For communication, its one of the hardest things to master for non-native english speakers, and being on that situation most of the time, I think one of the things you must do is to keep on communicating with the articulate ones, its like kind of a practice if you would say. Great vid!
"Toastmasters", haven't heard that in decades. You touch on so many good points with this one. Acknowledging and owning up to your mistakes ties in so well with integrity and the other positive traits. Becoming/being trustworthy is really important to being given more opportunities. When you find a problem you need to raise, try to bring a solution/resolution as well. lol I should have known you would get to that one.
Toastmasters has been around a long time. I can’t exactly remember when I first heard of them, but it may have been in college. It is a group venture, which you join to achieve goals. Costs some $$ to join and attend. This presentation by Tim, was a good one! Once I got into a project (or job), I made sure to show some perseverance, in solving problems in completing that task or assign, by asking questions and testing, then querying shareholders of their results. As always, thanks Tim and have a great year in 2023!
13:56 I think this advice needs some nuance. Some places would prefer you did the opposite. Instead of spending time trying to solve an issue on your own, ask for help asap, so you can be given the answer by someone who already knows, and move on to your next task. Developers are expensive, and it's cheaper to leverage existing knowledge in an organization rather than struggle for an hour and come up with a solution that won't pass a code review. It's not my preferred way of working personally. But I've worked in places where this is the advice I was given, and I can't fault the logic.
I completly agree! I think I have okay soft skills and good enough software skills. But I remember trying to help out someone who worked on a program I helped setup, he worked in my office. They were so dead set on being a stick in the mud with no flexibility at all it was really difficult to work with them and I tried my best to explain things like this too them, but we ended up getting in a bit of a heated argument lol.
Not even close. ChatGPT can sole simple problems, but lots of real-world problems don’t fall into that category. Anything proprietary or involving the interaction of complex custom systems, for example, wouldn’t be solvable.
Tim's Top 4 soft skills are:
- Communication 1:49
- Drive/Persistence/Ethics 9:44
- Humility 19:48
- Problem solving 26:26
This video wasn't what I expected. However, it was exactly what I needed!!! Thanks 🙏
Glad it was helpful!
For communication, its one of the hardest things to master for non-native english speakers, and being on that situation most of the time, I think one of the things you must do is to keep on communicating with the articulate ones, its like kind of a practice if you would say. Great vid!
Thanks for sharing.
This is what I am looking for. Being technical is not enough
I’m glad it was helpful.
"Toastmasters", haven't heard that in decades. You touch on so many good points with this one. Acknowledging and owning up to your mistakes ties in so well with integrity and the other positive traits. Becoming/being trustworthy is really important to being given more opportunities. When you find a problem you need to raise, try to bring a solution/resolution as well. lol I should have known you would get to that one.
Toastmasters has been around a long time. I can’t exactly remember when I first heard of them, but it may have been in college.
It is a group venture, which you join to achieve goals.
Costs some $$ to join and attend.
This presentation by Tim, was a good one!
Once I got into a project (or job), I made sure to show some perseverance, in solving problems in completing that task or assign, by asking questions and testing, then querying shareholders of their results.
As always, thanks Tim and have a great year in 2023!
I'm glad you enjoyed the video.
Totally agree! Keep doing this kind of videos 👍
Thanks! Will do!
Thanks Dad! Love you 😘❤️
You are welcome.
Great video, as usual!
Thank you!
Thanks
You are welcome.
13:56 I think this advice needs some nuance.
Some places would prefer you did the opposite. Instead of spending time trying to solve an issue on your own, ask for help asap, so you can be given the answer by someone who already knows, and move on to your next task.
Developers are expensive, and it's cheaper to leverage existing knowledge in an organization rather than struggle for an hour and come up with a solution that won't pass a code review.
It's not my preferred way of working personally. But I've worked in places where this is the advice I was given, and I can't fault the logic.
Great video Tim!
Thank you!
Could you mark and show some very important ideas and sentences in the video Like; desire , to get better will take you further
I completly agree! I think I have okay soft skills and good enough software skills. But I remember trying to help out someone who worked on a program I helped setup, he worked in my office. They were so dead set on being a stick in the mud with no flexibility at all it was really difficult to work with them and I tried my best to explain things like this too them, but we ended up getting in a bit of a heated argument lol.
Helping obstinate people is hard. Working with them with a good attitude is really hard.
Soft skills can be hard
Absolutely.
Nice 🙂✌🏼
Thanks!
13:27 this will be obsolete if you know proper prompt engineering for machines like chatGPT!
Not even close. ChatGPT can sole simple problems, but lots of real-world problems don’t fall into that category. Anything proprietary or involving the interaction of complex custom systems, for example, wouldn’t be solvable.
I used to hear John Sonmez talk about soft skills for developers. Now you just see him giving dating advice on RUclips. 🙄
Well, I'm not heading that route.
John sonmez is the man! His content is great too
admit your mistake, by saying i'm make a mistake
That's an important step, for sure.
They didn't like human beings so they going for programming, then they needed to deal with clients directly these days? How ironic.
I am not sure what you are trying to say.
Voice still not sync with the video, annoying ...