Switching Careers to Software Engineering with Anna McDougall - podcast episode cover

Switching Careers to Software Engineering with Anna McDougall

Jun 08, 20221 hr 8 minEp. 56
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Episode description

Remarkably, Anna McDougall has not just made one career switch, but 2. From a more corporate career in marketing / project management, to a career in opera singing, to a career in tech as a software engineer.
Wow! 👏

Interestingly enough, pivoting to a career in opera singing taught her a lot of skills which helped gave her a head start in programming. One of which is how to deal with the Imposter Syndrome 🥸


More of the topics we cover this episode, in order 💬
☑️ Pivoting from a career in opera, to one in tech
☑️ Software used by many requires diverse people to create it
☑️ Overcoming Imposter Syndrome
☑️ Tech interviews


More on Anna McDougall:

https://www.annamcdougall.com
https://twitter.com/annajmcdougall
https://www.linkedin.com/in/annajmcdougall
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCjJzKrbr3WGn1xE0LAQ91yA

Enjoy! 🎙

Transcript

Hi everyone. My name is Patrick you. And for today's episode, I had an ohmic do Lon who's currently director of product and Engineering over at access Springer, National media, and Tech. And we cover her journey from Opera to the tech world. How mindset is way more important than the skills? Because the skills you can actually teach yourself. And we also cover, how she copes with the Imposter syndrome. I'll put the links to our socials in the description

below. And with that being said, enjoy the episode. So, I looked you up online. I saw a lot of podcasts but I never got the full story going to browse through on how you got into the software engineering first place. How'd that happen far back? Do you want your own spin on it? Yeah, okay. Well, let's start at the beginning when I was eight years old, my, this is 1995 for those playing at home. My parents took me to a Bookshop. Yeah. And I saw An HTML at home.

Some it was something like that. Some book, all that. And I was like, I want to do that. Okay, I don't know why, but I just wanted to do it. I loved computers from a very young age. Yeah. So they bought it for me and I just worked through it. I sat on my dad's computer, I was very lucky that my dad owned a small business would like to employees. And so you had a computer that had an internet connection which in the mid-90s was already like a big deal and I got to sit there.

And open up notepad and write HTML directly into notepad and build websites that way. Uploaded them with FTP and the whole old-school cool. Old-school you know he's Geo cities and Angelfire for anyone who remembers the DiNozzo. That's right. And yeah so that's kind of where it started. I kind of made a few little websites throughout my Early teens. Yeah, I did a software design and development unit at high

school. Okay, which I loved I was very good at it. The teacher was not very good at it again, because it was kind of a whole new thing. And yeah, probably like, yeah, they weren't really special lies teachers for that for high school at that time. And so, I actually ended up teaching the class the HTML kind of stuff because I knew it better than the teacher and one a little, like, School award. For it, you know, the special contributions and all that stuff.

Which as you can tell, I'm still proud of such a teacher's pet and I did that, but I was the only girl in the class and even though the boys in my class were lovely, I have no complaints. There's still a barrier there. When you've got a bunch of teenage boys and one teenage girl, it wasn't Although there were friendly to me and they were nice to me. They weren't like actively involving me, you know, they weren't actively, including me, in a social sense.

You were the old one up. I was the odd one out. Yeah. And so I had other subjects. I was good at where I wasn't the odd one out. And so in the end, I ended up doing a really Arts heavy list of subjects for my high school exams. So like drama English Japanese and history Japanese even yeah. It's not uncommon in Australia. Actually taught offer Japanese. Okay, how's your Japanese terrible? I think I can only remember, how to say, I studied Japanese at

high school. Yeah. And like, hello Irwin hear those kinds of things really cool but I can still read the alphabet, the kanji, not the kanji. Okay, the hiragana and Katakana I can still read them even though I haven't practiced them for so many years. Like if I see them I can still be like oh that says you're a God now or whatever. And yeah, it's fine.

Like But yeah, so then I kind of completely left programming websites, the whole thing behind, I did a degree in media and Communications that's like journalism. I also made it in Spanish and did some time in Chile and so kind of doing yeah, journalism radio TV, this kind of stuff, production stuff, and then after my degree, I thought, you know, I'm not sure that I'm actually a very good journalistic Rider, okay? One And I found it very difficult to break into production in general.

And so I decided to try for a whole bunch of other jobs and the one I ended up Landing in was kind of project management for conferences and for events. Yeah, so I did that for about a year and a half before I then changing to digital marketing and digital marketing, I did for Opera Australia. So the company that runs all the operas in the opera house, for example, in Sydney, really cool. So I was doing their face. Book, Twitter, all that kind of stuff.

The, you know, the ads. But also, the engagement, special promotions, all that kind of thing with digital. Yeah. And also, from time to time, updating the blog and that included working with CSS. For the first time, I'd never worked with CSS before, because remember, when I learn HTML, you didn't have that. So I got a little bit of exposure to it there, but again, I was just like, oh, this is a nice cool skill that I kind of still have from my teenage years.

I still didn't think anything of it. Um, I then, as part of being in the Opera Australia, environment, I was meeting a lot of singers. I was listening to a lot of Opera and I remembered that I also enjoyed singing as a kid. And I thought, oh maybe I'll just take some singing lessons and do that again as a little hobby. Yeah. And one of the Opera singers was kind enough to agree to give me

lessons. So I started doing these lessons every week on my lunch breaks and very soon she said to me look, I know you said you just wanted to do this as a hobby. Hmm. I think you should try to go to the conservatorium of music. Okay, I think you could do this professionally. Yeah, excuse me, runny nose to you. That means a lot. Usually, when that happens to me, yeah. When they actually believe in you, they have to do this kind of thing. Exactly.

And it meant more as well because I wasn't looking for it. Yeah. You know, I wasn't going to her like so so can I be a professional exact, you know, it was like it just came out of the blue. I was like oh that's nice to hear. Okay. Yeah. And I had always wanted to do That as well. So I said, okay like let's try. Hmm.

I then ended up changing teachers to one of the teachers at the conservatorium and she kind of got me ready for the auditions and then I was rehearsing every single day, every single lunch break, so I was working full-time. Still? Yeah, every single lunch break would head up to the practice rooms, you know, do my scales, do my arya's, just trying to get ready for this audition and as you can imagine, I got into the Master's Degree therefore, at the Sydney. Vittoria of music.

Yeah. In Opera performance Reaper. Yeah, so that began my two years as an opera singer. I supposed to do with. I completed that I think very successful, it was really hard. I didn't know any music theory for example, and most people who are doing a master's degree as you can, imagine did a bachelor's degree in music so they know all this music theory, They Know music history. I came in basically being like, hey, I can sing really well and I can act. What do you think?

Like, that's really cool. Don't have any theoretical grounding and it was very intimidating. I could imagine bills on top of that. Yeah. And because it was a standard that they expected that I wasn't aware of yet and it was Way Beyond the standards that I had for myself. Yeah, so I had to adapt adapt and it was there were a lot of Tears, there was a lot of pain. I ended up paying for extra tutoring so I could try to kind of catch up.

Yeah and by the end of it, you know I got to sing in the star role in the final. Formance of my Master's Degree and I got hired by Opera Australia as a singer directly out of University. Yeah, I'm performing Cinderella for school kids, really nice Cinderella. And so later I moved to Germany, then to kind of try to pursue it as a career. There aren't many full-time singing jobs in Australia, in Australia. If you say I'm, I'm an opera singer. They say, oh, okay. And what do you really do?

It's like, it's like, it's so So not a career path, okay? But the majority of people, I think there maybe 30 full-time singing jobs in all of Australia. Yeah. You know. Germany. That's different. Yeah. In Germany, every theater has usually has a full-time chorus of Between 35 and 60 people, okay? Are like basically one theater in Germany, has more full-time jobs, Australia, so that the decision was pretty easy to come over and luckily, my husband who

was my boyfriend at the time. Also won an award and he got one, a one-year contract, one, a one-year contract at the same theater where I had gotten hired. So we kind of got really lucky just coincidentally where we were able to work together there. But three years and then I worked an extra third year. Now, this is coming back to programming in a second, you promise, I promise. That's a long story. So during that time, of course, you know, we're living together.

We're working together. Things are going well, we decide to get married, and then I become pregnant and planned and we're super excited. But of course, by this point, he's gotten a new job in Leipzig. Yeah, I'm still living in Wiesbaden. Now for anyone who doesn't know, German geography, the basically on opposite sides of the country. So so, it was Manageable. But not great during the pregnancy. Yeah. So basically, I was living alone in an Airbnb while I was

pregnant. And then eventually, of course, once my maternity leave kicked in, I handed in my notice and I went to Leipzig. Yeah, so this point, I'm heavily pregnant. I know I've got one year of. Leave ahead of me and being an opera singer while he's also being a singer while having a newborn is extremely daunting. Hunting is in to give you an idea in the Opera world. You receive your school. At least I did receive your schedule for the next week on the Thursday before hand.

Okay. So you can't, you can't plan anything. No, it's just like that. It's always like that and you're working nights. Of course, a lot you're working weekends, you're working holidays. So all the, all the worst times for trying to find childcare basically. Yeah. And so I was really thinking to myself, do I want to He knew with Opera. Yeah, after my maternity leave finishes, which would involve of course during auditions all over again. Probably wouldn't even get anything in Leipzig.

So then how would that work? The work of it. I loved the day-to-day job of being an opera singer. I often say like if you just took one day of work being, an opera singer is amazing and I love it. Okay, right. But taken all together over time, I was like, okay I've done this now for seven years, I know I can do it. I've been relatively successful in doing this, but would I be able to lie on my deathbed and be happy if I had this? Like, what? I feel like I was fulfilling my potential.

Yes, ugly. And the answer I came to was. No. I know that for a lot of people, my husband included just creating music for them. It's like that's life, like they love that and that brings them the joy and satisfaction they need. Yeah. And it's totally satisfying. Me it wasn't I never really had that. As I said, I came in kind of late for me, it was more about performance. It wasn't so much about the

music itself. And so I also felt like there was an intellectual part of my brain that I wasn't using. I knew from The Filling. Yeah. From the corporate stuff that I'd done before this project management marketing stuff. Yeah, I knew that I was good in business. I knew that I was good with people and in the corporate world so to speak. That's a different ballgame. Yeah. And and I knew that I liked it and I also love logic puzzles and these kinds of things, and like that was fun.

But then I kind of started thinking, well, hang on back. When I was a kid, I did this HTML stuff and I really enjoyed that. Maybe I should try it again. Or try something like JavaScript or python, which I kind of heard of floating around. I'd had a software engineer for an ex-boyfriend, so he had kind of given me a very short introduction to Java Script long, long ago, okay? And they were kind of all these little things I was like, oh

yeah. I've always wanted to try programming again and I really liked it as a kid. Was it actually any good at it or was it just like a kid thing? You know, only one way to figure out that's exactly is. So I was getting towards the end of my maternity leave at that point which meant you know the baby was a bit little bit more didn't require like 24/7 access all the time, you know and I was like, okay I should try it so I found the Odin. Which is like a free web development course online.

I'll see ya. And I just started kind of plugging away at that. My husband would take the baby in the first half of the day. And I'd take her in the second half of the day. Yeah. And that meant that I had the whole morning every day to practice coding. And so I would do between three and six hours of coding every day. Yeah. And was just teaching myself.

The great thing about the Odin project and I promise, I promise is not a plug for the own project, but the great thing about it is it teaches you like, get it teaches you General? Skills like how to easily enter and things like that. Not just it's not like free code camp where it's like you just have this kind of social environment and yeah, yeah. So you have to learn about all that stuff and it was great and I knew very quickly that I was good at it. Yeah. It was working for my brain.

It was like a light went off and I was like, hey, everything that talking about. That's how I think. Yeah. Like that's how I break down problems. Like, oh, you have a problem. We break it down into steps and then you break those steps into smaller steps. Yeah. And then you like, Find a good structure that can work for those steps and then you break those apart. And you know, like it's just it's exactly how my brain works

with everything. Yeah. So it was a bit of a revelation and of course, I also had the Discord community of the Odin project telling me. Wow, you're going really fast, but you're also doing good work here. Yeah. Like, you should definitely keep going. So, the big concern I had had, you know, as a new mom in my early 30s was like, is anyone even going to want me there? Like, I'm, I'm not like some Young hot shot out of a computer

science degree. You know, is someone even going to want to hire me in that scenario? And luckily, the Twitter communities this own project communities, they all welcomed me with open arms and it was like, everyone was just so lovely, and telling me like, yes, you belong here, like you should keep doing this really cool. That, that was very reassuring.

And then, I did a one-year, kind of Web development software development costs, like what they call in German advisor building, which means like a Continuing Education certification. And I also during the course of that, became the tutor for the course. I was like learning the course, but also teaching the other students, very nice. And I got hired before, that course, finished by Nova Tech Consulting in Berlin, okay?

That's how it began. That was March 20, 20, 20, 20, 20 21. I got hired at only 21. Yeah, that's like a year ago, yeah. Really cool. The what I like is that so when I was a kid, it was very intimidating, picking a career path or even picking your you're like electives that you were gonna do. It is a lot exactly. Because that was going to kind of Define your future career path, right depression? Exactly no pressure. It's the future we're talking about here.

Yeah and those decisions you make might close some doors and I was like man that kind of sucks. Yeah. But luckily I mean even as you describe it It's easy to Pivot, right? Might not be easy, might require hard work, but it is doable. You went from kind of a marketing thing meant more business oriented to completely something else, Opera and everything around that what it entails, but I can only imagine, and then back to software, right?

Actually, being able to teach yourself the skills of kind of creating software is amazing, right? Everything is out there online, the communities, you talked about encouraging, you giving you feedback and allowing you to thrive within a Path like that. It just makes it feel amazing to be part of that Community. I think it's very unique in the software space to have that as well.

Yeah, true and I think mean there is still some gatekeeping unfortunately, but I do think in general it is very welcoming. And especially in the online space, what do you mean by the gatekeeping part? Well, it's this is someone asked the other day on Twitter. What's the difference between a software developer and a software engineer?

And my answer was gatekeeping because, as soon as you use the word engineer, you know, you have these guys coming out of the woodwork being like, well, actual real engineer here, an engineer, it's a protected word, and you can't really call yourself lad and I'm like, well, one thing, if you do in informatics degree in Germany it's called informatics. It's not called engineering. Yeah. Anyway so I just If you really care. Like, I just, I just don't think it it's wrong.

For one thing I was a software engineer. My first job was Junior, software engineer, and I didn't have any government agents, like, knocking at my door. Like, excuse me, how dare you? I just think like, and the fact the matter is that the way our world is right now, if you will

girls and women in particular. But I mean we could talk about lots of different, historically excluded groups, but especially girls and women, We notice they're not coming through, you know, high school systems and into University Systems. So if we are like saying, okay, a software engineer can only be someone with an engineering degree.

Yeah. Well like it or not you are actively excluding anyone who has come through in a different path and people who come through in a different path are usually women. Yeah. You know and that's so it's kind of like it or not. That's a form of gatekeeping. Yes, I'm concerned. If he was going to short-sighted in that way. If you don't look past what you're saying, you might not realize what you're actually doing. And I don't think there's a difference.

They also say, software, developer, and Jen are just regular developer. I mean, exact, would you expect a software developer to not know how to set up a project? No expect a software engineer to never complete. A basic ticket know, like they do. Both of them both a software developer and a software engineer do both. I just think. Yeah, it's that's the only difference. If you call yourself a software engineer, you'll have people like, knocking on your door being like, are you sure?

And If you call yourself a software developer, I want to be like, okay whatever. Yeah, and these titles are not formal. I can have could be a cloud engineer Cloud sector box, I can create all the hottest Surfer Cloud engineer. If you're not up in those clouds mixing those years. I don't know if I'm actually creating software a, my cloud engineer. If I just pushed off to the clock if I do some infrastructure. Yeah, there's no rules.

So I don't know why people create these kind of rules themselves and and force them on other people. And I think the reason is that it's about Texting their own egos. I think people, when you personally have always wanted to be a software engineer and you've like, worked a whole life, you know, even a kid. You've done it at high school, you've gone into University. You've worked your butt off to get this degree and then you go

and become a software engineer. Now you've worked, let's say 10 15 years in software engineering. And then you see someone like me like a form of opera singer with, like, a years experience. Been like, oh now I'm a software engineer. Yeah, I understand why people don't like Like that feeling why that might make them feel like the title is somehow lesser. Yeah but I do think in the end it's a thing to do with your ego.

If if you're really proud of the work you've done which I think those people absolutely should be proud of you. Then it shouldn't really matter, what title is attached to that because you know, you've done that work. And you know, the experience you have and if someone else is coming in as a junior or whatever and they're called software engineer, what you should be saying is welcome. I've got all this experience. Let me help you become better

exact. And then you can be inflate your ego that way, basically, by helping other people. I think that's the best way to boost your ego is by helping other people in. And I mean that in a positive way, like to help your confidence is to help other people and to show other people what they can do. And yeah, I think everyone has something to offer and I think that's what those people should be leaning into rather than getting defensive and feeling, oh no, like everything I've

worked for is under risk. It's like it's not you still got your job. That's plenty of work for everyone right now. You know, just go and help help others and show them, show them what, you know, like prove it, you know, and do it that way. Like boost your ego that way.

That's exactly. I think it's the same people that say this is a weird or did that don't that can't think further than just thinking it's right or wrong or black and white right because experience is I don't know if it's additive but it kind of Blends together, right? If we have the same experience, we're going to think the same of the solution is going to be the same. But if we have, if you and me are in a team are So there are different. I also don't have a traditional

computer science degree. I came here throughout my own journey in my own path, but no one actually said to me you're not a software engineer or software developer holding the same things. It doesn't matter. At the end of the day, if you're in a team, your experiences blend together and together you figure out the solution can be more or less Innovative based on the creativity within the team. But the more diverse the more Creative Solutions are the

better. The end result gets because of it. Absolutely. And I think, I think the other thing to remember Amber there is if you're creating, especially if you're creating software for everyone, you know, an app that you expect to be used by many many, many different people. Yeah. If you don't then have many, many different types of people, helping you create that software. Yeah. You're going to have gaps. Like loopy, coconut, you're gonna unintentionally exclude

people. Yeah, you know, you might have the best of intentions but in the end you just don't have that experience. You just can't like you just can't know what someone from a different group is going to want or need. Yeah, you know just like How I, you know, I as an atheist I don't know what a Muslim person needs, I don't know what a Christian person needs, you

know. I don't have that experience as an Australian, I don't know what someone from Japan needs in an app or someone from Nigeria, you know, they have that experience. So it's so important. If you are creating International apps or websites that are going to be accessed by

many, many different people. And especially we can talk about a lie here, you know, all kinds of things this reaches into all different Aspects, you need to therefore, have a diverse group of people creating that product be it in the product side or the engineering side, whatever. You know, you just need to make sure that multiple eyes and ears are in there on your fingers, touching, touching the screen or whatever it is. But yeah, I completely agree with that.

And I remember an example of that that I heard of was a new, I don't even want to necessarily call a nap. But like a feature an airplane way you would It down and the screen in front of you would say like oh hi Anna like welcome on board. Yeah, whatever. Now as soon as this rolled out the trans Community was like this is a problem because a lot of them had dead names on their official certification on their passports. Yeah. So someone might come down.

So for example, a trans woman and she might sit down and it would say hi Adrian. Welcome on board and suddenly she's out Heard exactly. And that, that puts her, unfortunately, even today in physical danger because there are still people who will, you know, beat people up for that. So, you know, there are things like that. What you think? Oh, it's so it's so that's what I'm look for. Innocent like just so welcome someone on board but actually by flashing that name up so big.

You know, anyone who was involved in queer politics would be able to tell you that that's a bad idea and it just comes through not having it. First team involved in the process. Yeah yeah I mean if you're creating that you would think it's obvious, Right? Use the name that's on their their birth certificate or whatever. And all those on you have that on the on the back end of that happening.

And I don't even know if those people that actually created the software will get to hear the end of it. We had to hear that. Actually, this is the result of those choices, basically. Because unfortunately, sometimes we don't even know what our impact is positive or negative. Right. Which is a shame because I think if you were, if you would hear that, you would take that with you towards the future, right? That would be a new experience.

It's a learn, it's a learning experience, that's the thing. And that's what I think. I'm a Believer in Impact over intention, but I do think that if you are well-intentioned, then you should you the impact with a learning, I should be saying, okay, I had the intention to do something positive. Yeah, it had a negative Impact rather than going defensive again like before rather than going defensive and saying, well, well, I didn't mean bad so

it's not bad. Yeah, you should be like, okay, wasn't what I meant to do. I apologize. How can I learn from this? How can I do better next time? And it just, I mean, it's the same as thing I say, for impostor syndrome in Tech. It's kind of like the same idea, you know, rather than going in and getting defensive about what you don't know. Yeah, you have to really go in with a learning mindset of being like, okay, I don't know this thing that Feels bad. I accept that feels bad but now

I need to do something positive. Let's fix it. Yeah let's fix it. Like let's ask people. Let's do the Google searches. Let's go to Twitter, whatever it is but like let's find the answers and then that can be the solution to this bad feeling. I have. Yeah. Rather than just going defensive defensive defensive, and it's a relief, right? That you're in a space and that you are allowed to make mistakes. As long as you learn from them, you're not expected to know everything.

You are allowed to And what you don't know. It just makes it. It makes it more comfortable to be in this and to be unaware of the things that you don't know. Because it's a learning Journey. So is life, right? As a kid, you don't know the world. So you pick up things, you put stuff in your mouth and you're like, all this is not really edible but it back as a baby and you continue on, right? That's how you learn why things

are. So even as an adult, that we kind of opposed people to learn things and we expect people to know what they should know rather than what they know and expect them to learn, right? Be that sponge and sore. Acknowledged, I think it's weird but I did you see it shifting towards more, openness making people more comfortable in the role that they have and allowing them to grow. Yeah, absolutely. And you know, I mentioned before when I came into this Opera degree that I didn't know

anything. Yeah, you know about music theory and people often ask me if I experienced impostor syndrome in Tech, you know, being ostensibly an imposter but I don't actually it's not. I've had the unfortunate experience to the unfortunate luck to expect, you know what I mean? Because I think I think it's because I experienced it already in Opera, like, hardcore, right.

I was an imposter there, too. Like, I've done this whole thing before and you know, I've cried the tears and I've had the desire to quit and I fought through that and create a successful career there. Yeah, so when it came to Tech, It was like, oh yeah, I've done this. Like, I've been the impossible for this is fine. Like I just have to keep learning and an adventure.

I'll get to the point where I can do this professionally, just like I did with Opera and no offense to programmers anywhere, but Opera is harder than programming. So I don't mean to offend anyone, but it is like the Olympic sport of singing. I can agree with that because I have no clue what it is. Well, to give you an idea. Yeah, we've Opera, not only do you need to know the music

theory stuff. Yeah. And not only do you need to be able to sing and The tune, that's kind of goes without saying we have no microphones in Opera and you're singing over a 70 piece, Orchestra. Yeah, in theater, that can fit what? I don't know. 700 to 1,000 people. Sometimes more the screw and you're expected to be able to project your voice from the stage over this Orchestra, the very back of the theater. Yeah, with no microphone, right? So, it is actually a super physical thing.

You have to know how to physically. Hold your body, move your muscles, use your bones young, it's actually very, very highly technical musical field. Yeah, on top of that, you have to act dance move, we're really tight costumes or big enormous wigs that are kind of trying to pull your head. That's why sometimes you have to do all of that while lying on the ground or floating upside down on a wire, you know. Like so give me the ball game again. I'm sorry, but programming is

easy. So, when it, when it came to like learning programming and And not knowing anything. I was like well if I can do it with Oprah I can I can do this. Like you know. So different. Like apples and oranges, right? Yeah sure. You can't even compare the two. That's true. Yes, is it? So in all product, can you learn those skills? Well, yeah, it's still the same. You can come in with a certain amount of talent and still teach yourself a lot of things or cultivate those skills.

So I think the Olympics Sports analogy is a really good one because as with Olympic sports with Olympic athlete, And not everyone can become an Olympic Athlete, right? You could learn to become the fastest version of yourself. Yeah, let's say as a sprinter. So you might be a decent Runner as a kid and then you go to a coach and you can get really fast. Maybe you can even be the fastest in your state. Yeah. But you're not getting to the Olympics, right.

An average person will probably never get to the level of State. Yeah, you know, but they can still learn to Sprint really? Well. Yeah, I believe The same thing about singing and about Opera, in general, I believe the broad majority of people can at least, learn to sing. Yeah. Will everyone have the ability to become an opera singer or not?

Some people just don't have the natural Voice or they just, they just can't coordinate their body in that way or they're also physical builds that are more, that work better in Opera

compared to others. And you know there are just Some things you can't change genetically that do play a role in how well or badly you sing and of course, some people are tone deaf and they will never be able to learn and just like with programming, you know, some people they just can't they just can't wrap their heads around basic programming Concepts. Yeah, I believe those people are in extreme minority. I believe. Almost everyone could learn basic programming. I was gonna ask that.

Yeah, you do think that people can teach themselves in a more General sense. Course, the program more easily, than they would. For example, go to the Opera. And for, yes, I would say that. Yeah. So I would say, I would say of the general population. Yeah, let's say, I believe probably like 70 to 80% if they really wanted to, and if there were enough jobs for this, could learn enough to become an entry level software developer. Yeah, that's really cool. 70 to 80% of the population.

Yeah, Opera I would say like maybe If we're being generous five percent of the population so it's a huge to be an opera singer like a professional opera singer on a stage if they decided to and if they went out of their way to do it, it's really hard. And luckily for me I feel like it did also teach me a lot of skills that helped. Give me a head. Start in programming, despite the fact that they seem to be all sorry, they seem to be completely separate from each other.

There's a lot that I learned in Opera that I feel like still helps me today. Day especially my new role. Because I'm now I know I was a software engineer. I'm now a director of product and Engineering at National media and Tech, which is a tech subsidiary of the German media conglomerate Axel Springer. And we do like all these. We do basically everything for them. They're the biggest media company in Germany.

Yeah and my job is kind of to oversee all of the tech products that we do. It's all the tech projects that we do. So I have to like keep my eye on all these different things. My job is to come out and talk about them. A lot, of course, also deal with some Dai. So diversity, equity and inclusion, initiatives inside, for, for our technical staff. I'm not in h.r. So it's not really like everyone, just just our Tech staff of they want some representation at the highest level.

I'm there for them and that kind of stuff that kind of teamwork speaking on stages talking to you today. You know, a lot of those skills that I've learnt have come from Opera, exactly. So it's not just that, for example, Jacques Theory and learning music theory, has taught me a type of systemic thinking that helped me. Learn programming. I believe that's true. So there's kind of that more programming side of things that more like technical side of things.

Yeah. But also in a non technical sense, I feel like the skills I've learned from being a performer have really helped me a lot in my career just generally. Yeah I think it's a wide array of skills that you need as a software engineer or even when you go more High over right. I love this. Partially is technical sure. You actually need to know how to do things but you can figure those out, right? This isn't my own resources for that sometimes or sometimes your

trailblazing. We actually have to try things out of the skills are also human interaction communication psychology can help you which is then he comes back to what we said earlier. Right the diversity within a team makes the team better in the product as well at the end of the day. Yeah, and it's interesting. Say that because that's actually one of the skills that I really feel like I did bring across. Yeah, is empathy.

Because I mean, I like to think I've always been a bit of an empath like an empathic person in, you know, a social sense. But the thing about Opera and or any type of stage performance is that you are inhabiting characters, right? Yeah. So when you're doing a character study, you need to think. Okay, what kind of background did this person have? How were they raised? What were their parents? Like what was their school like? Why are they behaving in that way?

In this scene? One of the roles I played was as this kind of older, I should send you the clearance great. This kind of older princess, but she's the aunt of the main character and she's disinheriting her from the will because she had a baby out of wedlock. Yeah, and she's the, she's the evil character. Like she's the bad guy in this Opera and that was me. Yeah. But I when I walk out on that stage, I don't think Okay, now I'm the bad guy. I have to be like, I'm a good guy.

I'm the only one who can see what's the right thing to do. Yeah, you know, because that's how she was the shifter. Yeah, season selves is the bad guy.

So, I have to be able to shift into different characters and think about how, and why they act the way they do flee from their perspective, and I find that so helpful in software teams even because you often do have people who are completely different to you, I miss, you know, extroverted allowed Australian, former opera singer, in an engineering day unique, like, most of the time, there aren't a. Lot of people like me in a team, but I really pride myself in

being good at talking to people from many many, many different backgrounds, many, many different personality types. And I would say, most of the time we get along really well, because I feel like I'm able to Adapt to their needs. I'm able to try to see things from their perspective. Of course, I can't because I'm not them, but I can try exactly and, and therefore connect with them and make them feel more comfortable. And that's what I aim to do in every team. I'm on.

Yeah, the makes sense. I mean, I do it but I didn't do it like that consciously. Yeah, but because you come into a team and you'll obviously want to make people feel comfortable. You notice, when people don't speak up and some people do, Or some people are the only ones talking in a meeting, right? You want to include everyone because you know, their skills are valuable here, right? We are still in a team, a team is not a one-man Army, but some teams apparently are.

And if you can't make that same safe space within a team and it's just going to be that one man army, the results going to be the same as well, then. Exactly. And I mean, I'm not every meeting I should say, not everyone responds well to meetings, right? Like there are some people who are never going to talk up in meetings, no matter what you say or do.

That's also fine. And what I did in previous teams that I was on is that I would actually like go to those people after a meeting and just have a one-on-one coffee chat or something and you know, just kind of talk about them and what they're up to and if they want to talk about their ticket and give them that space to talk about it but not force them to do it. But very often that is where the real Stations with those people would happen because they were

just too intimidated by big groups. No matter how comfortable a lovely. They were, it was just they had this fear of looking stupid, this imposter syndrome kind of been creeping in where I asked. Like, if I ask what a Docker container, is everyone's going to like an idiot and then like they're going to fire me. And you know, I'll be gone by the end of the way, you know, this kind of. Oh yeah, anxiety.

Yeah. But when they're with me and were chatting and I say oh yeah and then I have to do something Docker containers. Then I can just say, okay, have you worked at Docker containers before? And they can say no and say oh do do you feel like you understand what they are? Would you like me to go over it again for you? Yeah. You know, and then that gives them an opportunity then

exactly. Ask that question and yeah, I feel like being able to put yourself in the shoes in my case of someone who's not as extroverted and to kind of think, okay? If I didn't like people as like, well, like bringing energy in from people. And if I weren't as confident in speaking, what would I need? In this scenario like what would make me comfortable to ask something? And you have to be able to I think put yourself in that scenario. Yeah, but I agree, it's not always conscious.

You like to think that after after a while you just kind of do it without thinking about it which is, that's a good sign, exactly, if you do that. So I love that. You said, you learned how to cope with imposter syndrome, right? Coming from the Oprah teaching, ourselves those skills. And then being like, OK, this is a different ball game, but still how to deal with that. Is that it The same. Right? What do you think the biggest Factor there is that helps you

cope with imposter syndrome? I love talking about. This is one of my favorite. Thanks again, it's funny. I can go back to this topic of the ego that we spoke about earlier I believe and and you know might be a little controversial I believe. When you feel imposter syndrome that's actually your ego screaming out interesting for a reassurance. It's like when people fish for

compliments, right? It's the same sort of idea, and a lot of people say, well no, no I mean I feel imposter syndrome because I'm not confident, you know? And I think well, I don't actually believe that I think you feel imposter syndrome because you think you could understand this and you should understand this but you don't write. And so then you think I'm better than this. I should be better than this. I can be better than this. Why aren't I better than this?

And it's this kind of loop so I believe it's your ego screaming out for reassurance. You'd like that? You are actually Enough. And that's often the response that people give when someone says oh I feel imposter Syndrome have go, it's fine. Everyone feels that way. It's normal. You know, these kinds of your find this kind of stuff. I think that that it's true.

Like all of that is true. I don't think it actually helps the core issue of impostor syndrome which is that sometimes you are the one worst one in the room. Yeah. Like sometimes sometimes there is stuff that you should know that, you don't know, and I don't think there's anything wrong with just saying that That with being up front about it. I'm a very blunt person in my life and I feel like it's important sometimes to be upfront with the truth. Okay, sometimes you are the

worst one in the room. Yeah. Okay. So what happens? Yeah, also this means. Okay let's say we've got six people around this table and I'm the worst one in the room. Okay. What do I have? I have an opportunity to learn from five. People who know more about the subject than me. Yep, that's amazing. That's great. Why would I be upset about that? Like, even if we accept that engineering teams are open to failure and are open to

learning? Yeah, and if you are in fact in a company like that, you should be because I feel like most engineers During teams are like that nowadays then you should be viewing every situation where you feel imposter syndrome, you should be viewing that as an opportunity to learn not as some sort of slight on you because you can be the worst one in the room. And it's fine. Like, Tech is an enormous field. There is so much to learn. No one at that table knows everything.

Yeah. Everyone needs to interrogate other people about what they know in order to learn the Basics of any field of tech exactly because, like, you could have the best back-end engineer in the world, you say to them make a react app and they will stare at you completely blankly, you know, like like, well, let's go. Exactly. So to me when someone says, I'm feeling imposter syndrome that says to me that they are approaching these situations whether I need to prove myself mentality. Okay?

So they might feel that they need to prove themselves to others. Might need field. They need to prove themselves to themselves, or to some hypothetical terrible parent, or something like that, someone that they feel like, oh, I'm going to show you, you know, but this proving yourself mentality is to me. Toxic absolutely toxic. If you go in being like, I need to prove myself. Then you're going to put on a front. I'm going to be like, I'm great. I'm really good. I'm really good.

Look at it. Look, everyone. Look how good I am. I know things, I know things. I definitely know things like you're not going to be like, oh okay, I've never heard of a Docker container before, what's that? Yeah, you know. And so for me, the change, the switch that is needed is from a proving yourself mentality into a learning opportunity, mentality viewing this as an opportunity to learn as an opportunity to grow and seeing that, as a positive thing.

So, I felt I've said before, I don't really suffer from imposter syndrome, I don't. Yeah. But I do sometimes feel twinges of it like where I'm like, oh, hang on, everyone's talking about terraform and I've never even seen it before. Like, I don't know what I'm Doing, you know, and in those situations, I try to just catch myself and I think. Okay. So you don't know about terraform like, no one's ever asked you to know about terraform before.

Yeah, so ask someone like learn and then the next time terraform comes up in conversation, you'll know what to do or you'll know at least the basics of put it rolls talking about yeah you know. So I think that that approach that being open is really important. I think it's especially important for senior Engineers. Yeah because I think the higher you get in So to speak, the more pressure, you feel to know everything or do you mean?

Yeah, but again, take as a huge field, they're always going to be gaps in people's knowledge. And the reason I say especially seniors is because seniors are in the unique position of being a role model, for a lot of other Engineers exact. And if they can very, very openly say, oh wow, I've never worked with that technology before. I'm feeling a bit of imposter syndrome right now. George can you help me understand this? Yeah, you know, No saying it openly, I'm feeling imposter

syndrome. I don't know about this topic. Can you teach me more? If you can do those three things as a senior engineer in a team, that's not only helping you as an individual. Yeah. It's helping the whole team Co. This is a safe space to know nothing. That's a great example and we made that exact everyone needs that? Yeah, I've never heard it be kind of match towards ego. I know I've had it, right? I've come from More of an

operational background. And then I got very frustrated because I would know how to fix things, but I wasn't responsible for that. I couldn't even do it. So then I moved to more of the engineering side and actually I had nothing to start off. Sure University knowledge made a website here and there, but whatever it wasn't an organizational setting the, you know, get, I'm really. Okay, let's start with that. And now let's make these changes here. Okay, we're going quite fast.

Okay, Quest. And okay, I was pretty proud of that, and then I got For your marks and my conch, these people know their stuff. So that's the how it kind of snowballs, right? And it's always there, you're always like, okay there's stuff, I don't know, but I always saw myself as kind of a wild card. I was like, I'd it's pretty obvious that I don't know stuff. So should I be ashamed of it? Not really, I should learn from this, right?

All these opportunities, all these people are here and they know a lot of stuff that I don't. But if I really want to do this, I need to be that sponge to absorb knowledge. It didn't make it go away. The Imposter syndrome, like it was always there. It's sometimes still pops up exactly as you say it, but you do learn how to cope with it, right? You do ask those questions because you might not be the only one, that's like, what's terraform? Because you're still within a group.

And if two people are talking, they also just mean like interesting then it might not be the only one. Right. Exactly. Well, that's the other things so often, when you think, oh my gosh, I don't know any of this often. There's at least one other person in the room. Who feels exactly the same way. Yeah. So it's really great if you could be Person to open it up,

but I agree with you. I think, I think it actually, in a way, it helps, being an outsider with impostor syndrome, you know, because I can be like, well, yeah, obviously I don't know exactly about relational databases like, you know, I didn't go to UNI for this, you know, our teach me exactly how about we lay it out. So we make sure everyone has the same. Exactly, let's go back to basics for a second. What? Jean. And what's the 0? What is that going to click? Never seen it.

These numbers before but I'm not quite sure I'm seeing the connection. I, uh, but yeah, so I think that cat does kind of help actually when you're like, very obviously, an outsider in a way. It gives you a bit of an advantage in that respect, but I do think that it comes down to honesty, like, it maybe goes even back to the like your job interview. If you're in your job interview and you're saying, oh yes, I'm an expert in this, and I'm an expert in that. I'm an expert in something else

in order to try to get a job. Yeah. Then you're in a terrible position when you start, you said, because now they should That expectation, you have to work that whereas for me when I've been in job interviews, what I've always really appreciated people saying, well, you know, with react, I could create a basic, you know, website, that, you know, could have like, for example, a restaurant website, or something like that. But I don't know how to use apis yet or something like that.

Yeah, so they can really say distinctly, I can do this. I'm not sure about this yet this technology. I've just touched a little bit. This tool I've used, maybe once or twice this other one. I feel very comfortable. Yeah, I love that because when someone is like that in a job interview, you know, exactly what you're getting is no question marks. Exactly, there's no like like, you know, are they telling the truth about really being good at

all? This stuff because there's no way you can test for all of it. Yeah. In an interview process, you kind of have to take their word for it, if the trust at some point and then that person, if you hire that person that the bragger so to speak. And then they're in meetings, that's terrible for them to because now they feel like they're incapable of asking

these questions. Yeah. So you know I feel like it's it's helpful from a unit lead perspective if you're giving people space to discuss what they're not. So good at it's helpful from a team lead perspective, if you're giving space, in meetings to give people space to not know about topics, but in the end, if you as a person as an individual and not being honest, and upfront with what your understanding, what you're not

understanding. Ending you just kind of dig yourself deeper and deeper into a hole where everyone just assumes you know. Yeah. And then you can get to the point where oh I haven't asked that question three weeks ago and now someone's asking me to do a ticket on it and I have no idea. And now it's like it's not too late. I don't think it's ever too late but you can feel like oh now if I ask a question it will everyone be like hang on you didn't understand this all the time, you know?

We towards a confrontation. Yeah, it just gets worse and worse. So it's just so important to to ask those questions. Be open and honest about what you are. Just, and don't understand. Yeah, just take the risk. Most of the time people are fine with it, like, it will appreciate it. One of the, one of the points of feedback I would get is that that's accurate. So we know you're kind of new at

this. Sure. We're also very humble about what, you know, what, you don't know when you say, you don't know, but you can figure it out. I trust that, right? I don't expect you to know, I just asked a question sometimes, I ask people do you know this and we're going to do that and it takes them way longer than I would think you should take is because they're figuring it out and sure they can. No, but at that point, when asked them, they didn't actually know.

But they weren't, they weren't comfortable telling me. Exactly. Like, okay, I mean, I'm honestly is number one with me, right? I don't assert a weird expectation because then it doesn't fit well with me as a person. If I'm disingenuous and not act out of Integrity, I guess. Like, I hold strong value within that. So, from disingenuous towards you, what? I know I'm disingenuous to myself as well, and either I need to figure that out, or I

should have said that. So I'm honest in what I know. I'm also honest in, should we actually do this? And I like to challenge a lot of things for people also be like, okay, this is actually a conversation. Now, instead of just being like a we need to do this, I asked of Patrick to do this and he just does it regardless of the if he knows it or not, I think it becomes better of it. That we actually have a dialogue that we're honest about what we

know and what we don't know. I also have expectations about a product owner that they know stuff, but if they don't then we can figure it out long. As we're honest That exactly. I think. That's, that's the key. And that's the challenge. Yeah. And especially I speak a lot of conferences about supporting Junior developers. Yeah. And one of the things I try to emphasize there is, don't underestimate people's fear of being fired. Yeah, especially when they're in their first job.

Like the terrified, they don't, they don't want to appear ignorant or scared, or, you know, or nervous or unsure of Themselves because they think if you sense weakness, you'll fire them. Yeah. And unfortunately for the juniors, the opposite is only completely true. If you're asking a lot of questions and being engaged in the topic, usually that actually leaves a much better impression. As you said, the team lead, then

knows where you stand. They can actually give you resources to help you, you can become a really solid developer in a year, two years easily if you're being really open and honest about what you know, and don't know. But unfortunately, a lot of people are coming in with that. Y'all of our if I show that then they're going to fire me. Yeah, I gave the example before of do you know what a Docker container is? Or would you like me to explain

it to you again? I think that's a good example because sometimes, when you ask people these missions I'll do you know what a Docker container is? It can almost sound like an accusation like confrontation. Do you know what? Exact whereas if you do the offer immediately, do not a Docker container is or would you like me to explain it? You know, it immediately gives them an out when they go. Oh yeah. Maybe you could explain it again. Yes, I think I know but maybe you know, give me another

explanation. Exactly. You know it gives them an immediate opportunity. Yeah. So I think that's a good solution for anyone who is trying to like Foster that like don't check knowledge but try to check knowledge with an offer of how to help at the same time so that it's much easier for them to accept it. They don't feel like you're about to fire when you ask those questions. Yeah, I don't know how it was for me but I didn't have The

fear. I think I joined a company and I was like, okay, this is absolutely gonna go right and my way or I'm gonna get the hell out of here. II know that I accepted that from when I started. So I think that really might have helped. I'm sure that must have helped but it not, everyone is like that. I don't think everyone did. So you recognize what you're saying that? All right, like, I'm a little bit the same way I'm an eternal

optimist. Yeah, I always go into things being like, oh, this is gonna be great, everything will go perfectly and You know, I that's just kind of the attitude I bring into things, but as you say not, everyone is like that other people had different experiences. Some people have had, especially career changes, they've come from things like areas, like Hospitality where they are, sometimes treated like absolute crap by their bosses, you know, they're not used to team environments.

Exactly. Yeah. Where people are actually supportive and actually want you to ask questions and engage with that meaningfully, they used to environments where they get yelled at if they don't know something, or they get Hold to like go clean it up right now, you know, like that and they have to do it and I'll be like why. Yeah, exactly or what is a mop and it's important to remember that also even University graduates have often worked jobs like that, of course.

So they're early experiences of employment and not necessarily conducive to having that kind of confidence that you that you had when you started, I do feel like that's another benefit of coming into town. Tech as a career changer as well is that, you know, we we've had a few more experiences of the

the real world. We've kind of gotten well for me anyway, past the age of 30. Especially I feel like I really stopped caring if exactly act and I just got to the point where I'm like, all right, I'm just gonna like be myself and that's going to die with some people are not and whatever. What will be will be, you know, and accepted a bit more the things that I could control you. And just said, okay, some people aren't gonna like me. That's fine. I don't like everyone. Yeah, no problem.

Those things like sure it's unfortunate but it is what it is. And similarly in the workplace, okay? Maybe there will be from time to time. Someone who doesn't respond positively to a question that I asked. Maybe I asked, you know, just going back to what is a container and someone goes what I would you ask that? Yeah. Highly unlikely for any genius listening at home. Highly unlikely that will be the reaction. Maybe it could be.

Yeah. And and if it is you just have to be like well I don't know it and I want to get better. Yeah end of story and someone else will be like, okay great let me help you, exactly, right. They could be One Bad Apple from time to time, you know? Team, hopefully not the whole team by the occasional bad apple does crop up. Yeah, but I think part of that confidence that you're talking about is just accepting, okay? They'll be people like that and that's not my problem. Exactly.

What Problem is becoming the best developer I can be. And the best way to do that is to continue learning and to talk to other people because often people can explain things far better than documentation care. Yeah, unfortunately, then I'd like one of my colleagues said that when they would see me struggling and it would be like, okay, so we know you can figure it out, right? That's not really the point.

But if you can figure it out within four hours and I can explain it in like half an hour, choose the option that I explain it because ask for help and you're beat faster and better because Cuz of it because we are within the team, right? I have colleagues next to me. That can explain stuff that I don't know in a way because they know me that well actually be beneficial and sure, everyone can figure everything out because a lot of stuff is online.

It's just going to vary in time and if it takes too much time, ask ask for help. Exactly. Exactly. And I think the really cool thing as well, I'm sure you can speak to this too. Is this strange phenomenon, where if you're stuck on a problem, An hour, an hour and a half. You got okay. I guess I have to just ask someone for help. Yes. Soon as you ask someone for help you suddenly understand what you doing, really hang on. Yeah. It's kind of like rubber ducking.

Little rubber duck technique but you like, you know, you've typed out this long slack message explaining what the problem is and then you're about to hit enter and then you go. Did he just another good reason to ask questions? Yeah, it's It's kind of externalizing, your thoughts and being confronted with them. Like okay.

Now I feel it now I see the solution to this problem of describing, what it was still wondering is because you made a complete career switch is how the interview process went. Did you have coding challenges? Lots of conversations or lots of screening things where you didn't even go through? Because all of that stuff is automated nowadays. So I have the honor of saying I've still never done a technical test. Okay?

Very lucky I've been sent one but I didn't end up doing it because I got a job offer before I needed to. Yeah. So when I was first applying it was kind of an accident. I'd kind of said on Twitter. Oh 2021 will be the year. I get my first day of job. Very exciting table and then someone message me on Twitter being like Oh if you're interested we've got a front end position going like why don't you apply?

And I was like oh I didn't mean I didn't mean like now the whole year my dad's gonna be all right and I kind of forced me to create a CV and create a Portfolio website and this kind of stuff because the offer was there, I wasn't going to say no. So I was going to try to go for that. And then as part of that process, I recorded a video of myself, kind of giving the basics, because I have a YouTube

channel as well. That is a bit unloved at the moment, but with lots of coding tutorials and career stuff. And I had this YouTube intro but it wasn't really appropriate for my Website. Because it's like it was on YouTube channel introduction and welcome to my YouTube channel. Yeah, exactly. So I thought okay I'll record a new video specifically for my job search two minutes. Like about me what I'm looking for. ETC. Yeah, I recorded that video.

I put it on my website. I put it on my YouTube, I put it on Twitter and that's where things kind of went a bit wild. And I got about 12 different messages that night.

So, within six hours of posting that think about 12 job leads in my inbox, Yeah. And one of those was the managing director of Nova Tech and he and I then had a meeting on the Monday. So I posted on the Friday, we had a meeting on the Monday. And by the next Monday, I had another meeting with the team lead, who was my future unit lead and the Tuesday, I had the contract.

Okay, so, it went really untraditional really quickly and I think they knew and I was very open with them that I had all these other Jobs in the pipeline. Yeah and so they knew okay, if we don't move fast, excellent heat is probably gonna go somewhere else. So they managed to kind of bypass the technical test in that specific situation. And then of course when I was interviewing for my current position it's a it's an upper

management role. So technical test wasn't required, they kind of just took my word for it when I explained what I could and couldn't do with programming because although I will still be doing programming as part of my role, it would be more like 20 to 30 percent of my role rather than a you're 90%. So I think they just kind of accept it. Okay. She's probably telling the truth because I don't you exactly at this point point, like why would I lie?

Have you ever been on the other side then of doing an interview in that way and doing an actual like take-home coding thing? That really not a take-home? No, no, I've been in a technical interview before as an interviewer, that was a live one. So what we would do is we'd actually give them an existing practice code base and we'd give them a uml diagram of like the relationship between the data

that they would be working with. And then they had to, you know, use get to clone it onto the machine and then they had to run the tests and they would be five failing tests and then they would have to fix them. Okay? And that was basically, that was the test. It was designed to go for. I think an hour and a half in total. Of course, it was assumed that not every bug would necessarily be fixed. Yeah. It was more about seeing how they communicate how they think about problems.

As I say, we haven't mentioned my book yet, but in one of the things I really focus on in my book about technical test because I've spoken to a lot of people about them, of course. Yeah, he's that very often. That's what they're really testing. Yeah. They're not necessarily testing. If you have all these algorithms, memorized some pieces are but most of the time. Most of the time, what they want to know is, could I work with

this person? Yeah. Like do they know enough to be useful firstly, like in terms of how they approach problems, how they get answers. So for example, I know that my current company allows people to use Google or whatever to look up their answers, you know, it's completely like a normal developer environment. How do people go about finding Solutions? How do they think about problems? And if we give them like three, Asks, how do they prioritize

those tasks? Because usually a technical test is not designed to actually be finished in that time. Exactly. And often what they want to see is what feature you choose or what test, whatever approach, yeah. What's your approach? And why can you explain it? And also when you're doing the test to kind of talk through what you're thinking is? Well I think that's a real skill that people anyone who's looking

for a job. Be it, junior or senior, or any level should practice before they start the interview process? Yeah, is actually coding while explaining what you're doing, imagine that you're in a pair, programming session, you know, and you have to narrate what you're thinking and what you're doing, and why? Because that takes practice, of course. It's exactly form of Master skill, and it's hot. Yeah, sorry. So, yeah, it's a skill.

A lot of these things are skills and like, any skill that can be learnt given practice time and consistency. Yeah. Yeah. That makes sense. I do see it trending towards more of a conversation. I guess, exactly. As you said it, I think yours is very non-traditional. Channel because it kind of came from Twitter world that you were already out there, kind of on social media.

You said, you have a YouTube channel, but for a lot of people, it's traditional coding challenge, confrontational, because that already Narrows kind of the market that we kind of source in in a way. Because not everyone wants to do that area. Will apply to those jobs that require and a lot of people will be sorry to interrupt, but a lot of people will also just actively say no to those exactly

nowadays. There are I have various amounts of offers I will choose the easier path or kind of same values and companies but no coding challenge. So, yeah, we need to figure out a way that also can challenge. Those things can make it apparent within a an interview. We interviewer, there's a hard that the have those skills the skills that we're looking for that. They are valuable that, they don't know everything. Sure. But what a limitations there and then we can actually hire that way.

Yeah. Well I mean, I've heard the same Saying, you know, you can train skills, but not attitude. Yeah, you know, and that's, that's the same kind of thing. I'm not sure I entirely agree, but I think you can train attitude as well, but but I think also maybe it's hire for attitude, not skill or whatever, it's something like that mindset, maybe something like that, but it's definitely to do

with training as well. But that's the thing, I think if someone's got a good mindset and I've got a good attitude and they are thinking in the right way. Yeah. Like they are, as we said earlier, they're breaking down problems in a Why? Or they are approaching approaching technical problems in a logical thought out pattern. Then, you know, they're on the right track? Sure. They don't know. The specific are a method or something.

Like, okay. Fine. You know, but that doesn't make a great developer like, really in the end, how you solve problems. Yeah, that's what makes you a great developer. As you said, learning the programming skills themselves, like you can do that. The Google search, those are easy, you know. Yeah but it's that mindset training that mindset both the technical mindset, you know, the the how to break down problems, how to come up with Solutions.

But also, as we said earlier, this learning mindset, the ability to be open and honest. Yeah and know your worth because I think everyone everyone brings something unique and something different and I think they should be proud of that and have confidence in that. Absolutely. All of that. That's the stuff that really matters, whether you know, C++ but you already know Java and JavaScript. Like, you'll be fine. You can land safely. You'll figure it out.

So that's the kind of stuff that people should be hiring for and usually are hiring for. And so, that's what you have to keep in mind in those interviews is, okay. I just need to show that. I can communicate these ideas that I know how to solve problems. And so, the one thing lots of people forget that when they're interviewing you, they want to imagine working with you every single day, is this. I want to talk to every single day. So, you know, bring your nicest

self basically? Yeah, because because they're also hiring for that. Yeah, yeah. I love that. Let's let's run it off there that I love how this conversation went love. Hearing about how your journey went and how you kind of ended up here everything the ups and downs in between as well. Is there anything you still want to share? Not really, I guess, follow me on Twitter in the description. There's somewhere. Yeah, you should all. Come on, June, July, and July at scold.

Are you belong in Tech? So, as I mentioned, yeah, as I mentioned earlier, that was the one question I had. When I started, do I belong? This kind of says, yes, you do and it's a very super practical guide to getting your first tech job with zero programming knowledge. So, it's like how to learn programming, like break it down like what should you do? It's not a programming book, but it kind of teaches you about how to learn. Then it's about how to blog, how to create an online presence.

To find communities both in your local area and online. And then it's about the actual application process interview skills, these kinds of things. It's super practical, it's not wishy-washy. Oh, it's like me, I'm just like doing something. This is how you do it. Bam, bam, bam. And yeah, it's coming out in July, should be on Amazon Kindle, all those normal cool. So I look forward to checking that out.

Awesome. Thanks everyone for listening and a McDougal all her stuff will be in the description below. And thanks for listening to catch you on the next one. Thanks for listening everyone. If you like the episode, I want to support the show. Don't forget to leave a rating better yet. Share the episode with a friend. Let us know in the comment section below. What you want to hear. I will make it happen. Cheers.

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