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Cover image for [On-Demand Talk] From Tech Support To Developer
Nočnica Fee
Nočnica Fee

Posted on • Edited on

[On-Demand Talk] From Tech Support To Developer

About this talk

In the early 2010s I was working in tech support, struggling to support a family, and watching the developers in my same company have a lot more fun and get paid a lot more. In this talk, I share a bit about my path from support to software development in the hopes that it will help someone else exploring this path. I also explain how I ended up shifting away from being a full-time developer to my current marketing role of Developer Relations.

Takeaways

  1. Focus on a single language, framework, and use case when you're starting out
  2. Define your goals clearly, and try not to default to taking any job that pays more money than your current one
  3. Realize that the advice you get may be outdated, since the industry has shifted a lot in the last 5 years
  4. If, after getting a development job, you realize that it wasn't right for you: there are lots of roles that can still use those skills!

Slides


>> Click here to download slides

🌈 Comment below and ask me questions — I might just answer them during my live speaker discussion!


About Nočnica Fee

Nočnica Fee is a developer advocate, specializing in cloud applications, serverless computing, and containerization. She writes regularly for The New Stack and has been published in Information Age and Forbes. She blogs on dev.to, streams on Twitch at twitch.tv/serverlessmom, and spends her weekends caring for her dozens of houseplants. Get in touch on Twitter @serverless_mom


This on-demand talk is part of CodeLand 2021 — a virtual conference brought to you by CodeNewbie & DEV on September 23 & 24, 2021.

Latest comments (20)

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michaeltharrington profile image
Michael Tharrington • Edited

Heyo! If you have any questions for Noćnica (@serverlessmom ) please drop them here! 🙏

We're gathering up these questions for the live speaker discussion coming up later on. 📣

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noviicee profile image
Novice

Woah! Feels like I am getting some real knowledge out here :D
Thanks Nočnica for the talk.

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rizzydc profile image
Ruzel Zakirov

Thanks so much for sharing your story. It's actually so hard for me to choose and concentrate on only few things and not to be overwhelmed by different frameworks and languages. But I guess one just needs to set priorities to actually be good at smth. Especially when you are quite a beginner in the field you are diving in.

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whatnotery profile image
Jos O'shea (they/them) • Edited

Nočnica I'm a non-binary aspiring dev who's worked as IT support for the past 8 years and not particularly enjoyed it. I'm not out at work due to an explicitly queerphobic boss but I don't have a strong educational background so I feel stuck in the job because the money is decent (but not developer money) and I need health insurance for my own mental health reasons. Thanks for this talk, all the advice was solid and it felt good to see that it's a career transition that's feasible. I'd love to connect more if you wouldn't mind! I followed you on Twitter, I'm @whatnotery !

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deweyhammers profile image
Richard Dewey Hammers

Hey Nocnica How can I reach out to you? I tried to find a way to message you and cannot find any

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towers1209 profile image
Loreto E. Torres

Thank you for sharing your very personal journey, @serverlessmom .

I really appreciate it.

As a developer advocate, what is it exactly that you do?

Thanks again, @serverlessmom .

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kaj profile image
Kajah

I found your story very valuable and also appreciated your discussion of capitalism. Thanks!

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fizzybuzzybeezy profile image
fizzybuzzybeezy • Edited

Nocnica, great point on the point in time matters when listening to advice on getting work!

Mental health issues can make things harder for us to manage our career trajectories, even though we're all high functioning in living with our own struggles. <3

Go to therapy++. I love this advice! It doesn't change you except to make you care better for yourself, maybe become more of yourself. It doesn't have to stop your goals. It will help you achieve them.

Thank you!

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srivera12 profile image
Sarah Rivera

Thank you for sharing your story!

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callumreid profile image
callumreid

I am curious on strategies for how to figure out what you are good at. When focused intently on one goal (becoming a developer), it seems hard to try out different hats. Would you recommend getting into a career space before exploring different avenues within it?

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serverlessmom profile image
Nočnica Fee

Really my recommendation there was to think about combining development with something you were good at before you started learning to code. Even if it's not something you got paid for, just think about the work, or work-like activities, that you really enjoyed.

If you enjoyed schmoozing while tending bar, developer Advocacy might be for you.

If you were always the one who planned your family vacation itinerary, complete with timetables and meal plans, you might want to think about project management.

Or if you liked selling, making deals, and growing your paycheck with hard work and high performance, maybe Solutions Architect is the right role.

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callumreid profile image
callumreid

This plus what you said during the discussion are such helpful and insightful things to hear. Really helps clarify how to think about directions to take, many thanks for your response and talk