Start building your portfolio RIGHT NOW with Hostinger!! Go to www.hostg.xyz/SHBvD and get 10% off with code NICKWHITE + additional 3 months + free domain
0:07 Today we continue to make up new titles based on the particular tool we are using, but I've never seen a Civil Eng refer to themselves as an Autocad Engineer 🤔
please Nick. Please Nick. You look very very tired. Please for your health. Take a week off from computers and focus on healthy activities. It will help your life.
I had your "The Fastest Way to Become a Software Developer" video on my watch list to return to it to create a portfolio, and now you make it even more specific. Thanks!
That's definitely not true. A good portfolio showcasing your work that looks amazing tells 10 times more about your skills than just a single A4 paper.
It depends on your level of experience. If you are trying to get your first job you need all the help you can get. A portfolio can prove you can use actually code and it can show where your skill level is at.
Yea but today it seems like the portofolio is more important than the projects, and should spent more time working on your portofolio than on your projects. And actually I see that every week on LinkedIn, a random guy coming up with a portofolio but with garbage projects. When you get hired, you're not gonna build more portofolios, but you gonna run tests and build complex stuff. Personnally I spent 5 days on my portofolio and 1-2 year(s) on my projects. Also the best project is always to respond to a client demand, or to have actual real users to your website, both ways it will give you responsabilities.
I have never been in a situation where having vs not having a portfolio would have made a difference in the recruitment process. It's just not something recruiters / interviewers care about.
It has made difference for me though. I have had 3 interviews this far(not that much I know), but in 2 of them I was asked questions about my portfolio projects after I mentioned them. "Why did you use this technology?", "What was the hardest thing in that project?" and so on. I think it played a big role for me getting that job. I said that I did a full fullstack project all by myself, with jwt auth and stuff so the interviewer from that point on knew that I know backend and how to interact with it no problem(this was a frontend junior-middle job), so he didn't even ask me any questions about that. Which in the end made my interview last only 14 minutes and me getting that job lol. If I didn't had a portfolio(projects I made by myself to talk about in an interview), I guess the interview would have been 30+ minutes with me answering a bunch of other questions, possibly reducing my chances of getting the job.
How do you do that while not violating NDA's? Also, what if you are at a stealth startup where they are Nazi about what u talk about outside their 4 walls?
I think focusing on "what you want to build" opposed to "what gets you a job" should be first. You'll hear "learn HTML, CSS, JS" and to that I'd say it's a good start as for any dev needs some basic understanding of web tech. But if you want to get into lets say robotics then you'll probably want to try another language.
Is there a free hosting site that I can use? maybe even temporarily..The price is not much regarding the product but in some country like mine we dont have interntional payment system so we have to hit up our friends and family in different country which is a hassle..
No, you need only portfolio if you are a front-end developer. Backend developers just need to show their GitHub repository and HR should have experienced backend developer which check how you write a code.
The word "portfolio" does not necessarily mean visual representation of something. If you are a backend developer, your GitHub IS already considered your portfolio to some extent. But probably arranging your projects(links to github projects) onto a single page with brief explanations about techologies used/overall project descriptions is even better. If you think that simply linking your github with 60 repositories in it is enough, you are wrong. You should yourself choose what projects there are the biggest and most significant to your current position, and better if you briefly explain what they do(=portfolio). "and HR should have experienced backend developer which check how you write a code" - if you have a lot of repositories and/or contibutions(with forks and stuff), no sane person would look through all your repositories to find which is related and which shows your skills better. A lot of the times that experienced backend developer may look at 2-3 repositories and go on to the next candidate. You wouldn't want him to see a bunch of small projects(or even worse, failed/wip projects) and label you as a "beginner developer" or "bad coder" just from that, right? You should yourself present in a brief and simple way what you can do and give straight links to the example projects. That is basically called a portfolio.
@@dev_with_me That is good enough I guess for a backend position. I would call it a "mini portfolio". But if you didn't add brief descriptions and used technologies, and only added links, you should add them though. It certainly helps the interviewer, hr, and the developers that will be checking your projects.
Totally disagree! You do not need a portfolio! I would even say that do not create one if you are just starting out. Junior developers with no experience do not know what they are doing and that is OK. Just build up your linkedIn CV and try to land any software developer position. You are going to learn soo soo much more on the spot developing and getting actually paid for it. By building up a portfolio you will be spending time and not even getting paid for it. You are far more likely to make more errors building your portfolio if you are a junior.
@jrupp28 it seems like we aren't using the 9999999th javscript framework that released right after I posted this comment which doesnt suit Chalie George's flavor
@@charlie-george im building right now a graphic design portfolio with astro and tailwind. The reason I picked tailwind is to have more control in my design, but if speed was the most important thing bootstrap is the perfect choice.
Start building your portfolio RIGHT NOW with Hostinger!! Go to www.hostg.xyz/SHBvD and get 10% off with code NICKWHITE + additional 3 months + free domain
0:07 Today we continue to make up new titles based on the particular tool we are using, but I've never seen a Civil Eng refer to themselves as an Autocad Engineer 🤔
please Nick. Please Nick. You look very very tired. Please for your health. Take a week off from computers and focus on healthy activities. It will help your life.
I had your "The Fastest Way to Become a Software Developer" video on my watch list to return to it to create a portfolio, and now you make it even more specific. Thanks!
I say a good CV is more important as long as you have a lot of experience. If not, then a demo portfolio will definitely help
Yeah but that opinion doesn’t make as much money from hostinger 😂
That's definitely not true. A good portfolio showcasing your work that looks amazing tells 10 times more about your skills than just a single A4 paper.
@@Inkarnid 😂😂😂
@@BartMolkenboer depends … some companies want experience. They might not even check your portfolio
It depends on your level of experience. If you are trying to get your first job you need all the help you can get. A portfolio can prove you can use actually code and it can show where your skill level is at.
You look like my arrogant aunt .nice video btw
😂😂
💀
Lol
what a compliment
Yea but today it seems like the portofolio is more important than the projects, and should spent more time working on your portofolio than on your projects. And actually I see that every week on LinkedIn, a random guy coming up with a portofolio but with garbage projects.
When you get hired, you're not gonna build more portofolios, but you gonna run tests and build complex stuff.
Personnally I spent 5 days on my portofolio and 1-2 year(s) on my projects.
Also the best project is always to respond to a client demand, or to have actual real users to your website, both ways it will give you responsabilities.
good input.
I have never been in a situation where having vs not having a portfolio would have made a difference in the recruitment process. It's just not something recruiters / interviewers care about.
so you've been offered every job you've applied to? impressive
@@Star-rd9eg I have been rejected after interviews, I'm far from being a coding jesus ! But it wasn't because of a lack of portfolio.
It has made difference for me though. I have had 3 interviews this far(not that much I know), but in 2 of them I was asked questions about my portfolio projects after I mentioned them. "Why did you use this technology?", "What was the hardest thing in that project?" and so on. I think it played a big role for me getting that job. I said that I did a full fullstack project all by myself, with jwt auth and stuff so the interviewer from that point on knew that I know backend and how to interact with it no problem(this was a frontend junior-middle job), so he didn't even ask me any questions about that. Which in the end made my interview last only 14 minutes and me getting that job lol.
If I didn't had a portfolio(projects I made by myself to talk about in an interview), I guess the interview would have been 30+ minutes with me answering a bunch of other questions, possibly reducing my chances of getting the job.
It only made the difference when I was getting a Junior level job, after that no one cares. Its about the experience.
@@twothreeoneoneseventwoonefour5 that’s cause you’re probs entry level
a github with lots of commits is the best portfolio
his knowledge with real life stories, it's the best I've seen, important is "important value"
Can you show us how to deploy a react app?
How do you do that while not violating NDA's? Also, what if you are at a stealth startup where they are Nazi about what u talk about outside their 4 walls?
Out of context. But I'm really really lost and don't know where to start nor what to properly learn to land a job
I think focusing on "what you want to build" opposed to "what gets you a job" should be first.
You'll hear "learn HTML, CSS, JS" and to that I'd say it's a good start as for any dev needs some basic understanding of web tech. But if you want to get into lets say robotics then you'll probably want to try another language.
@@wchorski thanks allot for your response. I think I'm overwhelmed by the amount of info
crap advice
@@Turnpost2552 my advice?
Suspendas is crying
Haven't watched but hopefully it covers who should judge it.
SUS COMIN ON SITE FOO
Is there a free hosting site that I can use? maybe even temporarily..The price is not much regarding the product but in some country like mine we dont have interntional payment system so we have to hit up our friends and family in different country which is a hassle..
I am a junior android developer! Did i need a portfolio also ?
why do u have eyes like this 💀
Writing and reading code 10+ hours a day. Life as a programmer.
Tired
HOOOKAY DUDE
As a developer you NEED to look the part to.. your highschool style and hair won't get you a job
this is the part 🤣
Lol I mean one quick look at his resume and that clearly ain't the case
this true?
Hi Nick, does portfolio need a backend ?
maybe for form submissions, but you can just call a third party API or make serverless function to send emails
I don’t have a portfolio, yet I’m a pretty ok backend engineer, mediocre I’d say, earning a little more than median salary for developers in my region
How much does a developer earn in Russia? I'm curious because here in Brazil 700/1000$ per month is the median salary for jr developers.
nick love ur vids but i gotta ask have u tried to change ur hairstyle I think u would rock with buzz
Great video sir! Check your portfolios responsiveness on a pixel 5.
haha ya i probably shouldve fixed it before posting this but i remember i jacked it up a while back and never fixed 😭
No, you need only portfolio if you are a front-end developer. Backend developers just need to show their GitHub repository and HR should have experienced backend developer which check how you write a code.
Game Developers should have a portfolio too
This! I just transitioned to a MLOps engineer. Let me make a portfolio for all my tf and yaml files.
The word "portfolio" does not necessarily mean visual representation of something. If you are a backend developer, your GitHub IS already considered your portfolio to some extent. But probably arranging your projects(links to github projects) onto a single page with brief explanations about techologies used/overall project descriptions is even better.
If you think that simply linking your github with 60 repositories in it is enough, you are wrong. You should yourself choose what projects there are the biggest and most significant to your current position, and better if you briefly explain what they do(=portfolio). "and HR should have experienced backend developer which check how you write a code" - if you have a lot of repositories and/or contibutions(with forks and stuff), no sane person would look through all your repositories to find which is related and which shows your skills better. A lot of the times that experienced backend developer may look at 2-3 repositories and go on to the next candidate. You wouldn't want him to see a bunch of small projects(or even worse, failed/wip projects) and label you as a "beginner developer" or "bad coder" just from that, right?
You should yourself present in a brief and simple way what you can do and give straight links to the example projects. That is basically called a portfolio.
@@twothreeoneoneseventwoonefour5 I just link them on my resume though.
@@dev_with_me That is good enough I guess for a backend position. I would call it a "mini portfolio".
But if you didn't add brief descriptions and used technologies, and only added links, you should add them though. It certainly helps the interviewer, hr, and the developers that will be checking your projects.
Very good info! Thanks!
Your video motivated me ! Thank you !
love the content Nick
kien thuc tu anh ay voi nhung cau chuyen o trong doi thuc, do la canh hay nhat toi da xem, quan trong la "important value"
loved your diss tracks :)
at least a github profile with a few projects is essential.
Is that Elon Musk on your wall? I think I'm gonna be sick....
Wah
Your homepage is broken on mobile
This dude really resembles Jughead Jones of Riverdale lol
Almost 300k subscribers. Well done! Thanks for your videos.
I've never seen someone try and get referral money harder than this.
my portofolio only html without css
Nick the goat 🐐! 🎖
Congratulations 300k
I prefer linkedin. Hostinger has great customer support though
Love the progress on your transition Nicky
Love the content Nick!
Totally disagree! You do not need a portfolio! I would even say that do not create one if you are just starting out. Junior developers with no experience do not know what they are doing and that is OK. Just build up your linkedIn CV and try to land any software developer position. You are going to learn soo soo much more on the spot developing and getting actually paid for it. By building up a portfolio you will be spending time and not even getting paid for it. You are far more likely to make more errors building your portfolio if you are a junior.
disagree. the side projects i made with react taught me state management and that is key for building complex apps imo
I follow you from Egypt
hello frnd long time no see
Whatever made up title you wanna assign yourself 😅
Pushing paid content is fine and all but this was way, way, way over the top. every few minutes, talking about the code for a discount...
why take advice from this guy he never had a job
I aint sayin he a gold digger
But he aint got none of his own viewers🔥🔥
When does the rap video drop?
If you don't have a GIT REPO, you just DON'T EXIST! 😉
Legit question, why not just use LinkedIn? They have a section for projects and you can add descriptions, links, etc.
Why will hostinger sponsor the video which recommends using LinkedIn. 😉
@gaurishgangwar this is a valid answer lol
wtf ....all you showed here i learned in 10 months of coding for frontend? :((((
your banned buddy
Javier Bardem of coding 😂
bro pls get some sleep
Bootstrap... in 2023? Seriously?
What's the problem?
@jrupp28 it seems like we aren't using the 9999999th javscript framework that released right after I posted this comment which doesnt suit Chalie George's flavor
@@kokonut5498 Nah it's not that. There's just much better alternatives out there like Tailwind.
@@charlie-george that’s completely subjective, Bootstrap still works fine and has its use cases
@@charlie-george im building right now a graphic design portfolio with astro and tailwind. The reason I picked tailwind is to have more control in my design, but if speed was the most important thing bootstrap is the perfect choice.
dude, sleep more :0
You need to get more sleep my man. Your eyes are even baggier than mine, and that's saying a lot.
I don’t know anything about software development but this is sooo true. 😲
Hello sir , I'm requesting to you pls provide some video on Codechef problem solution using java
Nigga what
Cx
💯
Are you Nick black???
your portfolio isn't responsive for mobile (mozilla browser)
Bro ur not a software engineer this is a blog post , screw ur ad
are you ice poseidons mate? wheres this sus diss track everyones talking about?