As a beginner in the cloud space, my greatest weakness is that I like to acquire many cloud skills at the same time. But I have found out that I can not learn cloud computing that way. Consequently, I have searched online for guidelines on important skills to acquire and I developed a roadmap to acquire these skills.
That is a good response! A way I might make it better is to say something like "I love learning cloud technologies and I find myself jumping from one technology to another, but I realised the best way to learn is through consistency and going deep on a topic. And so I have found some helpful cloud roadmaps that help to structure my learning" Hope that helps
Thanks for sharing. All your answers to these questions are very, very useful and applicable to non-cloud jobs too. I was sitting with almost 6 people in a conference room pre COVID and they drilled me for the position of Graphic Design and all these questions came up. Again, thanks.
The course has about 150+ lessons You get to learn how to work with various cloud technologies like AWS, Linux, Bash, Terraform, Python, Git, Cicd, Serverless, etc With every new technology you learn you will be given about 2 high quality projects that will allow you to go deeper into that technology so that at the end of the program you will have completed 10+ high quality projects with different cloud technologies Plus you will learn how to write your resume to attract the attention of recruiters You'll also learn how to interview better to impress hiring managers If you are interested in joining then sign up now: www.cloudcareermentor.com/#pricing
Want to build high quality cloud projects to get you hired? Sign up to: cloudcareermentor.com
As a beginner in the cloud space, my greatest weakness is that I like to acquire many cloud skills at the same time. But I have found out that I can not learn cloud computing that way.
Consequently, I have searched online for guidelines on important skills to acquire and I developed a roadmap to acquire these skills.
That is a good response!
A way I might make it better is to say something like
"I love learning cloud technologies and I find myself jumping from one technology to another, but I realised the best way to learn is through consistency and going deep on a topic. And so I have found some helpful cloud roadmaps that help to structure my learning"
Hope that helps
Thanks for sharing. All your answers to these questions are very, very useful and applicable to non-cloud jobs too.
I was sitting with almost 6 people in a conference room pre COVID and they drilled me for the position of Graphic Design and all these questions came up.
Again, thanks.
Thanks I appreciate that!
@@CloudCareerMentor It’s my pleasure.
Thanks a lot for haring the info, its very valuable
I'm glad you enjoyed it!
Ty!!
YW!
Nice one
I'm glad you enjoyed it, do you have an interview coming up?
How many hours of teaching is in your course?
The course has about 150+ lessons
You get to learn how to work with various cloud technologies like AWS, Linux, Bash, Terraform, Python, Git, Cicd, Serverless, etc
With every new technology you learn you will be given about 2 high quality projects that will allow you to go deeper into that technology so that at the end of the program you will have completed 10+ high quality projects with different cloud technologies
Plus you will learn how to write your resume to attract the attention of recruiters
You'll also learn how to interview better to impress hiring managers
If you are interested in joining then sign up now: www.cloudcareermentor.com/#pricing