professional experience and just landed a 65k job which is considered on the high end for my experience level.

  • @sandrinjoy
    @sandrinjoy 2 роки тому +5

    thanks for this. Filled with enough motivation to live in 2022. #stilllookingformyfirstjob .

  • @yonahgraphics
    @yonahgraphics 2 роки тому

    A lot of advice packaged in a single video. This is the best video I have watched in 2022.

  • @PlayWithMpe
    @PlayWithMpe 11 місяців тому +8

    "Over the long term I think tech is one of the most safest and best places you could probably work"- Fireship 2022
    Fireship 2023 - " Tech industry is dead"

  • @syllight9053
    @syllight9053 2 роки тому +4

    These tips are valuable more than gold! Thanks for giving this advice for free for the whole world to see!

  • @coachtroop
    @coachtroop 2 роки тому +3

    The sheer number of shout outs screams that this guy is a tech lead or ready to be one. When you hit that point of feeling successful in your own environment that you go out of your way to elevate others - it's a good sign you are capable of so much more than you are currently doing.

  • @syedsaad317
    @syedsaad317 2 роки тому +1

    Junior dev here about to complete one year in my company... But as a start of this journey i think i m gonna learn many things from u to work solo... Subscribed! Keep up the good work

  • @LMProduction
    @LMProduction 2 роки тому +2

    I don’t plan on going into the tech industry, yet this video makes me feel like I am already trying

  • @robcortex7420
    @robcortex7420 2 роки тому +22

    I'm not saying this to be cynical, nor am I saying it to sound like I'll never put in the work to become a web dev, but what this video shows me is a confirmation that getting a job in the tech industry is, like with most high-prestige, high-paying jobs, a popularity contest. I never liked popularity contests. They seem exhausting.
    Again, not being cynical, it's just I think my time would be better spent working and making money as a welder and focusing on other things in life for now, while still studying tech on the side in my free time. I mostly got into it to both compensate for dropping out of college and to desperately try and band wagon onto the digital nomad train to return to some friends abroad, but since then, my mentality about things and my view of the world and the horizon has broadened, and I've found other means of getting by.
    But, hey, cool, whatever. Who knows maybe I'll code and meme myself into a position by pure accident some day! I still do like coding and still love your videos!

    • @Fireship
      @Fireship  2 роки тому +11

      That's a fair point, but many career paths have similar popularity requirements. At the end of the day it's about showing employers that you are a good investment. Once you get a foot in the door, things become much easier.

    • @robcortex7420
      @robcortex7420 2 роки тому

      @@Fireship Yeah, I've learned that the hard way with some jobs. I guess it's just...Different with blue collar jobs? Or maybe my personality or where I'm at in life.
      I will continue getting my tech news and tips from you and will watch your -career- twitter with great interest.

    • @tomydurazno6243
      @tomydurazno6243 2 роки тому +3

      Thats to get the first job, but you are missing the key element and the only thing that really matters: your hability to code. If your programming skills are strong it gets way easier

  • @lukehero
    @lukehero 2 роки тому +92

    I'm totally self-taught and now work as a full-stack dev and very happy.
    I learnt from free content, then started building a project a month after a month of learning the fundemantals. After I had about 6 projects on my portfolio website I built I applied for some jobs and got hired pretty fast. I think it took me about 9 months from starting to getting a job. I learnt HTML, CSS, PHP and JS, no frameworks.

    • @PPLPSMorse
      @PPLPSMorse 2 роки тому +4

      Congrats!

    • @lukehero
      @lukehero 2 роки тому

      @@PPLPSMorse thank you!

    • @yanivrubin4166
      @yanivrubin4166 2 роки тому +1

      Pretty cool!

    • @dresean3725
      @dresean3725 2 роки тому +6

      That's extremely impressive! Takes most people a 1-1.5yrs of self teaching before they're ready to start applying

    • @RandyMCPEmaster
      @RandyMCPEmaster 2 роки тому

      9 months??! Wow

  • @arenaesports2580
    @arenaesports2580 2 роки тому +1

    As introvert and tech geek, I'm 100% sure that people in internet are extremely helpful and friendly.

  • @Checker8763
    @Checker8763 2 роки тому +1

    Thx for being our mentor Jeff!
    I always try to be a mentor myself for others, it feels rewarding to help others accomplish things u help them with.
    While u learn urself.

    • @joshuawalker7375
      @joshuawalker7375 Рік тому

      I don’t currently have a mentor so when I saw your post I thought maybe you would be able to answer a couple questions.
      1) For someone who cares more about making more in the long run rather than being concerned with landing a first job quickly would you recommend less common but more loved technologies?
      2) Would you say that it’s worth it to develop a large social media following for someone where doesn’t currently have one?
      3) What do you think is a realistic time frame for a self taught developer to make 100k?

  • @elliotpollard9083
    @elliotpollard9083 2 роки тому +7

    Video idea: how to land your first client and hire your first employee to form your own consulting/service company

  • @Wizzardo
    @Wizzardo 2 роки тому +4

    I'm gonna download this video and put it on every device I own. Using this as my motivation to get my lazy self to finish college and get a damn job

  • @ramimezghani8321
    @ramimezghani8321 2 роки тому

    Finally, one of these videos with actual new information. Thank you!

  • @kaiyojimbo8814
    @kaiyojimbo8814 2 роки тому

    Dude, you pump out amazing content. Thanks for this stuff.🔥🔥🔥

  • @HUSTLERSINC
    @HUSTLERSINC Рік тому +3

    This is both really funny and extremely insightful. Thats the beauty of this channel

  • @DayOfCasual
    @DayOfCasual 2 роки тому +59

    Networking is pure pain when you're an introvert...

    • @francescotrillini5226
      @francescotrillini5226 2 роки тому +3

      Same haha

    • @shineymcshine
      @shineymcshine 2 роки тому +1

      Now try it in a country where you barely know the language lol

    • @dresean3725
      @dresean3725 2 роки тому +4

      Fucking facts. Having 10+ people in your LinkedIn inbox and mentally not being capable of consistently responding to them without a 2 week break. Sucks

  • @cwxorochi
    @cwxorochi 2 роки тому +1

    Strongly agree to have a mentor ~ I work in a small company that we need to explore on ourself, definitely gonna be better if there is a mentor!!

  • @jazebjazeb323
    @jazebjazeb323 2 роки тому +1

    Damn this is the most wanted video for me.
    You are a life saver....(actually career saver)
    Good job!

  • @stevenhe3462
    @stevenhe3462 2 роки тому +3

    5:05 "I use windows sometimes"
    Really nailed it

  • @ryangrogan6839
    @ryangrogan6839 Рік тому +7

    Wish I saw this when it was posted. I'm in my 3rd month of looking for a job after finishing college. I have plenty of personal and university projects along with two previous jobs working in what I want to do. I've been to a career fair, got several offers to interview, but never got an email or a call. I'm sending out about 3 job applications a day, my Gmail is filling with emails that contain the word 'unfortunately' at a staggering pace. I missed an opportunity to make 80k because I was still focusing on school, so at least I know what I'm worth. I'm hoping I can update this comment with good news in the future.

  • @josephridge3646
    @josephridge3646 2 роки тому +1

    Great insights Mr. Jeff ! Your content has helped me alot Thank you !!

  • @brandonzane519
    @brandonzane519 2 роки тому

    One of the best videos you've ever made. Learnt a lot from this

  • @Tyronetehblack
    @Tyronetehblack 2 роки тому +89

    This video couldn't have come at a better time for me. I'm currently nearing the end of my internship/first real programming job and the job search has really been getting me down. I'm always scared to apply to jobs because I don't feel like I'm good enough. I already knew a lot of the tips/strategies you gave in the video but putting them into action is another story. I'm going to watch this video every day until it sticks in my head and I'm going to do my best to start networking, working on side projects, and being more consistent with programming. Keep up the great work and I can't wait for the videos mentioned at the end of this one! You're the best tech channel out there Jeff and I'm very grateful for all the great content you provide for the community!

    • @geneanthony3421
      @geneanthony3421 2 роки тому +7

      70%+ of people get a job based on who they know. Not nepotism but knowing someone at a company who they think highly of recommend you is a big deal. Most other jobs you'll get are ones where they probably are new or they have a high turnover or low end.

    • @thishandleistaken.
      @thishandleistaken. 2 роки тому

      Can I ask you how old are you?

  • @chrisgonzalez1676
    @chrisgonzalez1676 2 роки тому +3

    You're probably my favorite coding youtuber because of your brevity

  • @mpho438
    @mpho438 2 роки тому +2

    The cat reading a book on Javascript had me rolling 🤣 the attention you pay to detail and your humor while making this videos its unmatched

  • @aaryanmurgunde7365
    @aaryanmurgunde7365 2 роки тому +2

    This is a really nice video very informative, keep doing what you do ❤

  • @maxconstable2535
    @maxconstable2535 Рік тому +4

    Cheers dude, got rejected from my first web developer job this week after getting through the first interview/competency test, etc and was very much in the 'chuck the laptop across the room' frame of mind. This video has really brought me back down to Earth, I'm a newbie, that's fine, things take time.

    • @joshuawalker7375
      @joshuawalker7375 Рік тому

      How have things been going? Any luck landing that first job yet? If so, did you establish a strong social media presence?

  • @mateja176
    @mateja176 2 роки тому +21

    I've developed many different apps in hopes that they would start earning revenue. The one's which reached the MVP stage have not gained enough traction and eventually died down. The others I've abandoned at some point during development, usually because I went after the next "big" thing. Eventually I would open source the apps that were representable which aided my portfolio. It's often recommended to develop a community before developing a product. However, building in the open and sharing progress regularly is a promising middle ground.

    • @youaremad1736
      @youaremad1736 Рік тому

      What do you use to develop apps? Are they web apps or mobile apps?
      If mobile apps, do you use Java, kotlin, swift? What do you use?

  • @GroovedMusic
    @GroovedMusic 5 місяців тому +2

    I just watched “learn java in 4 minutes” and I think i am good👍

  • @SamOverride
    @SamOverride 2 роки тому +1

    Currently looking for Data Scientist internship. Lost hope to get selected. Your video gave me a quick motivation boost right now. I'll start applying again

  • @chaosNinja790
    @chaosNinja790 2 роки тому +3

    Algo and DS, important to clear rounds for CS Devs. Anyone can do a course and copy paste the same code and tell they did the project. Algo and DS is what gets you through the interview rounds.

  • @belemagrey
    @belemagrey 8 місяців тому +3

    Here in 2023! This was one of the most helpful, impressive, value-dense and straightforward tech-related video, I've ever come across. I don't usually comment on videos but I just had to, I never expected the video would leave me this impressed & satisfied!
    No fluff or unnecessary sugarcoating just high-value information delivered in under 15 minutes🔥.
    For someone who has watched a lot of good videos, but still ends up feeling confused & stressed when I don't get what I need.
    Honestly this video!! is undoubtedly one of the best of its kind. Thank you✨.

    • @tima1301
      @tima1301 5 місяців тому

      how are things? Could you please let me know what's happening in the market right now?

  • @vaclavsisl175
    @vaclavsisl175 2 роки тому +1

    I will recommend this video to a person who is now struggling with getting the first 'real' job. Even though this person is interested in completely different fields than tech. Great content, great value.

  • @lordmars_
    @lordmars_ Рік тому

    This guy has direct access to my sense of humor and I’m taking this video very seriously but also laughing at the witty humor and sly jokes he puts in to describing things.This is the content I needed in my life.

  • @dbacks2023-
    @dbacks2023- Рік тому +8

    My journey to making $50/hr as a developer began by taking odd freelance jobs at $20, and then a few years later got my first full time one at $35, and then I took some online courses my boss asked me to do and now here I am, 7 years from the day I began learning

  • @use.Name-
    @use.Name- 2 роки тому +89

    Thanks man, I always feel 10x motivated after watching your videos
    One thing to note is that you need a lot of time for studying how to code and during that time you'll need some sort of financial income aside from a full time job.
    So plan accordingly!

  • @basix250
    @basix250 2 роки тому

    This single video has all the tricks for making connections, amazing

  • @sungjuyea4627
    @sungjuyea4627 2 роки тому +2

    This is so practical! Thanks for the video!
    But I would like to mention that building one's own portfolio or contributing to an open source require decent knowledge on Computer Science and SW technologies. Even so called 'easy' technologies(like JavaScript or Python, allegedly) demand massive amounts of time to get used to them. When it comes to CS... I think that's why so many tech companies prefer CS degree holders to none holders. Well, I think every issue is associated with time. You can certainly do anything you want in SW industry. But it is not as easy as it seems...

  • @juanchaher1810
    @juanchaher1810 Рік тому +10

    Just got mine. And the best piece of advice I can think of is to not take rejection personally. I had crappy companies reject me, good companies reject me, and awesome companies value specific parts of my profile which made me a perfect fit for them. Intelligence and competence has many dimensions and you will not always be assesed in the dimensions relevant to your skillset. Patience and stomach to handle rejection and you'll get there 100% guaranteed.

    • @dbacks2023-
      @dbacks2023- Рік тому +1

      This. I went through months of rejection after college. When I got my first offer I thought they were crazy for hiring me. I still have imposter syndrome, even while I'm being put in a position to review junior developers code.

    • @amazingvidguyz
      @amazingvidguyz 10 місяців тому

      Although i get about 80% of the contracts i go after, rejection is a part of the process. Learn to appreciate its a game of numbers and def dont take it too personally., Sometimes we dodge a bullet by not winning once in a while.

  • @spencerburke1907
    @spencerburke1907 2 роки тому +3

    I actually have a tip that helped me as well(I work in a sort of different industry). You could also go to things like hackathons. There is a lot to be said about these, but programming and design competitions in general are really good for meeting people you could work with, and getting jobs. Companies will often have booths as well at these competitions. So it is actually an easy way to break the ice by going up and seeing if they have stickers. You also don't have to win the hackathon, you just have to build something cool, and also be able to talk about it. Hiring managers and job interviews like it when you can talk about stuff you built. Also, the cookie cutter tutorial stuff is really bad either, but you better be honest about the fact that you got it from a tutorial. Later.

  • @codeWithRoss
    @codeWithRoss 2 роки тому

    Love your videos!
    You inspired me to start producing my own content for my channel.
    Just wanted to say a big thank you!
    Always look forward to watching you videos!

  • @teh1archon
    @teh1archon 2 роки тому +2

    Awesome video and also 100% true to trying to land a job in the video games industry, as a programmer or otherwise.

  • @eduarlalo
    @eduarlalo 2 роки тому +4

    The cat-lawyer zoom always got me, Fantastic video!

  • @dirkneuhauser8213
    @dirkneuhauser8213 2 роки тому +65

    Great content :) For me, "knowing basic algorithms and data-structures" was kind of missing though. You will never get into Meta, google and so on, if you don't pass 3-5 pure coding interviews (and these are not normal programme skills you develop on the fly, but another skill-set one has to grind for separately )

    • @chaosNinja790
      @chaosNinja790 2 роки тому +6

      Exactly without Algo and DS , it's going to be difficult to clear rounds. Interviewer will ask technical questions and PS code

  • @josefreichelt5455
    @josefreichelt5455 2 роки тому +1

    This is quite an awesome video.
    Got a tip on a interesting topic to cover tho, "What to do with your coding hobby once you get a job in coding?". Multiple times I find myself battling between "I should be productive VS. I just want to relax after work"

  • @aritmurmu4610
    @aritmurmu4610 2 роки тому

    The most useful video i have seen on youtube . hands down !!!! thanks man

  • @Gigantobyte
    @Gigantobyte 2 роки тому +5

    Content only gets better with each video. Love it, this was super inspirational for me actually. Perfect timing.

  • @neontuts5637
    @neontuts5637 2 роки тому +16

    Thanks for the video Jeff. Add participating on online or offline Hackathons to the list :)

  • @rajeevdhaka8716
    @rajeevdhaka8716 2 роки тому +1

    This is best advice anyone will ever get about job interview in tech

  • @GengoSenmon
    @GengoSenmon 2 роки тому

    As a complete noob this was extremely helpful. It saves so much time to know what NOT to waste time on.

  • @thedrunknmunky6571
    @thedrunknmunky6571 2 роки тому +72

    Hopefully I’ll be able to land my first proper internship soon! I’ll use some of your tips.
    BTW, I too think that persistence is hugely important in “success”. Most successful people try a bunch of things and fail a lot before they succeed.

    • @thedrunknmunky6571
      @thedrunknmunky6571 2 роки тому +7

      Also, people these days seem to not work that hard and succeed so easily, but trust me, they’re working very hard behind everyone’s backs (or they outsource their work 🤷‍♂️). Conscious effort and trying is what gets you places, not just praying and hoping.

    • @mastermind5421
      @mastermind5421 2 роки тому +3

      @@thedrunknmunky6571 took me 2 years after graduating from my bootcamp to get a job but oh man did it finally pay off

    • @king-manu2758
      @king-manu2758 2 роки тому +1

      I got an internship around 1,5 years after I started. I'm still working there. It's a shit show though and the pay is laughable. I'm so wishing I get an actual serious job.

    • @blackboxbs8642
      @blackboxbs8642 2 роки тому

      proper internship?

    • @joshuawalker7375
      @joshuawalker7375 Рік тому

      @@mastermind5421 Thanks for sharing! Unbiased content like this is the reason I browse the comments. Were you studying full time for those two years?

  • @gsd225
    @gsd225 Рік тому +3

    This was extremely helpful... whether it takes me a year or two, I'm not giving up... Thank you for this

    • @lil_mate
      @lil_mate 6 місяців тому

      Hey man? Gotten the job yet??

  • @princecharles-amachree7329
    @princecharles-amachree7329 2 роки тому

    You always put out the best content
    Thank you for this, you're a blessing to the worlf

  • @coolsai
    @coolsai 2 роки тому +2

    Thanks man ! much appreciated 😍

  • @thanhlengoc3805
    @thanhlengoc3805 5 місяців тому +3

    1:05 You literally predicted the job market crisis.