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The Technical Career Navigator: An…
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The Technical Career Navigator: An Engineer's Programmer'S, and Technical Manager's Career Survival Guide Featuring 138 Keys to Finding a Job, and Adv (edición 1994)

por Ray Weiss

MiembrosReseñasPopularidadValoración promediaConversaciones
612,631,099 (3.5)Ninguno
Miembro:IvanIdris
Título:The Technical Career Navigator: An Engineer's Programmer'S, and Technical Manager's Career Survival Guide Featuring 138 Keys to Finding a Job, and Adv
Autores:Ray Weiss
Información:Prentice Hall Trade (1994), Paperback, 312 pages
Colecciones:Tu biblioteca
Valoración:*****
Etiquetas:Ninguno

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The Technical Career Navigator: An Engineer's Programmer'S, and Technical Manager's Career Survival Guide Featuring 138 por Ray Weiss

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In these hard economic times The Technical Career Navigator by Ray Weiss is the perfect book to help you find a job, keep your job and advance your career. The book is written for programmers, hardware engineers, technical managers and documentation writers. It consists of two alphabetically sorted lists of one to three page articles. Each article starts with one or more relevant quotes. The first list contains general tips for the intended audience. The second list contains job search tips.
Technical Navigator

I tried dividing the first list in some sublists for the purpose of this review.
Career

As expected the book contains a number of general career insights.

Be Noticed – do your work and make sure you’re noticed.
Consulting – tips on avoiding doing grunt work, setting your rates, growing your skillset and finding new projects.
Decisions – we make so many decisions in our working life, that we need to review where we are heading at least once a year.
Hairy Arm – leave an obvious flaw in your design or proposal. People want to have something to fix before accepting your idea.
I don’t Know – it’s hard to say that you don’t know something, but it is the best thing to do.
Lateral Thinking – a different way to solve problems.
Line Versus Service – work where the money is, line organizations.

Product Marketing

Surprisingly, the book also has advice on product marketing.

Betting On Instinct – most companies do extensive market analysis, however eventually decisions are made not based on numbers, but intuition.
By The You-Know-Whats – this one doesn’t require any explanation.

Technical Management

Technical management pitfalls are also discussed in the book.

Breaking Owsie Chains – owsie chains are bad. You need to find a way to break them.
Consent of the Governed – managers do not have a Divine Right to rule.
Credit Theory of Management – this theory compares management to credit banking.
Fear – you cannot innovate if you live in fear.
Gearing up – shifting from mediocrity to superiority.
Hiring – a list of hiring techniques is given.
It’s not What you do – do not expect other people to work in the same way or at the same level as you do.

Writing and Documentation

The author is a former technical editor with years of experience writing documentation.

Conceptual Maps – needed for documentation. I wonder if mind maps are meant here.
Learn to Write – writing can be learned. You need to read and practice a lot. There are two stages. First, aim for simplicity. In the last stage you try to perfect your style. For a technical writer content is more important than style.
Writing Memos, Letters – use a pyramidlike approach, put concepts at the top and details at the bottom. Use contractions and keep the text simple.

Programmer or Engineer

The writer seems to make a distinction between programmers and hardware engineers.

Design Reviews – reviews are needed to find errors early.
Engineering Notebook – you should have one, preferably a paper notebook.
Expecting Too Much – you don’t expect your code to work the first time you run it, do you? Why would it be different in real life?
Invest 30 minutes a Day – set time aside each day to keep current.
Pat Yourself on the Back – as you become more senior you will get less and less kudos from management. Know your worth.
Product Track Record – make sure you have some successes.

Job Search Tips

At the end of the book we find hints and observations about job hunting.

Catching a Horse – finding a job is easier, while you have one.
Contacting People – hints on contacting managers and recruiters.
Do It In Parallel – search in parallel fashion.

Technical Career Navigator contains many hidden gems. It’s a book you will be reading again and again. I give this book 5 stars out of 5. ( )
  IvanIdris | Jan 29, 2012 |
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