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Ask HN: How to grow your career reputation after spinning your wheels so long?

16 pointsby zanydudeabout 6 years ago
As a software engineer, I have about 10 years of experience in the industry, and working for 7 different companies.<p>But zero promotions or pay raises within any company. I have no experience managing or training others. I only get pay raises when I change companies, but not by much.<p>I don&#x27;t know if always being contractor has anything to do with the above. Since my very first job out of college was a contractor job.<p>You see, I was offered a contract-to-hire job at a web agency as a Junior SWE but the W-2 &quot;hire&quot; part never happened. I think that part of the contract was broken and my boss just said, you&#x27;re now a permanent contractor.<p>Ever since leaving that job it&#x27;s been contract after contract job for the next 9 years. So I always feel less visible compared to employees, on the sidelines never really in tune with company politics or what their goals are.<p>I get told a lot that I do good work and I&#x27;m a good communicator. But they never follow-up to give me future contract work.<p>It makes me feel very alone in this career world, and I don&#x27;t mean in the &quot;I have trouble making new friends after college&quot; sense. I mean that with workplace relations I don&#x27;t feel a sense of camaraderie. Especially when I work as a remote contractor.<p>I lack the career wisdom and maturity of a typical 10+ year engineer. Nobody really thinks of me as someone as a skilled expert in a topic, someone they could forward jobs to, or refer me to.<p>Any ideas of where to start? Build up a network and a reputation that is expected of a 10 year software engineer? I started going to meetups more, though not always easy to go to the downtown ones due to parking and time constraints. But I&#x27;m going to a few of the ones I can.<p>I already have built several personal projects online, as a result of the boredom of unemployment. So that&#x27;s already an ongoing process.<p>Other ideas to be &quot;known&quot; in your local circle of professionals? I feel almost as lost as I was when I just graduated.

9 comments

jimrhods23about 6 years ago
You are contracting and essentially a business. Your next career move is to find more clients.<p>As a remote contractor, you really won&#x27;t feel like you are part of a team. I&#x27;ve been contracting for the last 10 years and I don&#x27;t expect to be part of a team, because it&#x27;s only a way for me to fund my other businesses.<p>You need to find a 9-5 job where you can go into an office every day and interact with your co-workers.<p>&quot;I lack the career wisdom and maturity of a typical 10+ year engineer. Nobody really thinks of me as someone as a skilled expert in a topic, someone they could forward jobs to, or refer me to.&quot;<p>Why wait for referrals? I found all of my contracting jobs by reaching out on Linkedin or various job sites.
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cbanekabout 6 years ago
&gt; I don&#x27;t feel a sense of camaraderie. Especially when I work as a remote contractor.<p>This seems to generally be a hurdle of remote work. It&#x27;s hard to feel that sense of camaraderie when you are far away. There&#x27;s a lot of reasons for this that aren&#x27;t about you or them: like lack of face time, voice communication, out of sight out of mind, hard to get to know a remote person personally without &quot;watercooler&quot; talk, etc. It&#x27;s also pretty common that remote people are left out of promotions and exciting projects for these reasons.<p>I&#x27;m a bit nervous on the 7 jobs in 10 years. One phrase that comes to mind is &quot;10 years of experience vs 1 year of experience 10 times.&quot; Maintaining&#x2F;operating something you&#x27;ve built is a key step in improving your skills, since you can see your own mistakes and learn from them.
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ramtatatamabout 6 years ago
Start simple - print visit cards and come up with catchy motto. Go to any local IT event and make contact with people - in the end business is people and their problems, tech is just a tool to solve them. I personally found meetups and networking a skill on its own rights, more you practice better you become. You need to be a salesman of your own self. You will get your name known to people who make business decisions, that&#x27;s the easiest way to find yourself meaningful career and coin your own brand - even if you do not want to contract anymore.
imhoguyabout 6 years ago
&gt; I get told a lot that I do good work and I&#x27;m a good communicator. But they never follow-up to give me future contract work.<p>&gt; Like I have been told I do great work but they never want to re-engage for more work. Not in six months, not in two or four years.<p>That is strong signal of some problem to me. Either your niche is screwed or you have some issue they don&#x27;t want to tell you about. Did you ask them enough feedback about your performance during your work time?<p>Maybe you need to be more proactive?<p>Be proactive with pay and role. Foremost it is unusual to get any pay rise or promotion as contractor, you should explicitly ask for it before renewal, but you need to also have confidence you have grounds to do it.<p>Be proactive with discovering the company and people there. During your work term if you smell the project dries out you should proactively seek what else you can work on there - this is often easiest way to jump into a new competence.<p>Be proactive with asking guys from past companies how is the stuff going and that you are available to help them with it if there is any need.<p>You are remote, right, but can you arrange frequent on-site visits to show up and gain human trust which you can later turn into Slack chit-chat?<p>&gt; I already have built several personal projects online, as a result of the boredom of unemployment. So that&#x27;s already an ongoing process.<p>Be proactive! Certifications, trainings. Don&#x27;t become unemployment victim, say you run planned self-development time now.<p>&gt; I started going to meetups more, though not always easy to go to the downtown ones due to parking and time constraints. But I&#x27;m going to a few of the ones I can.<p>Be proactive! Give presentation, share some knowledge, experience, how-to. Politely tell on your contact slide that you are currently available for hire.<p>Be proactive with job channels too. Improve your LinkedIn profile, buy month of Pro package for exposure. Reach out to local recruiters and agencies - they have vast networks for sure. They will tell you how to improve your CV and pitch to get foot into the door.<p>And finally if your niche doesn&#x27;t serve you, find a new one.
shmoothabout 6 years ago
The best way to get ahead is to stay someplace a long time<p>Advance through attrition mainly<p>It’s boring and not challenging but...
quickthrower2about 6 years ago
For your next gig apply for something with a bit more seniority. Maybe an architect role? You are less likely to get it, sure, but it’s not impossible. If you persist you will get it.
cimmanomabout 6 years ago
Have you tried applying for jobs that are straight up full-time instead of contract-to-hire?
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asimjalisabout 6 years ago
What do you want to do?
brentisabout 6 years ago
Do you have a comprehensive git repo? What about your side business or blog showing your passion? If neither you really are just a tool - a function if you will - for others who want to be in front of the pack.