48 min

What to Do If Nobody's Hiring (and How to Slide Into Their DMs When They Do), with Rachel Nabors The Scrimba Podcast

    • Tecnología

Meet  Rachel Lee Nabors 🇺🇸🇬🇧! They are an award-winning cartoonist who transitioned to become a developer with a passion for teaching the world how to code. Rachel has worked at major tech companies such as Microsoft, AWS, and Meta. At Meta, they were a pivotal contributor to react.dev, the award-winning version of React documentation.
Rachel is also the author of the Tech Career Survival Guide, a series of Substack essays that may or may not become a book. In these essays, they teach readers about emotional resilience, managing change, and the practical aspects of working in tech. In this episode, Rachel will share their secret for landing high-profile tech jobs, as well as advice for owning your non-linear career path, especially if you're a career changer. You will also discover how to deal with a job market where opportunities may seem scarce and what you can do if nobody seems to be hiring. Plus: why you shouldn't email Dan Abramov, who to reach out to instead, and why collecting feedback from people directly is often better than staring at analytics.
🔗 Connect with Rachel
🧑‍💼 LinkedIn🌐 Website✉️ The Tech Career Survival Guide🐦 Twitter꩜ Threads🧑‍🚀 GitHub⏰ Timestamps
How Rachel became a developer while being a cartoonist (01:29)How Rachel handled the career shift into professional development (03:08)Code can make things come to life (05:48)Very few people are given jobs just because they're popular (09:22)Break (11:07)How Rachel gets her FAANG roles (12:28)What to do if nobody's hiring (14:48)How can a new developer create value in the community? (16:28)How Alex did the same (18:41)Great Recession was tough, but it brought up some great engineering (21:17)Increase your chance to get lucky later (25:43)What to do if you don't have a linear career path (27:38)When changing career paths, it can feel like starting from scratch (31:26)Developing expertise is not a good thing! (32:14)Are your skills out of date, and how Rachel transferred her old skills into new roles (33:33)Barista engineering (36:52)Don't be ashamed of your previous work experience, however unrelated (38:40)How Rachel adjusts to change and challenges and helps others do the same through The Tech Career Survival Guide (40:56)⭐️ Leave a Review
If you enjoyed this episode, please leave a 5-star review here and tell us who you want to see on the next podcast.You can also Tweet Alex from Scrimba at @bookercodes and tell them what lessons you learned from the episode so that he can thank you personally for tuning in 🙏 Or tell Jan he's butchered your name here.

Meet  Rachel Lee Nabors 🇺🇸🇬🇧! They are an award-winning cartoonist who transitioned to become a developer with a passion for teaching the world how to code. Rachel has worked at major tech companies such as Microsoft, AWS, and Meta. At Meta, they were a pivotal contributor to react.dev, the award-winning version of React documentation.
Rachel is also the author of the Tech Career Survival Guide, a series of Substack essays that may or may not become a book. In these essays, they teach readers about emotional resilience, managing change, and the practical aspects of working in tech. In this episode, Rachel will share their secret for landing high-profile tech jobs, as well as advice for owning your non-linear career path, especially if you're a career changer. You will also discover how to deal with a job market where opportunities may seem scarce and what you can do if nobody seems to be hiring. Plus: why you shouldn't email Dan Abramov, who to reach out to instead, and why collecting feedback from people directly is often better than staring at analytics.
🔗 Connect with Rachel
🧑‍💼 LinkedIn🌐 Website✉️ The Tech Career Survival Guide🐦 Twitter꩜ Threads🧑‍🚀 GitHub⏰ Timestamps
How Rachel became a developer while being a cartoonist (01:29)How Rachel handled the career shift into professional development (03:08)Code can make things come to life (05:48)Very few people are given jobs just because they're popular (09:22)Break (11:07)How Rachel gets her FAANG roles (12:28)What to do if nobody's hiring (14:48)How can a new developer create value in the community? (16:28)How Alex did the same (18:41)Great Recession was tough, but it brought up some great engineering (21:17)Increase your chance to get lucky later (25:43)What to do if you don't have a linear career path (27:38)When changing career paths, it can feel like starting from scratch (31:26)Developing expertise is not a good thing! (32:14)Are your skills out of date, and how Rachel transferred her old skills into new roles (33:33)Barista engineering (36:52)Don't be ashamed of your previous work experience, however unrelated (38:40)How Rachel adjusts to change and challenges and helps others do the same through The Tech Career Survival Guide (40:56)⭐️ Leave a Review
If you enjoyed this episode, please leave a 5-star review here and tell us who you want to see on the next podcast.You can also Tweet Alex from Scrimba at @bookercodes and tell them what lessons you learned from the episode so that he can thank you personally for tuning in 🙏 Or tell Jan he's butchered your name here.

48 min

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