The best career advice I’ve received (我的职业生涯建议)_the advice i accepted作文-程序员宅基地

技术标签: 职业  建议  其他  工作  生涯  

原文链接: The best career advice I’ve received

I recently had an interesting discussion with a colleague. We were recounting our job histories and how our, shall we say colorful personalities, could have negatively impacted us long term. The truth is, I was kind of an asshole coming out of college (some would argue I’m still kind of an asshole, but that’s beside the point). I was arrogant and bitingly sarcastic, a generally irreverent character. I thought I knew it all and was quite proud of myself for it.

I had a habit of telling more experienced engineers that they were doing things wrong, and despite being right most of the time, I didn’t have the personality to make it effective. During one particularly engaging conversation, one of the senior engineers stopped and said, in these exact words, “I’m going to f***en beat the shit out of you if you don’t shut up.” I laughed it off because I knew he wouldn’t dare, and only years later did I realize the relevance of that statement: it was actually what he wanted to do.

Since that time I’ve grown up a lot, learned to watch what I say, and treat people with respect regardless of defining characteristics. The sarcasm stays in check while in a professional environment; I let it out to play when I’m with good friends. This self-control, along with a lot of other invaluable lessons, came to me not of my own accord, but through the careful guidance of the mentors I’ve had along the way. If not for them, who knows if my interpersonal relationships would have short-circuited my career.

The truth is that I have been incredibly blessed in my career because of the people I’ve come into contact with. My managers along the way molded a really rough-around-the-edges character into someone I’m proud to be. More than that, because of their influence, I’m not just a good programmer – I’m a good teammate and a good person. So impactful were these people on my life that I frequently recount their advice to the colleagues that I now mentor.

I also find their advice to be universally applicable, so I’d like to share the things I was told that helped me along the way. Of course, some of these are paraphrased since my memory for exact phrases isn’t all that great, but I believe I’ve captured the important parts correctly.

Don’t be a short-order cook

My very first job lasted 8 months because the company shut down. As I was talking with my manager about what I would do next, he gave me this advice:

Nicholas, you’re worth more than your code. Whatever your next gig is, make sure that you’re not a short-order cook. Don’t accept a job where you’re told exactly what to build and how to build it. You need to work somewhere that appreciates your insights into the product as well as your ability to build it.

This is something I’ve kept in mind throughout my career. Simply being an implementer isn’t good enough – you need to be involved in the process that leads up to implementation. Good engineers don’t just follow orders, they give feedback to and work with product owners to make the product better. Fortunately, I’ve chosen my jobs wisely and never ended up in a situation where people didn’t respect or value my insights.

Self-promote

My second manager at Yahoo pulled me aside one day to give me some advice. He had been watching my work and felt like I was hiding a bit:

You do great work. I mean really great work. I like how your code looks and that it rarely breaks. The problem is that others don’t see it. In order for you to get credit for the work you’re doing, you have to let people know. You need to do a bit of self-promotion to get noticed.

It took me a little while to digest what he was saying, but I finally figured it out. If you do good work, but no one knows that you did good work, then it doesn’t really help you. Your manager can back you up but can’t make your case for you. People within the organization need to understand your value, and the best way to do that is to tell people what you did.

This is advice I give to many of my colleagues now. Self-promoting doesn’t mean, “look at me, I’m awesome.” It means letting people know when you’ve hit major milestones, or when you’ve learned something new. It means showing people the work that you’re proud of. It means celebrating your accomplishments and the accomplishments of others. It means being visible within the organization. The engineer who sits quietly in a corner and just codes away is always a bit mysterious – don’t be like that. A quick email to say, “hey, I finished the new email layout. Let me know what you think” goes a long way.

It’s about people

I was very title-driven earlier in my career. I always wanted to know what I had to do to be promoted. During my first one-on-one with my new manager on the Yahoo homepage, I asked what it would take for me to get promoted. His words still ring in my ears:

At a certain point, you stop being judged on your technical knowledge and start being judged on the way you interact with people.

I’m not sure I’ve ever received a better insight into the software engineering profession since that time. He was exactly right. At that point, no one was questioning my technical ability. I was known as a guy who wrote good, high-quality code that rarely had bugs. What I lacked was leadership skill.

Since that time, I’ve seen countless engineers get stuck at one level in their career. Smart people, good code, but the inability to work effectively with others keeps them where they are. Anytime someone feels stuck in their software engineering career, I recount this advice and it has always been right on the money.

None of this matters

I went through a period at Yahoo where I was frustrated. Maybe frustrated isn’t the right word, more like angry. I had angry outbursts and was arguing with people constantly. Things were going wrong and I didn’t like that. During one particularly rough day, I asked one of my mentors how he managed to stay calm when so many things were going wrong. His response:

It’s easy. You see, none of this matters. So some crappy code got checked in, so the site went down. So what? Work can’t be your whole life. These aren’t real problems, they’re work problems. What really matters is what happens outside of work. I go home and my wife is waiting for me. That’s pretty nice.

I had moved to California from Massachusetts and had a hard time making friends. Work was my life, it was what kept me sane, so when it wasn’t going that meant my life wasn’t going well. This conversation made me realize I had to have something else going on in my life, something I could go back to and forget about the troubles I had at work.

He was right, once I shifted my mindset and recategorized the annoying things at work as “work things,” I was able to think more clearly. I was able to calm down at work and have much more pleasant interactions with people.

Authority, your way

When I was first promoted to principal engineer at Yahoo, I sat down with my director to better understand what the role entailed. I knew I had to be more of a leader, but I was having trouble being authoritative. I asked for help. Here’s what he said:

I can’t tell you how to be authoritative, that’s something you need to figure out on your own. Different people have different styles. What you need to do is find a style that you can live with, that makes you comfortable. I can’t tell you what that is, but you do need to find it for this position.

I spent a lot of time that year observing people of authority and how they interacted with others. I took note as to how they walked, how they talked, how they dealt with problem situations. I tried different styles before I finally came across one that worked for me. My style is uniquely me and anyone learning to be in a position of authority has to go through the same growing pains. My advantage was that my mentor clued me about the process up front.

Moving from “how?” to “what?”

During a conversation with my manager at Yahoo, I asked what the expectations were with my new position. He answered:

To this point in your career, you’ve answered the question, “how?” As in, we tell you what needs to be done and you figure out how to do it. At this point, though, you need to answer the question, “what?” I’m expecting you to come and tell me what needs to be done.

This is the part where I see a lot of engineers get tripped up, and I would have as well if not for this piece of advice. Switching from “how?” to “what?” is very hard and takes time to develop. It also takes a bit of maturity to be left to your own desires as to what you focus on. After all, if you can spend your time on anything you want, you are also solely responsible for what you produce.

At Box, we call this “running open loop,” meaning that you do your job with minimal oversight and yet still are making a significant positive impact on the engineering organization and the company as a whole. This is the step where many engineers fail to make the leap, and I still give this advice to anyone who is trying to get to the next level.

Act like you’re in charge

I had just sat through a meeting where I had nothing to say. During my one-on-one with my director, I mentioned that I was just in a meeting where I had no idea why I was there and had nothing to contribute. He said:

Don’t ever do that again. If you’re in a meeting, it’s because you are there to participate. If you’re not sure why you’re there, stop and ask. If you’re not needed, leave. You’re in a leadership position, act like it. Don’t go quietly into a room. Just act like you’re in charge and people will believe it.

In that piece of advice, my mentor had reminded me of a lesson I learned while acting in high school: no one knows when you’re acting. If you’re nervous but act like you’re not, then people won’t know that you’re nervous. The same with leadership. The old phrase fake it til you make it comes to mind. From that point on, I never sat quietly in a meeting. I made sure I only went to meetings that needed me to participate and then I would participate.

Let them win

I went through a particular period where there were a lot of arguments on the team. I prided myself on ending those arguments with authority. I had a “my ruling is final” mentality, and my manager noticed that and gave me this piece of advice:

I see a lot of arguing going on, and I see you pushing through to win a lot. I know that most of the time you are right, but every once in a while let them win. Pick the things that really matter to you and push for those but let the other things go. There’s no need to win every argument.

This was one piece of advice I resisted initially. I was right nearly all of the time, why would I ever let someone else win? However, as I had grown to trust his instincts, I gave it a shot. The result: there were less arguments. People didn’t feel like they had to get one over on me, and in turn, I became better at identifying things I really didn’t care that much about. I stuck to my guns on important issues and let the others ones get resolved by the other party. The intensity of all conversations dropped considerably.

Conclusion

Looking back at the brash guy I was when I graduated college, my career could have ended up very different. I was seen as a malcontent, a smart but hard-to-deal-with guy who people dealt with because they had to. If it weren’t for the mentors I had along the way, as well as some humbling failures early in my career, my interpersonal skills (or lack thereof) could have very well done me in. These days, I regularly seek out those who are more experienced than me and ask for advice. I may no longer make big, glaring mistakes, but I also don’t want to wait for one to happen to seek out the experienced insights of someone I trust.

The nearly five years I was at Yahoo were some of the most transformative in my career. I got to work on interesting problems at a large scale, but moreso I was blessed with a series of wonderful managers and other mentors within my organization. I credit those conversations with turning me into a person that I’m proud of today, both at work and outside in “real life.”

If I can leave you with one overriding piece of career advice, it would be this: identify someone at your work that is smarter than you in some way (technically, organizationally, etc.) and attach yourself to them. See if you can regularly have lunch or coffee and pick their brain for the vast amount of knowledge it has. Your career, and maybe even your life, could end up drastically better by doing so.

原文链接:https://www.nczonline.net/blog/2013/10/15/the-best-career-advice-ive-received/

版权声明:本文为博主原创文章,遵循 CC 4.0 BY-SA 版权协议,转载请附上原文出处链接和本声明。
本文链接:https://blog.csdn.net/hpulfc/article/details/79470222

智能推荐

c# 调用c++ lib静态库_c#调用lib-程序员宅基地

文章浏览阅读2w次,点赞7次,收藏51次。四个步骤1.创建C++ Win32项目动态库dll 2.在Win32项目动态库中添加 外部依赖项 lib头文件和lib库3.导出C接口4.c#调用c++动态库开始你的表演...①创建一个空白的解决方案,在解决方案中添加 Visual C++ , Win32 项目空白解决方案的创建:添加Visual C++ , Win32 项目这......_c#调用lib

deepin/ubuntu安装苹方字体-程序员宅基地

文章浏览阅读4.6k次。苹方字体是苹果系统上的黑体,挺好看的。注重颜值的网站都会使用,例如知乎:font-family: -apple-system, BlinkMacSystemFont, Helvetica Neue, PingFang SC, Microsoft YaHei, Source Han Sans SC, Noto Sans CJK SC, W..._ubuntu pingfang

html表单常见操作汇总_html表单的处理程序有那些-程序员宅基地

文章浏览阅读159次。表单表单概述表单标签表单域按钮控件demo表单标签表单标签基本语法结构<form action="处理数据程序的url地址“ method=”get|post“ name="表单名称”></form><!--action,当提交表单时,向何处发送表单中的数据,地址可以是相对地址也可以是绝对地址--><!--method将表单中的数据传送给服务器处理,get方式直接显示在url地址中,数据可以被缓存,且长度有限制;而post方式数据隐藏传输,_html表单的处理程序有那些

PHP设置谷歌验证器(Google Authenticator)实现操作二步验证_php otp 验证器-程序员宅基地

文章浏览阅读1.2k次。使用说明:开启Google的登陆二步验证(即Google Authenticator服务)后用户登陆时需要输入额外由手机客户端生成的一次性密码。实现Google Authenticator功能需要服务器端和客户端的支持。服务器端负责密钥的生成、验证一次性密码是否正确。客户端记录密钥后生成一次性密码。下载谷歌验证类库文件放到项目合适位置(我这边放在项目Vender下面)https://github.com/PHPGangsta/GoogleAuthenticatorPHP代码示例://引入谷_php otp 验证器

【Python】matplotlib.plot画图横坐标混乱及间隔处理_matplotlib更改横轴间距-程序员宅基地

文章浏览阅读4.3k次,点赞5次,收藏11次。matplotlib.plot画图横坐标混乱及间隔处理_matplotlib更改横轴间距

docker — 容器存储_docker 保存容器-程序员宅基地

文章浏览阅读2.2k次。①Storage driver 处理各镜像层及容器层的处理细节,实现了多层数据的堆叠,为用户 提供了多层数据合并后的统一视图②所有 Storage driver 都使用可堆叠图像层和写时复制(CoW)策略③docker info 命令可查看当系统上的 storage driver主要用于测试目的,不建议用于生成环境。_docker 保存容器

随便推点

网络拓扑结构_网络拓扑csdn-程序员宅基地

文章浏览阅读834次,点赞27次,收藏13次。网络拓扑结构是指计算机网络中各组件(如计算机、服务器、打印机、路由器、交换机等设备)及其连接线路在物理布局或逻辑构型上的排列形式。这种布局不仅描述了设备间的实际物理连接方式,也决定了数据在网络中流动的路径和方式。不同的网络拓扑结构影响着网络的性能、可靠性、可扩展性及管理维护的难易程度。_网络拓扑csdn

JS重写Date函数,兼容IOS系统_date.prototype 将所有 ios-程序员宅基地

文章浏览阅读1.8k次,点赞5次,收藏8次。IOS系统Date的坑要创建一个指定时间的new Date对象时,通常的做法是:new Date("2020-09-21 11:11:00")这行代码在 PC 端和安卓端都是正常的,而在 iOS 端则会提示 Invalid Date 无效日期。在IOS年月日中间的横岗许换成斜杠,也就是new Date("2020/09/21 11:11:00")通常为了兼容IOS的这个坑,需要做一些额外的特殊处理,笔者在开发的时候经常会忘了兼容IOS系统。所以就想试着重写Date函数,一劳永逸,避免每次ne_date.prototype 将所有 ios

如何将EXCEL表导入plsql数据库中-程序员宅基地

文章浏览阅读5.3k次。方法一:用PLSQL Developer工具。 1 在PLSQL Developer的sql window里输入select * from test for update; 2 按F8执行 3 打开锁, 再按一下加号. 鼠标点到第一列的列头,使全列成选中状态,然后粘贴,最后commit提交即可。(前提..._excel导入pl/sql

Git常用命令速查手册-程序员宅基地

文章浏览阅读83次。Git常用命令速查手册1、初始化仓库git init2、将文件添加到仓库git add 文件名 # 将工作区的某个文件添加到暂存区 git add -u # 添加所有被tracked文件中被修改或删除的文件信息到暂存区,不处理untracked的文件git add -A # 添加所有被tracked文件中被修改或删除的文件信息到暂存区,包括untracked的文件...

分享119个ASP.NET源码总有一个是你想要的_千博二手车源码v2023 build 1120-程序员宅基地

文章浏览阅读202次。分享119个ASP.NET源码总有一个是你想要的_千博二手车源码v2023 build 1120

【C++缺省函数】 空类默认产生的6个类成员函数_空类默认产生哪些类成员函数-程序员宅基地

文章浏览阅读1.8k次。版权声明:转载请注明出处 http://blog.csdn.net/irean_lau。目录(?)[+]1、缺省构造函数。2、缺省拷贝构造函数。3、 缺省析构函数。4、缺省赋值运算符。5、缺省取址运算符。6、 缺省取址运算符 const。[cpp] view plain copy_空类默认产生哪些类成员函数

推荐文章

热门文章

相关标签