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The Internet is my Resume

35 点作者 tomcreighton超过 13 年前

11 条评论

dpritchett超过 13 年前
Reactions to this topic regularly break down into two camps: The people who are proud to have online portfolios, and the people who are angry at the idea that their sterling work experience is undervalued because of the lack of easily available proof.<p>Here's the thing: No one's saying your under-NDA work with proprietary toolsets isn't excellent work or that you're not at the top of your field. All we're saying is that <i>people who might want to hire you need as much information as possible about you and you're not giving them much to go on</i>. The entire "github/Stack Overflow/your portfolio/the web/Work for Pie* is the new resume" movement is about the information asymmetry that plagues the job market. Employers want to hire awesome people! Job seekers want great jobs! Historically neither side really knows what they're getting until well after the offer is signed and the employee is in the building. There are just too many questions you can't ask without sinking the deal, like "is it OK if I punch out at 5 every day?" or "do most of your former coworkers hate you?"<p>A sweet github "resume" offers two things:<p>- Social proof. Are competent people following and working with you in this public setting?<p>- Hard evidence of your technical skills, work style, communications abilities, interests, and persistence. You can't get enough of these from an interview or from a resume.<p>Both of these things are <i>gold</i> to a hiring manager, and it's hard to get better answers than the ones you and your trusted associates can glean by reviewing someone's online portfolio. If you've got a portfolio that compares favorably with the job requirements and the hiring manager actually <i>sees</i> this portfolio, you're getting an interview.<p>This means two things for a job seeker: (1) Have an excellent portfolio. (2) Do everything you possibly can to get that portfolio in front of the people you want to work for. How are we going to make that happen? Focus! Buy targeted Facebook ads for people at the company. Maximize the SEO potential of your personal blog and profile. Become respected and known by the people that your prospective manager also respects and knows. Attend the conferences your dream employers attend. Make every professional move with an eye towards career growth and increasing your desirability on the market. The enemy's gate is down. Good luck.<p>* Disclaimer: I know, like, and work with the founders of Work for Pie. It's a solid idea with lots of room to grow.
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Loic超过 13 年前
If the Internet is your resume, you do not own your resume and you are going to be doomed. You need to own your identity and your resume[0]. This can be as simple as having your own homepage with links to your GitHub, SF.net, Google+, whatever account, but it must be in the first results when searching for your name.<p>[0]: <a href="http://www.marco.org/2011/07/11/own-your-identity" rel="nofollow">http://www.marco.org/2011/07/11/own-your-identity</a>
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Nique超过 13 年前
Excellent article and I realize I'm in the land of hackers (whom I truly appreciate) so... I'm going to ask anyway.<p>What advice do you have for Product Managers who don't code?<p>I'm a decent hacker but I am a damn good PM! Should I post a Project design with screens created in Cacoo? and where should I put it?
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pace超过 13 年前
I disagree.<p>If you are a designer or a developer I fully agree -- the Internet is your CV. Just Github got so important regarding this.<p>But if your career profile is more management related it's a bit more complicated. You cannot go out and spam social networks with your achievements or beg for endorsements on LinkedIn -- this is counterproductive, smells like despair and you just shouldn't do this. Please don't get intimidated by such posts.<p>Best case is always when third parties talk about you AND NOT YOURSELF. With third parties I have news sites or at least well know blogs in mind. That's the best reference the net can give you. To come there isn't easy and the result of some work, don't give in to the temptation to post 24/7 your status on Twitter or blogs, nobody cares and there so many douches having ZERO achievements but are the #1 spammer when it comes to social stuff.<p>To come back to the management profiles: a classic CV is still much better because you are able to finetune and direct its content to the potential employee. One full-blown LinkedIn profile won't fit all -- a basic profile is more than sufficient and can be extended in a CV.<p>A last note: when we (friends or colleagues) notice that somebody is extensively working on his/her public profiles (like LinkedIn) and adding information, achievements etc., we know =&#62; this guy is looking for a new job and we literally feel his despair. Sometimes it's good to let everybody know that you need a new challenge but again: regarding management jobs you need to be much more subtle and try to signal your strengths in a different way.
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Supermighty超过 13 年前
I thought this was going to be by Vint Cerf before I looked.
RandallBrown超过 13 年前
Lots of places still make you apply through their job system (legal reasons or something) and most of those require a resume. Putting links to GitHub, Dribbble, StackOverflow or whatever on a resume is probably a great idea though.
jmjerlecki超过 13 年前
Q: "What have you done?"<p>A: "Google me."<p>I think thats the best resume you can have.
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wccrawford超过 13 年前
I've been telling newbies for a while now that they need to have a portfolio, preferably one that is web-accessible, like a GitHub account. In the past I've had direct input on hiring and one of the biggest factors was always code samples. We spent more time discussing a candidate's code samples than any other thing. Sometimes we even spent longer than the interview.<p>Don't worry if some of it is garbage code. We understand that some things get shared on there that aren't up to snuff. And feel free to tell us which ones to look at.
skeletonjelly超过 13 年前
It's come up before on HN but I don't like the notion that GitHub is <i>the</i> place to show off your skill as a programmer. Not all of us can release work as open source :( For good and bad reasons.
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butterfi超过 13 年前
I agree with the general principals here, but the audience for resumes (the HR people) don't always know, or even care, what GitHub is -- whether they should or not isn't the question. They're trolling through dozens of applications and making HR work harder isn't going to improve your chances. I'll look at your online portfolio or Google your name only after HR has selected the candidates they think I would be interested in.
jshowa超过 13 年前
Uh... almost any reputable company out there requests a resume when applying to a job. So I fail to see how this article is relevant.