Posted on Jan 17 • Originally published at selftaughttxg.com
Would you like 1-on-1 help from industry experts to help you break into tech? In this weeks' article, I cover MentorCruise's new Podcast featuring tech celebrity Dylan Israel, the guest on episode one!
About MentorCruise
Through MentorCruise, you can hire a dedicated career coach to help and support you in reaching your goals for a flat monthly price.
"Want to ace your next job interview? Successfully build your startup? Itching to learn high-demand skills? Work smart with an online mentor or coach by your side to offer expert advice and guidance to match your zeal. Become unstoppable using MentorCruise."
-MentorCruise
About Dylan Israel
Dylan Israel is currently a Front End Engineer II at Amazon, a Mentor, and an Educator.
Dylan has built courses on JavaScript, TypeScript, and Front End technologies. He speaks at conferences, has created over 1,000 videos on software engineering, and is Co-Host of the "Self-Taught or Not" Podcast.
The MentorCruise Podcast
The MentorCruise Podcast is a brand new Podcast consisting of in-depth conversations with their Mentors.
EP 1 - Breaking into big tech with Dylan Israel
Dylan Israel is the first guest on the new MentorCruise Podcast, and the topic is "Breaking into big tech."
Dylan discusses his path to success as a self-taught developer during the Podcast, from his humble beginnings to landing his first job at a "FAANG" company.
( FAANG: Facebook, Amazon, Apple, Netflix, and Google)
"It took four years to be an overnight success!"
-Dylan Israel
Humble Beginnings
Like many people, Dylan chose to go to college because it was the typical path. Admittedly, Dylan only gave college a "half effort" because he wasn't happy there.
Dylan decided to drop out of college to pursue becoming a software engineer on his own. He describes his first job in tech as "a cross between a business analyst and a technical writer." He worked 50 hours a week.
Continuing his education, Dylan spent a lot of time taking coding courses from online schools; Dylan cites Codecademy and freeCodeCamp.
While learning with these online schools, Dylan created his own YouTube channel, where he documents and teaches what he is learning.
"I just wanted an interesting side project that would catch people's eyes, and maybe I could make some money in the best-case scenario."
-Dylan Israel
Many people found Dylan's resourceful and inspirational YouTube channel and coded along with him, including me!
However, not everyone shared my positive opinion of Dylan Israel's YouTube Chanel. Throughout his self-taught coding journey, Dylan has come across traditionally trained developers and "Trolls" who were vocal about their disbelief in his ability to become a professional engineer.
"The comment was like, Hey! Self-taught engineers will never be engineers or something like that. Part of it was maybe a chip on my shoulder and being like, listen, I can work anywhere, and I will prove it to you, and am going to Big 4, big tech companies."
-Dylan Israel
Dylan pursued his journey and persevered in becoming a professional engineer despite their negativity.
How Dylan landed a job at Amazon
Dylan worked at Price Waterhouse Cooper, a big company, but not a big tech company. He credits all of his "passion projects" in drawing the attention of tech recruiters.
"For the recruiters to reach out, they have to say, 'Hey, maybe this person knows what they are doing and is a very passionate engineer, and let us give him a shot.' Right?"
-Dylan Israel
Dylan secured an interview at Amazon through a recruiter that reached out to him. Two weeks after the interview, Amazon hired Dylan.
What to expect at a FAANG interview
Amazon was not the first FAANG company Dylan interviewed for. He interviewed five times at FAANG companies before being hired.
Dylan informs us that each FAANG interview is a four to six-hour process.
"I had 5 FAANG interviews before I got my first FAANG job, right? And that is not a fun process to go through by any means, right? That is probably 30 hours of just interviews that did not amount to much of anything other than a learning experience. It absolutely is worth and it absolutely has made me a better engineer and has had a positive impact on my career trajectory."
-Dylan Israel
Dylan tells us, although all of his "passion projects" got him the attention he needed to get his foot in the door of FAANG companies, during the interview, all of that "goes out the window," and it's straight onto "data structures and algorithms tests."
In addition to data structures and algorithms questions, FAANG companies also require you to take behavioral tests. Dylan tells us that we need to show that we have confidence, and we need to believe in our own skillset, or "people are going to pick up on that," and they are not going to hire us.
"You have to be able to sell yourself. You have to be able to answer questions, interact. So much of any job is not only the technical part. Do people perceive you are going to be easy to work with? that you are going to be fun to work with? and that they are going to ask you a question and you are not just going to grunt back at them, right? So, I do not think you need to be an extrovert by any sense of imagination, but you have to be able to communicate your experience and be confident that you can, for some of those behavioral questions."
-Dylan Israel
What FAANG companies look for in candidates
During the Podcast, Dylan provides us with valuable information on what big tech companies look for in candidates:
"It is like, hey, we want somebody who brings something different to the team, and it is going to make the team better."
-Dylan Israel
Dylan tells us there are many applicants to the big "FAANG" tech companies and explains what the applicants have in common and what will help you to stand out.
Applicants have in common:
- Software engineer
- Work experience
How Dylan stands out from other applicants:
- Course Creator
- YouTuber
- Podcaster
- Conference Speaker
- Mentor
"How am I different than other engineers? Well, I build courses, I do YouTube. I have podcasts. I spoke at conferences. And then they were, great! We found our diamond in the rough type of guy."
-Dylan Israel
Dylan also tells us, to pass the interview, we have to be confident and be able to articulate our expertise clearly.
What Dylan does at Amazon
Dylan works at Amazon as a "Front End Engineer II" on a project called Explore.
Dylan describes the Amazon Explore project, "we are digitizing travel and experiences. It is a web RTC real-time streaming app, a pretty fun thing, different than building your traditional e-commerce platform or component library that I have done in the past."
You can use this link to check out Amazon's Explore, which is currently in its beta version.
Dylan as a Mentor
Dylan is a top mentor on MentorCruise with a five-star rating from over thirty mentees.
Also, Dylan provides his own created courses for FREE for all of his MentorCruise mentees!
You can read the entire transcript and listen to the full episode on the MentorCruise website!
Erik Hanchett as a Mentor
Did you know that Dylan's Self-Taught or Not Podcast Co-Host Erik Hanchett is also a MentorCruise mentor?
Erik has a Bachelor's Degree in Computer Science and an M.B.A. in Entrepreneurship from the University of Nevada, Reno. Erik also works at Amazon as a Front End Engineer.
To learn more about Erik, you can read my article: Erik Hanchett: Advice on how to get your first developer job from an Amazon Front-End Engineer
Dominic Monn Links
The host for the MentorCruise Podcast is Dominic Monn. Be sure to give him a follow!
Be sure to check out the MentorCruise website!
Dylan's Projects
YouTube channel
Dylan's YouTube channel CodingTutorials360 has over 79,000 subscribers, and the channel's total views are over 5.8 million.
YouTube channel description
"Coders and inspiring programmers have come to the correct channel. Daily uploads of multiple object-oriented programming languages. Specializing with JavaScript and its frameworks such as jQuery, Angular, React, and more. Most of the content is focused around online tutorial sites such as Codecademy, FreeCodeCamp, and CodeCombat."
Podcast
The Self-Taught or Not Podcast covers the "do's and don'ts" of software development and is hosted by Dylan Israel & Erik Hanchett.
Dylan tells us he put his YouTube and Podcast on hold as he is currently building courses.
Building courses for:
- LinkedIn Learning
- w3schools
For LinkedIn Learning, Dylan created a course for Unit Testing with Jasmine and a course for TypeScript.
Many self-taught developers find their way to w3schools when learning how to code, including Dylan. Now Dylan is creating "TypeScript" content for w3schools!
My other Dylan Israel articles
Dylan's links
Conclusion
In just under five years, as a self-taught developer, Dylan Israel went from being a college dropout to a six-figure employee of a highly sought-after "FAANG" company, Amazon.
In addition to building his online presence through his YouTube channel, Podcast, courses, and public speaking, Dylan credits having a mentor as a significant contributor to his "path to success."
Dylan has come full circle; He was instructed by a mentor and is now a five-star mentor at MentorCruise!