Leave your đŠ job behind
Maybe your job sucks like mine did. Maybe you wake up every morning looking for an excuse to stay home like I did. Maybe you're learning to write code to escape like I did. Maybe you can't get anyone to hire you like I couldn't.
If that sounds like you, I created this web site so you can break into a tough industry⌠like I did! When you started learning, you probably heard how many job openings there are for web developers. It's so true! What they don't tell you though is that those openings are for senior-level developers, not fresh-outta-bootcamp newbies like us.
I've been there, and I stumbled into a way to make it work.
When you find yourself hitting that wall, check out some of the articles and resources here. Everyone is different, and my method won't work for everyone, but, you know what else isn't working? Shotgunning applications to every opening under the sun and hoping for the best.
Why Web Development?
Learning web development is a great way to get out of your đŠÂ job and start building a better life for yourself. Hereâs why:
- 63% of developers reported they were satisfied with their careers
- Web developer salaries are 70% more than the overall average
- The field already has tons of positions waiting to be filled and that number is set to grow 30% by 2031 â six times the growth of the average
8 Things I Learned to Get From Walmart Cashier to 6-Figure Web Developer
One of my middle school teachers had a poster in her classroom. It was a multi-car garage, doors open showing several exotic cars. The text on the poster: âJustification for higher education.â
I doubt there was ever a time when most college graduates were going on to own Ferraris and Lamborghinis, but I do believe there was a time when a college degree guaranteed a comfortable standard of living. Those days have long since passed.
Now, we need another kind of education. A school of hard knocks cobbled together from the disappointments and failures of the traditional career path. We were lead to believe that, if we followed that path, the rest would take care of itself⌠but what happens when it doesnât?
I followed that track until I was 30. It took me from cashier jobs at a grocery store and at Walmart to working in a call center for Comcast to a job in IT paying about $36k a year.
The nice thing about low-paying jobs is that they are easier to leave. I spent the next six years figuring out how to make things work on my own. These are the 8 lessons I feel were most critical to get me where I am now.
- Find a Big Goal that drives you forward, stops you from quitting, and can refill your willpower reserves.
- Do tutorials and read books as-needed to get up-to-speed, but use personal projects to drive your learning. (I shared some ideas if youâre short on inspiration.)
- Donât stress over the tech and software you use to get started. (Thatâs why this site has a single recommendation each for the best laptop and IDE you should be using.)
- Waiting to be hired costs time and money: time because you need to find a junior position which is harder to come by and money because youâre unproven and are asking your employer to take on that risk. This means youâll probably get paid less than what youâre worth.
- Start your career with freelancing. This will force you to learn about business which will make you a better web developer. Every web project starts with a business goal. If you can focus on solving that instead of just building a web site, youâll be much more valuable as a web developer. Besides that, itâs a much easier on-ramp, and you get experience which will help you be paid what youâre worth if you seek a permanent position later. (I can help you get your first freelance gig and learn how to send invoices.)
- Disqualify clients early and often. Each client you take on represents an opportunity cost: itâs another, perhaps better client you canât take on. Itâs better for the prospective client too. If youâre not the best fit for their job, theyâll have less success and be less satisfied. You want your freelance jobs to be a home run for everyone involved.
- Build relationships with people, even if youâre an introvert. Friendships and great work opportunities will follow. Go to meet-ups and conferences. Talk to people about what you do, and, more importantly, about what they do.
- Invest in yourself. Buy the right tools you need to do a good job. Spend money on learning new things if that leads to a better/quicker outcome than doing it for free. Hire people to do things youâre bad at or donât want to do, both in your business and your personal life.
Knowing these principles alone wonât make you successful. Heck, I wrote them, and I can barely force myself to follow them a lot of the time. For now, just read them, try to understand them, and keep them in your back pocket. If youâre like me, it will take a few false starts to muster the discipline to try them.
Once you have that discipline and start living by these rules, youâll see your web development career start to take off. đ
That's a little about what I learned that got me started in my new career. If you're looking for a new approach, here are some resources to get you started.