Landed a Job as a Blockchain Developer! #1859
Replies: 14 comments 13 replies
-
I am highly motivated, and I hope to achieve my goals too. Keep crushing it, @Nlferu |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
I'm glad to hear this! I wish you all the best of luck! |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
Thank you so much for sharing your progress here, this is MASSIVE!! Can we use this as a testimonial for the course? |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
Thank you so much for sharing, this has really motivated me to keep pushing. @Nlferu |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
Thanks @Nlferu for sharing this, After reading it I felt that I am on the right track it is just that process is taking its time. I also missed my 2 technical interviews one at nethermind and another is at valory. But yes I am still applying and learning. |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
This is LEGENDARY!!! I can't imagine a person without programming background can get a smart contract job. I have 2 YOE full-stack but I still really doubt if I can get a job, lets PUSH harder. |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
I mean this man reminds us that we can achieve whatever we set out to achieve |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
Thanks for sharing your experience, @Nlferu. I agree with you that @PatrickAlphaC's courses are amazing. He is doing a great job in the Web3.0 community. As an experienced backend developer (in my case, I am a PHP engineer), I find Patrick's courses to be the best training for advancing my transition to Web 3.0. I am quite far from being a good Solidity engineer, but I strongly believe that one day I will make it! As I like to say to people who ask me how to improve their programming skills, I compare a programmer to a swimmer. You can learn how to swim pretty well, but the difference between an Olympic swimmer and a good or average one is the training. Swim, swim, and swim every day, and you will succeed. |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
Thanks mate, really needed to read this and sending best wishes! I am about to finish my Advanced Foundry but I feel like I don't know anything :( @PatrickAlphaC what's the best way for someone with no professional programming experience to have that fluency to start coding. When I start building, I hit a brick wall - like a plateau |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
What a fabulous experience I first read your previous Q&A and then I got this. I'm a recent graduate who wanna engage into the awesome field. You made a cool thing and you will passionately continue it, which really inspires me and gives me a lot of confidence. Best wishes to you! |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
This is very motivating. Thank you for sharing. |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
very motivating. Thank you for sharing |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
Congratulations on this amazing feat,. |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
WOW this is amazing!! This just proves that hard work won't fail you and that you just have to keep trying and trying. This motivated me to be consistent with my coding journey to! Thank you for sharing this! |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
Hello Folks,
I thought it would be nice to write this post to encourage everyone who works hard and to assure them that it is possible to get a job as a programmer in the blockchain industry (even now, when the market is very rough). As the title suggests, I have finally landed my first job in this amazing industry without previous experience as a developer! I'm also self-taught; I did not study programming or anything similar formally. I started learning with Patrick's course for Solidity and Python. Then, I finished the JS and Foundry versions, completing all the challenges and exercises actively helping community and even improving courses repositiories.
Regarding searching for job, it took me a veeeeery long time (compared to my regular job searches where one application usually equaled a new job for me). I was programming every single day for a minimum of 2 hours (usually much longer because I truly love it). I quickly began to create my own projects from start to end, which evolved into more advanced projects for a few Chainlink Hackathons or for my friends, and I learned tons, including diving into frontend development!
I sent a lot of applications (over 200-300, hard to tell exactly), and I mostly received only a few responses from recruiters who didn't even know how to code. After some time when not getting any responses for blockchain positions I started to applying for regular programmer jobs (it was everything really backend, frontend, fullstack literally anything that matched my stack a bit), but it failed as well as all of my projects were web3, so it did not worked for regular positions and I was not as good lets say in frontend as I was in Solidity for example. After continuing to learn and improve my CV while sending more applications, I received only three invitations for technical interviews (with breaks of about 1-2 months between each invitation). I was scared as hell because we all know how hard and stressful technical interviews can be, but to my surprise, I did really well. The first interview failed because of my long notice period, the second one failed because the founders of the project didn't want a programmer without previous experience (even though the programmers who interviewed me wanted to give me the job). Finally, the third interview went very smoothly as well, but this time successfully and I beat over 70 other candidates for the position, landing my first job as a blockchain engineer!
Advice for Everyone Who Keeps Trying:
Build Cool Projects: Focus on creating amazing projects. It's better to concentrate on one outstanding project than on several common ones.
Pursue Your Interests: Focus only on roles that genuinely interest you. If you like frontend development, go for it, but don't mix it with other areas if you are new. Employers prefer specialists over generalists who know a little about everything but are not experts in any single thing.
Enhance Your Profile: Keep refining your CV, create a portfolio website, update your GitHub profile README, talk to other developers, participate in hackathons, and contribute as often as you can. Show your activity on GitHub to demonstrate your ongoing engagement and skills.
Thank you, @PatrickAlphaC!!!
I hope that you might consider filling the gap with courses for Solana (Anchor framework) blockchain programming I would love to dive into it more :) You are amazing and keep doing great stuff!
I hope this motivates everyone who works as hard as I do to reach their goals!
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
All reactions