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by aaron5
1692 days ago
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What an encouraging comment - and thank you so much for looking at that RLC repo! It's riddled with mistakes, to be honest. I took it on as a learning project, speaking of which... > Instead I kept practicing and studying until I was good enough to hire for a mid-level position. May I ask how you demonstrated how good you were to the hirer? I mean, when you were studying were you producing side-projects, contributing to github repos, going through a course that gave you grades? I hope this question isn't rude. I'm not sure how to jump over the junior dev role without my resume being auto-filtered out because of lack of experience, if that makes sense. Anyways, congratulations! I hope you're liking your work in web development, because your story is really encouraging. |
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I had done some small personal projects and two websites, which I highlighted on my resume. I also had spoken at a few Meetups, so I had an "Appearances" section on my resume as well.
Ultimately, the place that hired me was one of 4 actual interview I went on (with maybe 75 applications sent). They assigned me a takehome assignment. I later found out I was the only candidate who successfully completed it.
> I hope you're liking your work in web development
Yeah! It's fun using my brain to make a living, and most importantly, I work a lot less than I had to before, for a lot more money.
They gave me a take home assignment and I did it. I later found out I was the only applicant who successfully completed it.