You don't need a portfolio site. I've been a professional developer for 25 years. Never had one, never needed one, and a portfolio site from a potential hire has never once influenced my decision (in a positive way) to hire them.
I disagree. You have 25 years in the game. Noβ¦ YOU donβt need one. As a self taught junior developer I do need one. Without one potential employers wonβt even look at me. Iβve had employers tell me that. Itβs not the same as it was when you started.
I'm 100% self-taught too - from the age of 7. I'm coming at this from both sides - as an employer, and as a developer. The developers I have interviewed who have had a portfolio (a minority) have fared no better than the ones without, and in some cases it has actually counted against them (demonstrating use of inappropriate technologies for a project, and poor code).
I've never once required for a portfolio from a candidate, or worked for/seen a company that does.
This was back in 1983. My dad (he's had various tech-related jobs, eventually moving in a more logistics direction... but he was never a full-on programmer to my knowledge) bought us a ZX Spectrum 48K home computer. When we first got it, it didn't come with much software (very few games) and I couldn't afford to buy games. It did however, come with an in-built programming language (BASIC) - you were essentially inside a REPL interface as soon as you switched the thing on (after setting it up and plugging it into the TV). It also had a printed manual for the language with lots of well written examples for beginners. My dad encouraged me to give it a go and I got hooked... just changing little bits of the sample programs at first to see what happened - then eventually writing my own stuff. Computer magazines at the time contained printed listings to type in and try - which also was a great boost for ideas and learning
My communication may have been received wrongly. I agree that you don't need a portfolio site to get hired. And a developer should not be focused on building one. We remove that friction completely.
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You don't need a portfolio site. I've been a professional developer for 25 years. Never had one, never needed one, and a portfolio site from a potential hire has never once influenced my decision (in a positive way) to hire them.
I disagree. You have 25 years in the game. Noβ¦ YOU donβt need one. As a self taught junior developer I do need one. Without one potential employers wonβt even look at me. Iβve had employers tell me that. Itβs not the same as it was when you started.
I'm 100% self-taught too - from the age of 7. I'm coming at this from both sides - as an employer, and as a developer. The developers I have interviewed who have had a portfolio (a minority) have fared no better than the ones without, and in some cases it has actually counted against them (demonstrating use of inappropriate technologies for a project, and poor code).
I've never once required for a portfolio from a candidate, or worked for/seen a company that does.
U started at 7...self taught. Interesting. I was watching cartoons and playing. Are your parents doctors or tech-related? Just curious.
This was back in 1983. My dad (he's had various tech-related jobs, eventually moving in a more logistics direction... but he was never a full-on programmer to my knowledge) bought us a ZX Spectrum 48K home computer. When we first got it, it didn't come with much software (very few games) and I couldn't afford to buy games. It did however, come with an in-built programming language (BASIC) - you were essentially inside a REPL interface as soon as you switched the thing on (after setting it up and plugging it into the TV). It also had a printed manual for the language with lots of well written examples for beginners. My dad encouraged me to give it a go and I got hooked... just changing little bits of the sample programs at first to see what happened - then eventually writing my own stuff. Computer magazines at the time contained printed listings to type in and try - which also was a great boost for ideas and learning
Nice. I started with "logo" and something called MS-DOS (can't remember a thing) cheers
Yes, agreed. The portfolio shouldn't be a barrier for any developer. That's why we are building Hyperlog.
You say you agree, and then tell me you're building a site where you can build a portfolio - which you just agreed is a non-necessity. OK π€
My communication may have been received wrongly. I agree that you don't need a portfolio site to get hired. And a developer should not be focused on building one. We remove that friction completely.