this post was submitted on 04 Sep 2023
2 points (100.0% liked)

Transprogrammer

718 readers
1 users here now

A space for trans people who code

Matrix Space:

Rules:

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
 

I graduated in May with my associates degree, and sadly after applying a bit nothing, not even a reply email. I am convinced I am just unprepared for this industry, I will admit I don't have a GitHub with 1 billion contributions, and a bunch of connections. but can I seriously get nothing. I can't afford the 25K needed for my bachelors. I am honestly considering put in my applications to target or whatever and giving up.

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] pixxelkick@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

I would say take a good look at what your resume looks like. Usually no responses back is an indicator something is wrong with your resume and causing issues.

  1. Are you filling out the cover letter / "Say something about yourself" section on every application? I largely just throw ChatGPT at the problem and then do a second pass over it to make sure it looks good before submitting

  2. Resume should be kept very short and sweet, with 90% of its content being focused on specifically name dropping key technologies by name you have used so automated systems pick it up. If you are a MERN dev for example, make 100% sure that "MongoDB", "Express.js", "React" "Node" and "NPM" are all verbatim somewhere on your resume.

Typically your resume should be quick and easy to scan from the top left corner to bottom left corner and convey most of the info. Id' recommend watching some videos and read some posts on how to make a solid resume.

Other than that, I strongly recommend having a github that has a fully functional simple application on it that you have made on your own time, with numerous commits and a well fleshed out readme, ideally multiple paragraphs.

Just as an example, I have numerous projects on my github and most of them have some semblance of a readme. Try and include:

  1. What is the application
  2. Why would you wanna use it
  3. Installation instructions
  4. A blurb linking to the report page for the github, that basically amounts to "Found a bug, report it here"
  5. A simple basic roadmap of future features you are thinking of adding (doesnt need to be actually happening, but it looks really good to have)