Ask HN: What sites do you use to find Tech Jobs?
What types of websites have been the most effective at getting software development jobs or related tech roles?
What job searching techniques have been most effective for you?
What job searching techniques have been most effective for you?
11 comments
[ 2.3 ms ] story [ 31.2 ms ] threadMeetups for same reason as above.
Also Craigslist has surprising yield, despite lack in diversity.
I'm not saying the jobs will be good. But you will get recruiters calling.
I like to play a game with dice.com. I will leave my profile stagnant for a few months. Then I will log on and then add an extra period some one in the resume. Then the next day, the phone will start ringing with recruiters thinking I'm looking for a new job.
I would probably go directly to the companies I'm interested in once I've done a ton of research into the companies and their trajectories/teams. There'd probably only be a handful of companies that I'd be interested in joining. Luckily I'm in the Bay Area so there's a lot of great ones that wouldn't require me to move.
I could get my foot in the door at most companies just based on my resume (nothing insane - a consistent trajectory with good performance at a string of top companies/startups helps). But after that, I'd be royally screwed by the interview process if I didn't prepare thoroughly for the algorithms puzzles for a solid month or two. LeetCode (online coding practice) and Cracking The Code Interview (book) are popular review material for exactly this so I'd review those after work and on the weekends. Even after preparation there's still an unnecessarily big element of luck built into the standard tech interview process. With luck and preparation hopefully a couple of the companies from my shortlist work out and that would be that.
I can't say I'm experienced at job searching techniques. I get most of my work through personal referrals. But I'm pretty free with advice and like helping small businesses get their basic IT stuff sorted. It's not really my day-to-day Software Dev role, but I enjoy it. And it's surprising how often it results in decent projects down the line. (although that's never the intent)