TE
科技回声
首页24小时热榜最新最佳问答展示工作
GitHubTwitter
首页

科技回声

基于 Next.js 构建的科技新闻平台,提供全球科技新闻和讨论内容。

GitHubTwitter

首页

首页最新最佳问答展示工作

资源链接

HackerNews API原版 HackerNewsNext.js

© 2025 科技回声. 版权所有。

Ask HN: What did you do that helped you reach senior title?

23 点作者 brunooliv超过 2 年前
I doubt there&#x27;s a single, pivotal thing that you can do to reach the top of the IC ladder, but, besides looking into your internal company career ladders, what have you done, maybe by going the extra mile, or taking ideas from HN or nice subreddits that really helped you in any way?<p>I&#x27;ve managed to get promoted to a mid level position by actually streamlining our onboarding process together with my manager during a time of team growth at the job, for example.<p>Do you have similar stories to share maybe?

11 条评论

seanhunter超过 2 年前
I have been promoted in just about every company I worked at up to C-suite where obviously promotion isn’t really relevant any more. The common factor in each case is I always (no matter what my theoretical job title) try to do two things:<p>1) Understand as much as I can about the actual mission of the company. What is it trying to do, why does this make money, what is the impact it has on the broader society, how does my team&#x2F;department contribute to this mission, etc? This helps to align my activities as much as possible with the companies actual mission because often bosses will give you tasks which are about furthering their career rather than doing this. If you try to make your work line up with the mission you avoid a lot of that sort of nonsense. Even if you don’t succeed, you will learn a lot by doing this and that will help to keep your work interesting.<p>2) Strive to increase my personal impact. Don’t try to get promoted, don’t try to get influence don’t try to increase salary etc. Try to figure out ways you can have a greater impact. All the other things will flow from that if you succeed.
评论 #33936954 未加载
评论 #33931530 未加载
jstx1超过 2 年前
Senior means different things across companies so if the goal is the title (which it probably shouldn&#x27;t be), the fastest way to get there is to change companies - there will be <i>someone</i> willing to hire you with a senior title.<p>Or at least that was the case until recently, I don&#x27;t know what&#x27;s happening with the job market anymore.
评论 #33931075 未加载
_rm超过 2 年前
I submitted my resignation during an exodus, and then told the CEO of my company at the time I&#x27;d withdraw it if he changed my title to senior and gave me full remote rights.<p>I was already operating at a senior level at the time, so it wasn&#x27;t inappropriate. But sometimes there&#x27;s only one language people understand, so you have to speak to them in it.
评论 #33933251 未加载
comprev超过 2 年前
This might sound snarky but I assure you it is not. The most simple method is applying for a &quot;senior&quot; role then accepting their offer.<p>In the smaller start-up&#x2F;scale-up world where &quot;everyone&#x27;s a senior&quot; you&#x27;ll be working with colleagues who only have 2-3yr experience, yet already have senior titles.
tkiolp4超过 2 年前
By getting acknowledged by my peers. Knowledge is the first step, so you need to know your stuff. The second step is to sell yourself as such knowledgeable person. Know what’s your position in the team&#x2F;area&#x2F;company and ask to be compensated as such.<p>If you are switching companies, you either switch as being already a senior or you do it pretty good at the interview. In any case, you still need to get acknowledged by peers once you start.
clnq超过 2 年前
The biggest quick hack to success in my career has been quickly leaving companies where I&#x27;m unlikely to succeed.<p>The second-biggest one was realizing that negotiating power is the currency of career progression. The more you use it, the faster you will advance.
munbun超过 2 年前
Being visible and present. Did this mostly by unblocking my team, writing ADRs for larger features, being involved during pre-grooming, and helping people via huddle or pairing.<p>Things also move much faster if you have frequent 1:1s and keep a log of your wins.
heeton超过 2 年前
I started to focus less on development.<p>This was <i>my</i> track, it will be different for others, but: seniority meant understanding user &#x2F; business problems and then making better decisions about what to build.<p>I enjoy the quip that “juniors find complicated solutions to simple problems, mids find complex solutions to complex problems and seniors find simple solutions for complex problems”.<p>Sometimes the best thing you can do as a dev is to re-frame the problem, and I think a certain level of experience or confidence is needed to do that. But you can definitely cultivate the skill and get there sooner.
brunooliv超过 2 年前
Really great insights here so far! I can see that indeed the idea of unblocking your team, improve workflows, focus on writing documentation and working on things that matter to and further the company&#x27;s business plan and mission are really key ingredients and, I believe I&#x27;ve been doing that for the better part of last year so I&#x27;m really glad to see that my own personal path and experience is aligned with a lot of the ideas I&#x27;ve read here!! Really amazing insights!!
quickthrower2超过 2 年前
I don’t recall! I guess one of the companies decided to start using it because I have a few yoe. Not something I care about too much. As long as I do senior type stuff in the job and get paid well.
rufius超过 2 年前
Look for pointless work being done in the org and advocate for moving teams to working on what actually needs to get done.<p>It sounds weird but you’d be surprised how often teams have lost any good reason to be doing what they’re doing at a micro level. They might still be on track at a macro level, they’ve just got pointless work slowing them up.
评论 #33934006 未加载