1. Do something rewarding 2. Have a big picture (kinda like an obsession that keeps you motivated) 3. Enjoy the process I think I should add mine. 4. Compare time - compare where you are now to where you were 2 months ago. The vast difference keeps you motivated
"as a 25 year old CEO" is final for you. Don't cross the line and become Techlead. We love to you the way you are and don't want you to change it. Just continue "Storytime with your favourite 25 year old CEO" and everything will go well 😂😂🤣🤣
Seriously. I don't care how enticing a TL video title looks, I don't click it because I don't want to give him that fraction of a cent. I'm sure plenty of others feel the same.
Also to add, take breaks in between your work. When you are stress, walk around, take a break. Let your subconscious do the work. You will feel better when you come back. And don't be too hard on yourself. Common beginner mistake. Expecting things to work in your way just shows inexperience. Control the controllable, like your perception and your breathing. All the best everyone.
I was just beginning to feel burnt out, to get notified by RUclips about your next video posting stating "Why I don't burn out". Your timing is impeccable . You saved a week or so of stranding and procrastination. Thank you :)
I recently read a book called Flow by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi. Sounds like a lot of what you touched on is similar to what that book is about. Basically having goals in any activity you do makes it intrinsically interesting and challenging. When you are challenged in just the correct amount you will enter a flow state. I'm sure any programmer has experienced that. Basically when you can enter a state of flow in anything you do, you will find it so satisfying that even the act of doing it is enough to drive you. Highly recommend that book for anyone.
Coding in the flow is actually very bad idea and not liked by many companies out there. Problem is when you are in the flow you can't control time you spend on some particular thing and as a result waste too much time on something irrelevant to value of end product/feature. It also is like a drug and if (when) you for some reason can't enter that state anymore you'll have a lot more severe burn out (or at least you'll be heading to burn out waaay faster)
I think burn out is a big frustration. You begin working on something and focus on that for several days, weeks, then you realize that you are are not going anywhere, what you expected will not happen.
Over 95% of developers are burnt out by age 25, so kudos to you! I think another thing to point out is that when you get as good as "experts" like us, then code becomes our primary language, so coding is the equivalent of normies writing text messages. And who gets burnt out from texting? Nobody, that's who. ttyl👋
The key is to find what you're good at and do it! You will find a way to make money along the way and while you work in that field, you probably will make tons of money, even though that is not your main goal - simply because if you love what you do, you will probably be good at it and you will be more dedicated to doing it than someone who doesn't love it (and may even hate doing it) and are just doing it because it makes a lot of money. It's trite but find your passion and you will lead a happy life. When your work life is going well, generally your love life and everything else goes well too. When you chase money without having a passion for what you do, it can bring much unhappiness and affect other areas of your life. Don't listen to scoffers. There are many people out there who might think you're crazy to leave a cushy job you loathe, but they don't have to live your life, you do. And you only have one life, so don't listen to those people. But of course, plan well and look for little signposts that lead you in the right direction. And don't worry about prestige or peer pressure, in this world, you can make money doing anything. Even thirty years ago, no one thought there could be money made from making videos for RUclips, so just be hopeful; don't listen to the negative people, and find your passion and follow it. Obviously the author of this video didn't find ultimate fulfilment working for a FAANG company, and that he's happier running his own business. And he loves solving problems like algorithmic problems and he also likes to build things. Solving difficult problems and making things he's created work gives him a high. He also loves presenting things and communicating with an audience, informing and teaching. He probably looks forward to going to work everyday and has built a good team to work with. This is the good life. You can tell who the successful people will be; they are the people who love what they do.
I definitely think following a passion is the way! However, I must disagree with the "finding what you're good at", I would change it to "find something you have a passion in and dedicate true time to crafting it and mastering". Setbacks are essential for humility and growth. For example, you may be absolutely terrible at playing an instrument and objectively many people disagree with you trying and suggest quitting while you're ahead but if you're constantly thinking about cords and how to up your ante, I believe you're fast on the path of mastering. But yeah 100% follow passion.
@@xx-wp3mq I know what you mean, but my experience tells me that people are usually good at things they are interested in and they are interested in things they are good at. People naturally get drawn to things; and because they are interested in these things, they come good at it very easily. I do think it's "genetic"/"familial". I have noticed that many successful people are doing the things that a parent did - same occupation, job, field of interest. It doesn't matter that the parent hates their job and isn't particularly successful in it, the child gets naturally drawn to that occupation, and if given a chance to do the same sort of work, is very successful at it and the person loves their job. I suppose people will come up with examples to contradict this, but I have studied successful people and this seems to be the number one common trait amongst these people, according to my informal study. If I may take a guess, I would say Clement's father (or mother) is engaged in something similar to what Clement is doing - the parent likes solving problems, likes to work independently and be their own boss, and has an analytical mind. Said parent is probably good at public speaking too. My own father hated his job and did so all his life, but I am really interested in his field, though I don't have much academic training in it. I have done my own research into that area in my own time as a hobby and I am really fascinated by these things. I have ended up accidentally doing something that is a mix of both parents' occupation. I actually did not like my first career, which coincidentally had nothing to do with either parent's occupation, so chose to do something else, and am much happier doing it. Eerily I find myself going down the same path as my parents, without even choosing to do so deliberately. For example, living in the same town they lived in when they were young, even though at the time I did not know they had lived there. Also, ended up going to the same uni although I applied to dozens. The same uni that a parent attended was the one that accepted me, even though I didn't really go after that uni in particular ... ended up going to the same university town that my parent lived in for a while ... weird ... I could have ended up in any city really.
@@xx-wp3mq *"For example, you may be absolutely terrible at playing an instrument and objectively many people disagree with you trying and suggest quitting while you're ahead"* Not talking about hobbies and such, talking about career paths .... a person can have many passions, but in the example you give above - trust me, if you don't have a passion AND skill/aptitude for playing a musical instrument, you're not going to do well in a career as a musician. Even talented musicians with great technical ability find it hard to make a musical career work.
@@engespress I totally get what you mean, if you have the boost at the start of natural aptitude then it’s almost definitely a route to success, I was just saying as I know many software engineers who perhaps didn’t particularly do well at school (and their parents often just worked in retail) and are now thriving. I really do think it comes down to how much you want it, obviously this differs per career (I mean your chances of becoming an athlete are literally none if you didn’t take it seriously at a younger age etc.). If you’re willing to be humble and take logical steps you can really have a fruitful career, but as I mentioned you perhaps need a lot more discipline than someone who is naturally built for that - and of course this is specific to some careers. I think people shouldn’t be discouraged for wanting to change careers to something their perhaps not the best at (provided they are really willing to give it a go and find mentors and a route to the industry and of course do a lot of networking etc etc.). But you’re definitely right with the inherent skill, it requires double the work to master!
Mann!! When ever I want to search for your channel(I don't remember your name so well cause I'm new to this channel) I search for algoexpert on RUclips and your channel pops out😀😀. Your publicity is working quite well😅😅
As someone doing and enjoying it (SE) for 35 years, I still suggest you insist on a day off every now and then. It will not burn you out if you don't, but (a) changing atmosphere every now and then is good for the soul. It will make your work better. (b) let your mind work "offline" on a problem for a day - and you'll be surprised with the creative solutions it will generate. (c) relationships (family, gf, friends) require maintenance... I've been spending much more time doing work than an average person, yet... I believe that it is important to take just one day/weekend off from time to time, even if it won't burn you out not to doing so.
the final words towards the end of the video is what gets me..i want to change paths but i don't have any other viable option so i'm stuck in a perpetual state of burnout. working 12 hours a day at a job i hate for minimum wage where 100% of my income goes towards rent and bills so can't even save to move to a cheaper city, and can't even work towards getting new skills for a different job because by the time i get home i'm so exhausted i immediately pass out even though i want to study coding so badly. i've been using my weekends to study but i'm such a slow learner it will probably take me the next 5-10 years before i'm even prepared for an entry-level programmer interview
Have you considered being a fire systems safety inspector (If you are in the US)? There are companies like Koorsen and Cintas that offer company vans and usually somewhere around double minimum wage, it might not be your dream job but it could help you on your way to getting your first coding job by not being on financial redline. I've been in this situation, I know it really sucks.
I'm 28 and I started to feel like I'm a zombie. One or two years ago it was totally different. The side hustle also might take 5 years to have an impact. I think when we live in a reward system where you need to motivate yourself all the time to do something. You trick your brain to feel pleasure. But what I found out is that when you take care of your body and do sports then you feel much more better.
Clement, it's obvious that you are clueless about what being burned out means. Until you experience it I guess it's difficult to know what it is. The nastiest thing about being burned out is that you are not aware or you don't accept your condition. This means that you won't change anything in order to improve things. Also, I don't expect that that people get burned out when they are 25. However, in time, if you press the pedal for a long period of time, then you'll get burned out, no doubt. Getting burned out is not necessarily bad. It means that you threw in the game everything you got and it came the time when you have to slow down things, make changes, adjustments and calibratiions.
Hi, clement. I recently bought AlgoExpert and I am enjoying it. For expanding your business, I would suggest you to make a search box in AlgoExpert in which we can search our queries.
From what I'm seeing on the GCP documentation (cloud.google.com/serverless), we don't use any of these particular GCP products; that being said, we do run on GCP! GCP is our Cloud Service Provider and the backbone of our infrastructure.
You will one day! Burn out is caused by unproductive work. What I do is to focus on things other than coding. Learning other productive maybe more productive things
Thanks Clement. This comes at a time where I needed to hear something like this so I highly appreciate the effort that you put in sharing your experience with us. I really admire what you've done with AlgoExpert and hope to build on similar success patterns with my current venture: Koala Rank. Thanks again!
it's about work life balance. for some people their occupation is their "life's work" (Elon Musk) for a lot of people their hobby is their "life's work" (Fermat) for some people raising their children is their "life's work" (Serena William' father) figure out what you're "life's work" is; you won't get burnt out doing that
Clement, do you think absence of a master's degree will eventually prohibit the individual's career opportunities and make one hit a glass ceiling or something at a reputable workplace like FAANG. If yes, why? are bachelor graduates perceived as less intelligent?
Please make a video on how to master data structures and Algorithm. I mean AlgoExpert is a problem solving website, but where to learn the fundamentals??
You should make videos where you code and show us a few tricks on JavaScript. I have been working in TypeScript/JavaScript for about a year but I want to know how you do it and work on a professional project
clement, i have a few questions, i'm a beginner i love coding and i'm also a high school student the question is will i have enough time to study and coding while working as a software engineer ?
Hi Clement, please tell us how you spend your whole day after leaving Facebook. Your github squares(or 'graph' maybe i dont know) are always colored. You commit/update something in your github repos everyday....what work do you do? are you working on some project? tell us about it please :)
Hi sir, I have got to know you for a month now, and you really inspired me, especially your episode with William Lin.... I would really like to know why did you leave working at google or facebook, and where do you work now??
Hi Clem , nice video my question is if JavaScript , reactjs , reactnative and node are enough software engineering and what r further good languages which I can persue after them which can help me
First learn databases, eg SQL, then learn more about infrastructure and deployment. Some sort of cloud computing service like AWS and something like docker. After you know one language it becomes largely pointless to learn more that do the same thing
@@clem I don't know, but usually, people do burn out when they do multiple things at once (like a heavy job + a business or yt) for an extended period of time,... anyway great video as always and very helpful tips : )
This sentence "By the way if you're preparing for a coding interview..." should kinda be made as a method in the Clement Mihailescu's class of RUclips tutorials. I hope you're not saying it yourself every time. Don't Repeat Yourself - DRY technique :) .
Hey clement can you talk about racism I'm sure silicon valley is racist towards black minority coders I'm sure institutional racism exists I'm 100% sure white privilege exists Havard, mit and Stanford are expensive for minorities and given that silicon valley companies accept and consider candidates from these universities first if u can make a video on that I'll respect you given that you quite atticulate.
I like you. But seems like you are using clickbait type title in your video. What's the difference between you and Techlead then? Isn't it another version of 'as a millionaire'.
I am seeing your AD about AlgoExpert with a girl telling me that I want to be a software engineer at Google too much these couple of months. Her voices makes me hate your website even before I visited it. Sorry ))
Dear Clément, I really enjoy your videos and I find them really helpful, but this one is total bull****. I'm a psychologist and left my very joyful and rewarding job 1,5 years ago with burnout. I have been in and out of psycho-somatic clinics, psychiatrists, therapists and all that Jazz. First of all sleep deprivation itself is not burning out but it is definitely a symptom. Second it is a psychosomatic disease/disorder (I don't know the precise terminology as English is not my 1st language), therefore your mental state, your bodily symptoms and emotions are all interconnected and can have many shape or forms. What almost always connects them is depression. Now, depression is not sadness it's actually the absence of emotions all together. But you are definitely finding yourself on the more pessimistic side of view. For sure, some people have a certain prevalence to burnout and depression BUT it has certainly nothing to do with a rewarding job. Quite the opposite. All this "Do what you love"-stuff leads people into a trap of working an unhealthy amount of hours, not being able to gain emotional distance from work, setting boundaries, etc. And as a 25 y/o I just assume that your body has still enough strength, youth and resilience to not burnout, yet. Let's talk in ten years.
@@clem I think this one is better. I literally shaved my head because I don't know when I will get a haircut next time 😅. So you are in a better place than me
1. Do something rewarding
2. Have a big picture (kinda like an obsession that keeps you motivated)
3. Enjoy the process
I think I should add mine.
4. Compare time - compare where you are now to where you were 2 months ago. The vast difference keeps you motivated
This^^
Totally agree that seeing your own progress over time is an incredible motivator and can shield you from burnout!
Your doing god's work
"as a 25 year old CEO" is final for you. Don't cross the line and become Techlead. We love to you the way you are and don't want you to change it. Just continue "Storytime with your favourite 25 year old CEO" and everything will go well 😂😂🤣🤣
Seriously. I don't care how enticing a TL video title looks, I don't click it because I don't want to give him that fraction of a cent. I'm sure plenty of others feel the same.
I think he does the "as an x" thing as a constant dig at TL since TL tried hard to fk him over in business.
@@craigcj5953 What did TL do Clement?
Moises De La Rosa Ripped him off on Algo Expert then tried to steal the product one for one.
@@@moisesdelarosa3843 TechLead ripped him off and tried to steal AlgoExpert
Also to add, take breaks in between your work. When you are stress, walk around, take a break. Let your subconscious do the work. You will feel better when you come back. And don't be too hard on yourself. Common beginner mistake. Expecting things to work in your way just shows inexperience. Control the controllable, like your perception and your breathing. All the best everyone.
I went 4 years without a day off writing software before I burned out.
Honestly didn't it get little late ?😂
I was just beginning to feel burnt out, to get notified by RUclips about your next video posting stating "Why I don't burn out". Your timing is impeccable . You saved a week or so of stranding and procrastination. Thank you :)
I recently read a book called Flow by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi. Sounds like a lot of what you touched on is similar to what that book is about. Basically having goals in any activity you do makes it intrinsically interesting and challenging. When you are challenged in just the correct amount you will enter a flow state. I'm sure any programmer has experienced that. Basically when you can enter a state of flow in anything you do, you will find it so satisfying that even the act of doing it is enough to drive you. Highly recommend that book for anyone.
I’ve read Flow-great book indeed!
Coding in the flow is actually very bad idea and not liked by many companies out there. Problem is when you are in the flow you can't control time you spend on some particular thing and as a result waste too much time on something irrelevant to value of end product/feature. It also is like a drug and if (when) you for some reason can't enter that state anymore you'll have a lot more severe burn out (or at least you'll be heading to burn out waaay faster)
I think burn out is a big frustration. You begin working on something and focus on that for several days, weeks, then you realize that you are are not going anywhere, what you expected will not happen.
1:13 Why am I not burnt out? ....... a little smile appears on the face of Red bull's CEO
*Monster's CEO has entered the chat.*
Lmao
Thats actually the only video so far that is at least not entirely useless for seniors. It is rather obvious, but can be easily overlooked
"as a 25 year old CEO" in the video title reminds me of techleads "as a Millionaire" :p
Over 95% of developers are burnt out by age 25, so kudos to you! I think another thing to point out is that when you get as good as "experts" like us, then code becomes our primary language, so coding is the equivalent of normies writing text messages. And who gets burnt out from texting? Nobody, that's who.
ttyl👋
The key is to find what you're good at and do it! You will find a way to make money along the way and while you work in that field, you probably will make tons of money, even though that is not your main goal - simply because if you love what you do, you will probably be good at it and you will be more dedicated to doing it than someone who doesn't love it (and may even hate doing it) and are just doing it because it makes a lot of money. It's trite but find your passion and you will lead a happy life. When your work life is going well, generally your love life and everything else goes well too. When you chase money without having a passion for what you do, it can bring much unhappiness and affect other areas of your life. Don't listen to scoffers. There are many people out there who might think you're crazy to leave a cushy job you loathe, but they don't have to live your life, you do. And you only have one life, so don't listen to those people. But of course, plan well and look for little signposts that lead you in the right direction. And don't worry about prestige or peer pressure, in this world, you can make money doing anything. Even thirty years ago, no one thought there could be money made from making videos for RUclips, so just be hopeful; don't listen to the negative people, and find your passion and follow it. Obviously the author of this video didn't find ultimate fulfilment working for a FAANG company, and that he's happier running his own business. And he loves solving problems like algorithmic problems and he also likes to build things. Solving difficult problems and making things he's created work gives him a high. He also loves presenting things and communicating with an audience, informing and teaching. He probably looks forward to going to work everyday and has built a good team to work with. This is the good life. You can tell who the successful people will be; they are the people who love what they do.
I definitely think following a passion is the way! However, I must disagree with the "finding what you're good at", I would change it to "find something you have a passion in and dedicate true time to crafting it and mastering". Setbacks are essential for humility and growth. For example, you may be absolutely terrible at playing an instrument and objectively many people disagree with you trying and suggest quitting while you're ahead but if you're constantly thinking about cords and how to up your ante, I believe you're fast on the path of mastering. But yeah 100% follow passion.
@@xx-wp3mq I know what you mean, but my experience tells me that people are usually good at things they are interested in and they are interested in things they are good at. People naturally get drawn to things; and because they are interested in these things, they come good at it very easily.
I do think it's "genetic"/"familial". I have noticed that many successful people are doing the things that a parent did - same occupation, job, field of interest. It doesn't matter that the parent hates their job and isn't particularly successful in it, the child gets naturally drawn to that occupation, and if given a chance to do the same sort of work, is very successful at it and the person loves their job.
I suppose people will come up with examples to contradict this, but I have studied successful people and this seems to be the number one common trait amongst these people, according to my informal study.
If I may take a guess, I would say Clement's father (or mother) is engaged in something similar to what Clement is doing - the parent likes solving problems, likes to work independently and be their own boss, and has an analytical mind. Said parent is probably good at public speaking too.
My own father hated his job and did so all his life, but I am really interested in his field, though I don't have much academic training in it. I have done my own research into that area in my own time as a hobby and I am really fascinated by these things.
I have ended up accidentally doing something that is a mix of both parents' occupation. I actually did not like my first career, which coincidentally had nothing to do with either parent's occupation, so chose to do something else, and am much happier doing it. Eerily I find myself going down the same path as my parents, without even choosing to do so deliberately. For example, living in the same town they lived in when they were young, even though at the time I did not know they had lived there. Also, ended up going to the same uni although I applied to dozens. The same uni that a parent attended was the one that accepted me, even though I didn't really go after that uni in particular ... ended up going to the same university town that my parent lived in for a while ... weird ... I could have ended up in any city really.
@@xx-wp3mq *"For example, you may be absolutely terrible at playing an instrument and objectively many people disagree with you trying and suggest quitting while you're ahead"*
Not talking about hobbies and such, talking about career paths .... a person can have many passions, but in the example you give above - trust me, if you don't have a passion AND skill/aptitude for playing a musical instrument, you're not going to do well in a career as a musician. Even talented musicians with great technical ability find it hard to make a musical career work.
@@engespress I totally get what you mean, if you have the boost at the start of natural aptitude then it’s almost definitely a route to success, I was just saying as I know many software engineers who perhaps didn’t particularly do well at school (and their parents often just worked in retail) and are now thriving. I really do think it comes down to how much you want it, obviously this differs per career (I mean your chances of becoming an athlete are literally none if you didn’t take it seriously at a younger age etc.). If you’re willing to be humble and take logical steps you can really have a fruitful career, but as I mentioned you perhaps need a lot more discipline than someone who is naturally built for that - and of course this is specific to some careers. I think people shouldn’t be discouraged for wanting to change careers to something their perhaps not the best at (provided they are really willing to give it a go and find mentors and a route to the industry and of course do a lot of networking etc etc.). But you’re definitely right with the inherent skill, it requires double the work to master!
I really like what you say on your LinkedIn posts
Mann!! When ever I want to search for your channel(I don't remember your name so well cause I'm new to this channel) I search for algoexpert on RUclips and your channel pops out😀😀. Your publicity is working quite well😅😅
As someone doing and enjoying it (SE) for 35 years, I still suggest you insist on a day off every now and then. It will not burn you out if you don't, but
(a) changing atmosphere every now and then is good for the soul. It will make your work better.
(b) let your mind work "offline" on a problem for a day - and you'll be surprised with the creative solutions it will generate.
(c) relationships (family, gf, friends) require maintenance...
I've been spending much more time doing work than an average person, yet... I believe that it is important to take just one day/weekend off from time to time, even if it won't burn you out not to doing so.
the final words towards the end of the video is what gets me..i want to change paths but i don't have any other viable option so i'm stuck in a perpetual state of burnout. working 12 hours a day at a job i hate for minimum wage where 100% of my income goes towards rent and bills so can't even save to move to a cheaper city, and can't even work towards getting new skills for a different job because by the time i get home i'm so exhausted i immediately pass out even though i want to study coding so badly. i've been using my weekends to study but i'm such a slow learner it will probably take me the next 5-10 years before i'm even prepared for an entry-level programmer interview
Have you considered being a fire systems safety inspector (If you are in the US)? There are companies like Koorsen and Cintas that offer company vans and usually somewhere around double minimum wage, it might not be your dream job but it could help you on your way to getting your first coding job by not being on financial redline. I've been in this situation, I know it really sucks.
I actually love your Linkedin and these videos, great content
Fantastic, I like such highly practically insightful videos, keep it up clem
Just wait until you're 28.
I'm 28 and I started to feel like I'm a zombie. One or two years ago it was totally different. The side hustle also might take 5 years to have an impact. I think when we live in a reward system where you need to motivate yourself all the time to do something. You trick your brain to feel pleasure. But what I found out is that when you take care of your body and do sports then you feel much more better.
Clement, it's obvious that you are clueless about what being burned out means.
Until you experience it I guess it's difficult to know what it is.
The nastiest thing about being burned out is that you are not aware or you don't accept your condition. This means that you won't change anything in order to improve things.
Also, I don't expect that that people get burned out when they are 25. However, in time, if you press the pedal for a long period of time, then you'll get burned out, no doubt.
Getting burned out is not necessarily bad. It means that you threw in the game everything you got and it came the time when you have to slow down things, make changes, adjustments and calibratiions.
Hi, clement. I recently bought AlgoExpert and I am enjoying it. For expanding your business, I would suggest you to make a search box in AlgoExpert in which we can search our queries.
Hello Clément, merci pour tout ces partages !
Hi Clement, great video. One question I had was about Algoexpert's deployment. Do you use serverless on GCP to deploy algoexpert?
Yes, he uses gcp for deployment
From what I'm seeing on the GCP documentation (cloud.google.com/serverless), we don't use any of these particular GCP products; that being said, we do run on GCP! GCP is our Cloud Service Provider and the backbone of our infrastructure.
Chill man.... you do not "have" to cut the video every 3 seconds..:)
You will one day! Burn out is caused by unproductive work. What I do is to focus on things other than coding. Learning other productive maybe more productive things
You quintessentially summarised it on 7:38 : LOVE it! If you just run behind money, you gonna lose.
Haha, you're just getting started my friend. Give it a couple more years and revisit this video.
I am a 31 year old CEO and on the brink.. getting old sucks
Ay dud, can you make a video going a little more in depth into what exactly testing is, with examples, and how it works at big tech companies?
Thank you for this video. Great great content bro. I love all your videos.
Thanks Clement. This comes at a time where I needed to hear something like this so I highly appreciate the effort that you put in sharing your experience with us. I really admire what you've done with AlgoExpert and hope to build on similar success patterns with my current venture: Koala Rank. Thanks again!
Keep up the great work! 🚀
🚀
Nicely put Clement
This was a great video. I resonated with each point.
I`m guessing the biggest thing is to work on your own sht - if it already makes money the better.
The GURU for software engineering, the real truth is reveled here
Am 50. Shit happens. Not if. When. Worked 3 years wo a day off in the past. Ended up in the hospital. Be careful.
This. Exactly. 25yo has seen 5y of work life and thinks he figured out the holy grail.
Be careful.
AlgoExpert is great! I really enjoy trying to make my code look nicer than your solutions 😏
Merry Christmas Clement
I have been watching ur vdos from quite a long time...n I MUST SAY YOU ARE MY INSPIRATION...i really wanna meet you someday☺....cyaa...have a nice day
it's about work life balance.
for some people their occupation is their "life's work" (Elon Musk)
for a lot of people their hobby is their "life's work" (Fermat)
for some people raising their children is their "life's work" (Serena William' father)
figure out what you're "life's work" is; you won't get burnt out doing that
How do you relax Clement? Do you play videogames or?
Why am i a normal human being (as a 25 year old CEO)
Hi Clement sir I am 18 years old teen from india dream to work for Google please keep guiding us
Hi Clement. Quick question. Why do you not prefer using WordPress or any CMS?
Clement, do you think absence of a master's degree will eventually prohibit the individual's career opportunities and make one hit a glass ceiling or something at a reputable workplace like FAANG. If yes, why? are bachelor graduates perceived as less intelligent?
Please make a video on how to master data structures and Algorithm. I mean AlgoExpert is a problem solving website, but where to learn the fundamentals??
We have a Data Structures Crash Course on AlgoExpert that should teach you everything you need for the interviews!
You should make videos where you code and show us a few tricks on JavaScript. I have been working in TypeScript/JavaScript for about a year but I want to know how you do it and work on a professional project
Why i don't burn out as a 2 years old baby.
As I fellow engineer that loves typescript, I wonder, do you choose typescript as you language of choice for coding interviews?
clement, i have a few questions, i'm a beginner i love coding and i'm also a high school student the question is will i have enough time to study and coding while working as a software engineer ?
Hi Clement, please tell us how you spend your whole day after leaving Facebook. Your github squares(or 'graph' maybe i dont know) are always colored. You commit/update something in your github repos everyday....what work do you do? are you working on some project? tell us about it please :)
Is it even possible to pass the google coding interview with just 1-2 months of preparation??
Can you do a video on how to do work/life balance? Like relationships with friends and Ms. AlgoExpert
What stack did u used for AlgoExpert?? MERN MEVN or MEAN?
Not everyday is Sunshine and rainbows
This man is becoming Techlead (He was ex-Techlead partner/friend)
Great video again!
Can i use JavaScript to solve coding interview problems at google interview?
What is the average age of L4 and L5 engineers?
what is algoexpert about
is it coding exam?(I am not planing to have a interview )
Hi sir, I have got to know you for a month now, and you really inspired me, especially your episode with William Lin....
I would really like to know why did you leave working at google or facebook, and where do you work now??
algoexpert lol
Hey Clement I'm currently in senior year(17 years old) and I'm quite well-versed with Python C++ and Java. Will algoexpert do me good at this age?
Is there any age for learning? Sundar pichai started coding at the age of 8
how much work can you have for a website with a few questions?
Hi Clem , nice video my question is if JavaScript , reactjs , reactnative and node are enough software engineering and what r further good languages which I can persue after them which can help me
First learn databases, eg SQL, then learn more about infrastructure and deployment. Some sort of cloud computing service like AWS and something like docker. After you know one language it becomes largely pointless to learn more that do the same thing
what programming language did you learn?
And what jobs people get who have learnt Python?
I think he mentioned it on his video how he got into Google. Javascript and Python as far as I know.
/clem for discount on the platform, looks like GTA Cheat code. FUNTABULOUS
Rule #1: Don't talk about burning out while you don't have a job (9-5 job)
But I had a 9-5 for over 2 years!
@@clem I don't know, but usually, people do burn out when they do multiple things at once (like a heavy job + a business or yt) for an extended period of time,... anyway great video as always and very helpful tips : )
Super super informative video, thank you very much Clement!
This sentence "By the way if you're preparing for a coding interview..." should kinda be made as a method in the Clement Mihailescu's class of RUclips tutorials. I hope you're not saying it yourself every time. Don't Repeat Yourself - DRY technique :) .
Yes! Need to make a helper method out of it! 😅
Good morning 🌞
word work doesn't exist for me. either im passionate about something or i dont do it
imp topic, great insights..
Clémemt Bai kaise ho thum??
Elon Musk Is One Of Those People I've Seen That They Are Too Ahead Of The Time Period They Are In! No Wonder The Unknown Factor Motivates Us A Lot!
You have "sources" in Romania bro :)) 100%
As a millionaire ex techlead
Ex Facebook
Awesome.
Hey clement can you talk about racism I'm sure silicon valley is racist towards black minority coders I'm sure institutional racism exists I'm 100% sure white privilege exists Havard, mit and Stanford are expensive for minorities and given that silicon valley companies accept and consider candidates from these universities first if u can make a video on that I'll respect you given that you quite atticulate.
as a SWE, that's expected. you cannot have a free day
probably because you sleep until 2pm
but you look burned out XD.. your an inspiration man
I like you. But seems like you are using clickbait type title in your video. What's the difference between you and Techlead then? Isn't it another version of 'as a millionaire'.
I am seeing your AD about AlgoExpert with a girl telling me that I want to be a software engineer at Google too much these couple of months. Her voices makes me hate your website even before I visited it. Sorry ))
aka Why I'm better than TeachLead
Nice
Dear Clément,
I really enjoy your videos and I find them really helpful, but this one is total bull****. I'm a psychologist and left my very joyful and rewarding job 1,5 years ago with burnout. I have been in and out of psycho-somatic clinics, psychiatrists, therapists and all that Jazz. First of all sleep deprivation itself is not burning out but it is definitely a symptom. Second it is a psychosomatic disease/disorder (I don't know the precise terminology as English is not my 1st language), therefore your mental state, your bodily symptoms and emotions are all interconnected and can have many shape or forms. What almost always connects them is depression. Now, depression is not sadness it's actually the absence of emotions all together. But you are definitely finding yourself on the more pessimistic side of view. For sure, some people have a certain prevalence to burnout and depression BUT it has certainly nothing to do with a rewarding job. Quite the opposite. All this "Do what you love"-stuff leads people into a trap of working an unhealthy amount of hours, not being able to gain emotional distance from work, setting boundaries, etc.
And as a 25 y/o I just assume that your body has still enough strength, youth and resilience to not burnout, yet. Let's talk in ten years.
Redbull X
Dear sir,
I am new to coding. But I want to know more by doing fluently as well as you.
Please replay what would you suggest me to be so...
😘😘😘😘😘
please Make TypeScript and Ds tutorials , 😅lol xd
Do you miss your cool haircut😅😅?
Yes 😞
@@clem I think this one is better. I literally shaved my head because I don't know when I will get a haircut next time 😅. So you are in a better place than me
Boy take a break
Because you have a beautiful girlfriend and the other divorced. Furthermore, he got no friends (as a millionaire).
1
Cause you can last longer😜
2022:
'**************' as a 27 year old CEO (ex- 25 year old CEO, ex- 26 year old CEO)
One more,get a good girlfriend!