00:00:00
I try to not make a ton of videos about
00:00:02
getting a job in Tech but with the state
00:00:04
of the market and how tough it has
00:00:05
gotten I think it's worth sharing my
00:00:08
thoughts I just had a conversation with
00:00:10
a bunch of Junior devs yesterday and
00:00:12
before then I did a talk at a college
00:00:14
that really showed me how rough things
00:00:17
are for people trying to get their first
00:00:18
job or even those who were laid off and
00:00:20
are trying to get a new one it's rough
00:00:22
out there and I want to do my best to
00:00:25
try and showcase what from my experience
00:00:28
works I do want to disclose something
00:00:30
important though I haven't looked for a
00:00:32
job in a while I obviously don't need to
00:00:36
get one right now thanks to all of you
00:00:38
guys supporting me my team and the
00:00:40
channel I have two companies one for my
00:00:42
content and one for my actual Tech stuff
00:00:45
that we sell with ping both upload thing
00:00:47
and ping. and those have put me in a
00:00:50
position where I don't have to hunt but
00:00:52
what I do often have to do is hire fire
00:00:55
and help other companies doing the same
00:00:57
so all I might not have as recent of
00:00:59
experience actually looking for a job I
00:01:01
still have a ton on the other side and
00:01:03
having done hundreds of interviews as an
00:01:05
interviewer throughout my career I hope
00:01:08
I can give a little bit of good advice
00:01:09
considering the current state of the
00:01:11
market I don't want to mince words
00:01:12
though it is rough out there right now
00:01:14
and in previous videos that I covered
00:01:16
the state of the job market in I showed
00:01:19
that it wasn't that bad but at this
00:01:20
point it kind of is I know far too many
00:01:23
people who are struggling to get jobs
00:01:25
and at the same time I see the same
00:01:26
mistakes over and over and over again I
00:01:30
want to break all of these down and try
00:01:32
to give you a like mini boot camp on
00:01:34
what I think makes the most hirable
00:01:37
Engineers but first a quick word from
00:01:39
today's sponsor post hog the all-on-one
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suite of product tools that you almost
00:01:42
certainly should be using every project
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I didn't use post hog for I ended up
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regretting it they're an open source
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platform that's uh a little bit goofy as
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we can see with the cookie request there
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that isn't even a real cookie request
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they have everything you need all open
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source by the way from product analytics
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to web analytics session replay feature
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Flags experiments surveys which surveys
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is so clutch all of these are great I
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mostly use the product analytics but
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everything here is useful it's one of
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the best analytics platforms I've used
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super easy to integrate in every web
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stack nextjs Astro crazy custom things
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old school stuff too but like it doesn't
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matter how solid they are how beautiful
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the website is if they're super
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expensive well almost all of their users
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more than 90% of their customers are
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actually using it for free not just cuz
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they can host it themselves at the open
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source project but because they give you
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a million events for free and even when
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you do have to start paying it's super
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super cheap we're talking
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0.005 if you actually manage to rack up
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the bill here congratulations you found
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product Market fit and you're doing
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really well I can't imagine doing all
00:02:42
the stuff I do today without post hog
00:02:44
they made my life as a product developer
00:02:46
way easier which is why I reached out to
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them to sponsor the channel so thankful
00:02:50
they did I hope was helpful for you
00:02:51
check them out today at soy. linkpos hog
00:02:54
and make sure to tell him that Theo sent
00:02:55
you to understand where the job market
00:02:57
is now it's important to understand
00:02:58
where it was not long long ago because
00:03:00
most of the education system and the
00:03:02
advice that you're going to get online
00:03:04
is focused on how the job market worked
00:03:06
in like 2019 2021 it also worked like
00:03:10
this way before then too a key thing
00:03:12
about tech jobs is that there were way
00:03:14
more jobs than there were tech people so
00:03:17
if I needed five people on my team to
00:03:20
work on a project and I only had three
00:03:23
finding those other two was really
00:03:24
difficult because the number of
00:03:26
available Engineers was relatively low
00:03:28
as such we were more likely to open up
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Junior roles not because we needed
00:03:33
somebody at a lower level or we just
00:03:35
wanted to pay somebody less but because
00:03:37
it was so hard to find great Engineers
00:03:40
that you would roll the dice and hire
00:03:42
people who were less likely to be
00:03:44
meaningful contributors in hopes that
00:03:47
eventually they would be in this example
00:03:49
you need two really good Engineers maybe
00:03:51
you'll hire five to six Juniors and if
00:03:54
you have a one in three chance of them
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becoming really good someday you might
00:03:58
end up with four people who are kind of
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dead weight but you would also end up
00:04:01
with two that are really really good and
00:04:04
eventually those people will be able to
00:04:05
run teams and do their own hiring and
00:04:08
level up other Engineers as well hiring
00:04:10
a junior engineer isn't a exchange of
00:04:13
money for code it's usually an
00:04:15
investment an investment in a bet the
00:04:17
business is making in hopes that long
00:04:19
term you'll become good enough to be a
00:04:22
really useful contributor to that
00:04:23
business it's harsh to say it that way
00:04:26
but it is reality most Junior engineers
00:04:29
slow down their teams however if they
00:04:33
level up fast enough and they really
00:04:34
start to get what's going on they stop
00:04:37
slowing the team down and eventually can
00:04:38
accelerate it really meaningfully so the
00:04:40
best thing to Showcase in an interview
00:04:42
will always be your ability to grow and
00:04:44
adapt on the Fly because that's the best
00:04:46
indicator that somebody might break out
00:04:48
of that junior level and go far far past
00:04:52
it two really big things have happened
00:04:55
that have made the job market work less
00:04:57
like this the first is the massive
00:04:59
layoff weight Wes that have been
00:05:00
plaguing tech for a while now if you
00:05:02
haven't kept up it's pretty brutal in
00:05:04
2024 over
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145,000 Tech roles disappeared 2023 it
00:05:11
was even more 260,000 that's a lot of
00:05:13
Engineers who were employed that no
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longer are and these people now are also
00:05:19
looking for jobs so if I'm again imagine
00:05:23
I'm an engineer running a team with five
00:05:25
people we need two more previously I was
00:05:29
very likely to consider juniors in hopes
00:05:31
they could level up and get to that
00:05:32
point now there are 260 to
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400,000 senior plus Engineers that have
00:05:39
actual industry experience that are
00:05:41
competing for those slots the likelihood
00:05:43
that I can get an actual experienc
00:05:45
engineer is significantly higher
00:05:47
especially if somebody on my team has
00:05:50
worked with one of those people who was
00:05:51
laid off and they say hey my friend Joe
00:05:54
here needs a job I worked with him
00:05:56
before he's really good they're going to
00:05:58
skip the entire line and jump in front
00:06:00
and be much more likely to get that role
00:06:03
there's a theme Here trust and we're
00:06:05
going to be going back to that in just a
00:06:06
minute because first I've talk about
00:06:08
problem two AI this isn't oh AI is going
00:06:12
to ruin all our jobs the big bad Doom
00:06:14
machine just trying to be realistic here
00:06:17
Ai and the tools that are being built
00:06:18
with it do represent a meaningful change
00:06:21
in how jobs and Tech roles work on one
00:06:24
hand the Need For Less experienced
00:06:27
Engineers as unproductive as they were
00:06:29
has has gone down a bit because training
00:06:31
Claude to do what you need is both
00:06:33
slightly more reliable and slightly less
00:06:36
higher cap than what Junior Engineers
00:06:38
could do and honestly in a lot of ways I
00:06:40
feel like I'm mentoring a junior when
00:06:41
I'm working with Claude it's roughly the
00:06:44
same thing but more importantly it has
00:06:46
accelerated what good Engineers can do
00:06:49
very heavily if I have the option of
00:06:51
teaching an employee on my team how to
00:06:53
work with a specific code base or just
00:06:56
spend 20 minutes trying to get claw to
00:06:58
make the change I'm working on going to
00:06:59
do the thing with Claude most of the
00:07:01
time it's just easier and faster and I
00:07:04
as an experienced engineer can be much
00:07:06
more productive when I use these tools
00:07:08
and can cover a much larger surface area
00:07:10
that previously would have required more
00:07:13
employees that's not the biggest thing
00:07:15
that AI has changed though AI has ruined
00:07:18
the process of interviewing for earlier
00:07:21
roles it is horrifying if you put up an
00:07:24
open role on the internet like Hey we're
00:07:27
hiring for a junior hit up this email
00:07:29
address you will immediately get
00:07:31
thousands of emails from people AI
00:07:33
generating the worst slop you've ever
00:07:36
seen and calling it a res and then a
00:07:38
five paragraph or 10 page cover
00:07:41
letter that they had chat GPT write for
00:07:43
them it is horrible I cannot emphasize
00:07:46
enough how miserable it is doing the
00:07:50
actual recruiting and going through the
00:07:52
NeverEnding large pile of resumés that
00:07:55
are more and more full of AI crap it's
00:07:58
horrible and know it's hard to be
00:08:00
sympathetic to the interviewer side when
00:08:02
you're trying to get that first role
00:08:04
fresh out of school fresh out of boot
00:08:05
camp fresh out a learning react yourself
00:08:08
but you need to know the misery that is
00:08:11
opening up a junior role for
00:08:13
applications and the gigantic
00:08:16
unbelievably large number of
00:08:18
resumés that are going to come in as a
00:08:20
result it sucks it sucks so hard that
00:08:25
most companies just give up on managing
00:08:27
that stack of resumés entirely because
00:08:29
it's not worth going through because
00:08:30
it's entirely slop just years ago those
00:08:34
roles would have gotten a few hundred
00:08:36
applications now it's tens if not
00:08:38
hundreds of thousands sometimes I've
00:08:40
seen people who had like 50 followers on
00:08:43
Twitter post an open job rle and in 24
00:08:46
hours get 10,000 applications it's
00:08:49
insane so what do we do about this if
00:08:54
the number of senior employees looking
00:08:56
for roles has gone up the amount of
00:08:58
shitty resumes has gone up and the
00:09:00
amount of rolls as a whole has gone down
00:09:02
how can you possibly get a job is it
00:09:05
time to just give up I don't think so
00:09:08
because there's one key thing that has
00:09:10
been going down since all of this
00:09:12
started trust trust is a hard to come by
00:09:16
commodity nowadays everybody is lying
00:09:19
everybody's AI generating and
00:09:20
hallucinating every resume coming
00:09:23
in is questionable at best but you know
00:09:25
what isn't your own experience in the
00:09:27
people that you have worked with the
00:09:29
best thing you can possibly have when
00:09:31
looking for a job is trust and there's a
00:09:34
lot of different ways to build trust the
00:09:36
one everyone says is go contribute to
00:09:38
open source I have a whole video called
00:09:41
Don't contribute to open source that
00:09:42
describes why this is a dumb idea and
00:09:44
also gives a little bit of advice on how
00:09:46
to do this right but I want to focus on
00:09:48
some more practical things one of the
00:09:51
biggest ones is being part of the
00:09:53
community you have no idea how many
00:09:56
people pop up in my twitch chat show up
00:09:58
in my Twitter replies hang out on Blue
00:10:00
Sky hang out in Discord and just show
00:10:03
without even trying that they know what
00:10:05
they're doing and it's very easy to
00:10:07
start trusting these people almost too
00:10:09
easy if you know what you're doing
00:10:12
enough to hang out and watch the videos
00:10:14
that I make all the time there's a good
00:10:16
chance you could be successful in the
00:10:18
space a very good chance and due to the
00:10:20
fact that so many people are here it
00:10:23
might feel like you can't stand out you
00:10:25
are wrong it is very easy to Stand Out
00:10:28
by just being around and being useful if
00:10:31
you have a high signal to noise ratio
00:10:33
where when you show a link in chat it's
00:10:36
likely to be relevant and interesting or
00:10:38
when you reply to something on Twitter
00:10:40
it's likely to be useful or funny I'll
00:10:42
quickly build an association in my head
00:10:44
with your username your profile picture
00:10:46
brings value is funny these graphs in
00:10:49
people's heads are relatively easy to
00:10:51
manipulate not in the derogatory trying
00:10:54
to screw with people sense but in the
00:10:55
more realistic people like the people
00:10:59
understand what they're doing s and it
00:11:01
is so easy to build this type of trust
00:11:04
if you just talk about the things you
00:11:06
actually care about in spaces with other
00:11:08
people who care about them there is a
00:11:09
catch though if you don't actually care
00:11:11
about tech you're kind of a lot
00:11:14
of people got into software Dev purely
00:11:17
for the money they don't even like
00:11:19
computers I knew a bunch of Engineers I
00:11:21
used to work with that didn't use
00:11:23
computers in their spare time at all
00:11:25
they would just use their phones a
00:11:27
little bit and then read books and watch
00:11:29
movies and that's fine good for them but
00:11:33
in this new era of AI and the slow
00:11:36
condensing of the field the people who
00:11:38
don't care are not going to make the cut
00:11:41
the ones who only came in for money that
00:11:43
aren't spending their spare time
00:11:45
watching videos on my channel playing
00:11:48
with new open source libraries and being
00:11:49
part of these communities they're
00:11:51
absolutely and you have to go out
00:11:53
of your way now to not look like one of
00:11:56
them and that sucks it genuinely does
00:11:59
cuz there's plenty of people who can
00:12:00
contribute plenty of fine code but if
00:12:02
you don't care it is unlikely you're
00:12:05
going to be better than the AI tools
00:12:07
that we'll be using next year and that's
00:12:09
a very hard pill to swallow but once
00:12:12
you've swallowed it you'll realize oh I
00:12:14
actually do kind of care about this I
00:12:17
know my peers don't but I was the one
00:12:19
they were asking for help with their
00:12:20
homework on those people can still have
00:12:23
a ton of success and if you're one of
00:12:25
those if this isn't the first of my
00:12:27
videos you've watched if you've hung out
00:12:29
in the community you've played with the
00:12:31
tools I recommend you've disagreed with
00:12:33
things I've said and you've been
00:12:34
involved you're fine you just need to
00:12:37
show the world that you do care and that
00:12:40
you do know what you're doing and the
00:12:42
way to do that isn't spitting out
00:12:43
hundreds of random GitHub reos it's not
00:12:45
throwing bad contributions to whatever
00:12:47
projects you heard me talk about the way
00:12:49
to do that is being involved hanging out
00:12:52
bringing value be realistic and honest
00:12:55
if there's something that I'm talking
00:12:57
about that I missed a key point on
00:12:59
point it out if I'm live streaming
00:13:01
myself talking about things that you're
00:13:03
familiar with and I say hey I need a
00:13:05
source for this thing does anyone have
00:13:06
it and you do go find it and bring it in
00:13:09
make your name associated with value and
00:13:12
you will very quickly build trust with
00:13:14
me and I like to think I'm a good person
00:13:16
to have trust you because I've helped
00:13:17
dozens of engineers get jobs in the last
00:13:19
year alone because I know a ton of
00:13:21
companies that are hiring but they're
00:13:23
not hiring in the sense that they have a
00:13:25
public listing that anybody can send a
00:13:27
shitty AI generated resume to they're
00:13:29
hiring in the sense that they're
00:13:31
strategically building a team that has
00:13:33
specific technical needs and
00:13:34
requirements they want to make sure
00:13:36
every bet they make is a trustworthy bet
00:13:39
because that's what hiring is it is a
00:13:41
type of gambling and it's a type of
00:13:42
gambling that sucks because people's
00:13:44
healthc care is involved but you have to
00:13:46
be ready to roll the dice a bit and
00:13:48
understand that the other side is
00:13:49
rolling the dice too it's your goal to
00:13:51
make that roll look as likely to be
00:13:54
successful as possible increase the
00:13:56
likelihood that you're going to be
00:13:57
successful for those companies and the
00:13:59
companies will see it the same way you
00:14:01
have to show them that you're very
00:14:03
likely to be a good hire and very
00:14:05
unlikely to be a bad one and that's not
00:14:08
as hard as it sounds there's a lot of
00:14:10
ways you can do this I met this engineer
00:14:12
Taylor at render ATL and she was awesome
00:14:16
she asked a really good question after
00:14:18
my talk about a niche use case for
00:14:20
Server actions in nextjs and I decided
00:14:23
to chat out with her more after cuz I
00:14:24
was curious she wanted to make sure she
00:14:26
was using the right Solutions with
00:14:28
server action so she went out of her way
00:14:30
to try whole of these different options
00:14:33
and came to me asking what my thoughts
00:14:34
were about them my thoughts were well I
00:14:36
haven't done the research you have I
00:14:38
would love for you to share that
00:14:39
research so I could do more with it and
00:14:41
I told her it would be awesome if she
00:14:43
had done a blog post about it her
00:14:45
response wait other people care yes if
00:14:50
you care enough to do that type of
00:14:51
research to spend that time deep diving
00:14:53
on different solutions to problems
00:14:55
document it and share it with the world
00:14:57
there's a decent chance nobody notices
00:14:59
there's also a decent chance someone
00:15:01
does and more importantly if you're
00:15:03
talking with people like me and I go to
00:15:05
your profile on blue sky or Twitter or
00:15:07
whatever and I go to your blog and I see
00:15:09
you have this post that's really
00:15:11
interesting to me light bulbs start
00:15:13
going off in my head like oh they get it
00:15:15
they're in they're not just playing with
00:15:18
these things to get a job they care
00:15:20
enough to Deep dive on things I haven't
00:15:22
even had the time to Deep dive on yet
00:15:24
and that is the best signal I can
00:15:26
imagine that someone is a trustworthy
00:15:28
potentially good hire and there's one
00:15:30
last piece that will always make hiring
00:15:32
easier friendships if you have
00:15:35
connections with other people be it
00:15:36
peers that you went to school with
00:15:38
co-workers you had in previous jobs or
00:15:40
just a friend from your hometown that
00:15:42
happens to have a role in an engineering
00:15:43
company try to maintain those
00:15:45
relationships and try to nerd out and
00:15:48
talk about these things with them
00:15:49
obviously if those people aren't
00:15:51
actually nerds they're just coding for
00:15:52
the job and making the money don't push
00:15:55
it too hard but if you can form a solid
00:15:58
m in their heads a oh this person
00:16:01
is associated with this thing going well
00:16:03
the likelihood that you can turn that
00:16:05
into a job is very very high I learned
00:16:08
this personally from my time at twitch
00:16:10
because as uh Rough Around the Edges as
00:16:12
I could be to work with I'm not one to
00:16:15
compromise where it would hurt our users
00:16:17
I was very deeply associated with things
00:16:19
actually shipping I became the guy that
00:16:21
was pulled in when projects were going
00:16:23
to miss their deadlines to make them not
00:16:25
only hit their deadlines but often
00:16:27
exceed them so we could keep working on
00:16:29
the things that actually mattered and
00:16:31
that association between me and shipping
00:16:33
has persisted throughout my entire
00:16:35
career and I had a ton of opportunities
00:16:37
come up and I still do to this day
00:16:39
because somebody I worked with in the
00:16:40
past has that association between me and
00:16:43
actually getting done those
00:16:45
associations last way longer than any
00:16:48
role at any company will and the people
00:16:50
who build those associations are going
00:16:51
to have their own jobs in the future at
00:16:53
other places you might be interested in
00:16:55
that is so essential to succeeding
00:16:58
because when I'm hiring I'm kind of
00:16:59
doing like a tier list in my head of
00:17:01
what I want if I have an open role on my
00:17:04
team the first thing I do is think about
00:17:07
the people I know that' be a good fit
00:17:08
for that role once I've exhausted that
00:17:11
list if I can't find anybody the next
00:17:13
thing I do is mention it to the team
00:17:14
I'll say hey I kind of want to hire for
00:17:16
this role what do you guys think and if
00:17:19
somebody else says I think that's a good
00:17:20
idea I actually know a person who would
00:17:22
be perfect for it they just got laid off
00:17:24
at this company and I think they'd be a
00:17:26
good fit that's the easiest interview in
00:17:28
the world world they're probably going
00:17:29
to get the job if after that point
00:17:32
there's nobody on the immediate team
00:17:34
that has a good referral for the role
00:17:36
maybe I'll post it as an internal job
00:17:39
posting to see if anybody from a
00:17:40
different team wants to transfer to my
00:17:42
team because if we've already hired them
00:17:43
and I can look at the work they've done
00:17:45
and talked to their co-workers the
00:17:46
likelihood of a bad higher is
00:17:48
significantly lower and internal
00:17:50
poaching is at an all-time high right
00:17:51
now because it's so scary to hire
00:17:53
someone that isn't a good pick after all
00:17:57
of those steps are exhausted after I
00:18:00
realized I don't know anybody my team
00:18:01
has realized they don't know anybody and
00:18:03
I can't poach anyone from another team
00:18:04
at the company finally I might consider
00:18:08
a traditional public job rooll list
00:18:11
maybe so if you do want to get a job
00:18:13
fast it's very important to do what you
00:18:15
can to be in those first three tiers and
00:18:18
if you're stuck fighting at the fourth
00:18:19
one if you don't have friends in Tech if
00:18:22
you're doing this alone find a way to be
00:18:25
less lonely because that's going to be
00:18:27
the thing that kills your career it's
00:18:29
not the opportunities that businesses
00:18:30
have it's not the companies that are not
00:18:32
giving you offers it's not the degree
00:18:34
that you did or didn't spend all your
00:18:35
money on the thing that will kill your
00:18:37
career is letting the loneliness get to
00:18:39
you fight that we're getting some good
00:18:42
messages and I wanted to call out this
00:18:43
one because I think it's a phenomenal
00:18:45
example of what I'm talking about here I
00:18:47
had a video call with a guy I didn't
00:18:49
know from Turkey to help him with a
00:18:50
question that he posted in Theo's
00:18:51
Discord about how to set up create T3
00:18:53
app in a certain way now he's a good
00:18:55
friend of mine this is what I'm talking
00:18:57
about AU here had successfully made a
00:19:00
connection brought value and built this
00:19:03
mental association with in that case one
00:19:06
person but that could scale really far
00:19:08
really fast so now if that person from
00:19:10
turkey that he met is hiring or is
00:19:12
working at a company that is hiring and
00:19:14
he knows that you're looking for a role
00:19:16
you are so much more likely to snag that
00:19:18
role and if you do this for not just one
00:19:20
person maybe three or four maybe a few
00:19:22
of those are public and if it's in the
00:19:24
Discord and the public question stuff
00:19:26
the answers are there too and I and many
00:19:28
others notice who is answering those
00:19:30
questions and who is bringing the most
00:19:31
value some of the best hiring help I
00:19:34
have given companies was telling them
00:19:36
who in my Discord answers questions the
00:19:38
best and they just straight up hired
00:19:39
people from that and now those people
00:19:41
are running engineering at surprisingly
00:19:43
large companies like clerk yes clerk has
00:19:46
a high up engineer that was found
00:19:48
because they answered questions while in
00:19:50
my Discord these are some of the best
00:19:52
ways to build trust to have these
00:19:54
relationships with people who get it and
00:19:56
are in the field too oh look my team I
00:19:59
literally met aore through twitch chat
00:20:01
Gabriel is my lead researcher I found
00:20:03
him because he was always posting useful
00:20:05
links and sources and all the other
00:20:07
things I needed to be successful with my
00:20:09
video creation and pulled him onto the
00:20:11
team we also have Addie here who has
00:20:13
been beyond helpful she's found a ton of
00:20:16
connections and made a ton of
00:20:17
friendships in the space and now she's
00:20:19
the one who reviews most of her videos
00:20:21
before they go live there's a ton of
00:20:22
these like Ethan met Rees through the
00:20:25
server if you watched my video on uh the
00:20:28
faster version of McMaster those two
00:20:30
became friends through my Discord server
00:20:32
and they built that together they might
00:20:34
even do a startup in the future knowing
00:20:36
how these things tend to go it's not
00:20:38
that hard to do when you're a nerd and
00:20:40
you hang out in spaces with other nerds
00:20:42
take advantage of that don't be alone
00:20:45
don't let yourself be The Loner that
00:20:46
doesn't have friends to talk about the
00:20:48
stuff with and don't use the fact that
00:20:49
you went to school during CO as an
00:20:51
excuse which I've seen a lot it does
00:20:53
suck but you can still make these
00:20:54
connections other ways I made a lot of
00:20:56
friends through weird Facebook groups
00:20:58
grou about hacking stuff when I was in
00:21:00
college and those friendships ended up
00:21:02
being essential to me finding success in
00:21:04
the field find people that you can
00:21:06
relate with that you can nerd out with
00:21:08
that you can have these deep Technical
00:21:10
and life conversations with so that you
00:21:12
don't have to go through this alone
00:21:14
because if you're going through it alone
00:21:15
I honestly don't know if you're going to
00:21:16
make it now because this kind of
00:21:19
sucks so make friends build trust show
00:21:24
the world that you kind of know what
00:21:25
you're talking about and you won't have
00:21:28
as bad a time and for everyone else if
00:21:31
you're just here for the
00:21:33
money good luck that's all I got to say
00:21:35
on this one I hope this was helpful
00:21:38
until next
00:21:39
time peace nerds