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Personal Growth for Developers: What’s a Trajectory Look Like?

As a developer, there are a lot of very cool directions your career path can lead you.

You could end up a team lead or manager, or even Chief Technology Officer for your company. You could be a top-tier coder in a particular technical field. You could be an entreprogrammer, a contractor who’s sought after for the coolest new app or startup.

The point is, there are a lot of choices you can make about where you want your career to take you.

But getting to the point where you’re making those big choices takes time, dedication, and a career-long trajectory of personal growth. Where do you start? How do you make sure your career keeps moving forward, propelling you toward your end goals?

Realistically, you’ll likely need to spend around a decade honing your skills and working your way through the typical career ladder for engineers. But once you’ve put in the time and built up the skills and knowledge, a lot of new doors will open up.

Here’s what you can expect during the early and mid-stage years of your career.

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Step 1: Junior Developer

Graduating with a CS degree, completing a bootcamp, or finishing a tech apprenticeship will all put you in a good position to snag a role as a junior developer. This is entry level. It’s the ground floor where most great engineers started, and it’s a great place to learn how to take the skills you learned during your educational background and apply them to the real world.

A junior developer should be able to:

  • Write simple scripts
  • Understand database and application services, like queuing and caching

It’s pretty normal to be at this stage for up to the first three years of your career. During that time, you’ll probably find yourself sometimes doing similar work to senior developers and wondering why you don’t have their title. That’s normal! It’s all part of the learning process, and you’ll be at that stage soon enough.

Step 2: Software Developer or Senior Software Developer

With a little job experience, you’ll be qualified for positions as a software developer or senior software developer. Not much about the job itself changes at this point, but with some real work experience under your belt, you’ll have the knowledge and confidence to do more complex tasks and projects.

A software developer or senior software developer should be able to:

  • Demonstrate how they’ve learned and grown with some experience in the job behind them
  • Write complex code
  • Thoroughly understand things like databases, application services, and application lifecycle development

Typically, 1-8 years of experience in the field will give you the qualifications you need for this level. Software developers and senior developers often aren’t quite at the level they’d need to be to manage and supervise others, but they’re on their way. At this point, engineers can start to choose their next steps based on their future goals, and there are two good, but different, next steps. The question to ask yourself to decide which of these two paths to take is this: Do you want to manage a team?

Step 3A: Lead Developer or Technical Architect

If you do want more challenges and responsibilities, but don’t want to manage a team, a position as a lead developer or technical architect is a good next step for you. These are specialized engineers who write code that others look to for help or inspiration. They also design the most complex systems that will then be implemented by other engineers.

A lead developer or technical architect should be able to:

  • Show skills and knowledge developed with years of programming experience
  • Have subject matter expertise
  • Have well-developed technical skills
  • Be able to conceptualize, plan, and build out complex projects

Alternatively, if you do want to manage a team, you can take a different path.

Step 3B: Development Team Lead or Software Development Manager

Stepping into a supervisory or managerial role is another logical next step you can take after you’ve gained the necessary experience.

A development team lead or manager should be able to:

  • Manage large-scale projects
  • Manage teams of people
  • Recruit, hire, and fire developers

Taking a management path requires more than just coding skills. In order to succeed as a supervisor, you’ll need soft skills like communication, leadership, and the ability to mentor and teach others. This might take more work, since those are skills that don’t inherently come in an engineer’s playbook and will have to be learned separately.

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So whether you’re a junior programmer just starting out, or you’re looking to step into your first management role, you might be wondering what it takes to keep your career moving forward over time. For that, and no matter what career path you want to be on, there’s one simple rule.

Success is dependent on your impact. The one thing engineers should do to keep propelling their careers upward is to always seek to increase their impact.


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