We’re coming on that time of year when many people make their goals for the next year. Before you do that, reflect on how you did this year. If you accomplished a goal, how did you do it? If you didn’t accomplish a goal, what happened?
Many people wrote in to me with the goal of becoming a Data Engineer. That’s a great goal and one that I’ve help thousands of people attain.
How did you do at this goal? Did you get a job as a Data Engineer? Have you had this goal of becoming a Data Engineer and still not attained it?
I’ve found a wide array of levels of effort in hitting this goal. Some people have spent hours watching YouTube videos. Others have bought an online course that is really introductory. Still others are held up by the programming requirements of Big Data.
This is the point in time where you take a really honest look at the time you’ve spent and see if they’ve actually paid off:
- Do you have a job as a Data Engineer (this should be your end goal)?
- Could you pass a Data Engineer interview or would you crash and burn at the whiteboard?
- Do you understand Big Data concepts or does your lack of understanding show through during an interview?
- Could you pseudo-code WordCount?
- Could you pseudo-code finding all the distinct words in a petabyte of data?
If you’re looking at these and saying no; you need more help. If you looking at these questions and saying maybe, you probably won’t pass that interview. If you’re saying yes, I invite you to take out a pen and paper and do the pseudo-coding. These aren’t arbitrary questions; these are the basic questions you’ll see at every Data Engineer interview. You’ll get more complicated questions than this. You need to be ready.
Becoming a Data Engineer isn’t an easy process. It requires a significant amount of time, effort, and skill.
Not attaining your goals happens one day a time. It starts with being disheartened because watching those YouTube videos doesn’t teach you everything you need to know. That online course is too introductory to even pass an entry level Data Engineer interview. You keep spending time and not getting anywhere. You’re not making any progress on the goal you want to achieve so much.
What should you do?
You need to use a proven source of learning to become a Data Engineer. I’ve taught thousands of students at hundreds of companies. I specialize in taking Software Engineers and making them Data Engineers. My curriculum has been proven to take Software Engineers and making them Data Engineers.
If:
* You actually want to achieve your goals this time
* You’re tired of wasting your time
* You’re lost in the maze of Big Data technologies and don’t know which ones are actually used in production
I encourage you to join my list. That’s the only place my Professional Data Engineering course is offered.
My Professional Data Engineering course teaches you the skills you need to become a Data Engineer. Most courses just teach a single technology. That isn’t a Data Engineer; that’s a Software Engineer who knows a little about Big Data. A Data Engineer needs to know many different technologies to use the tool for the job.
The course teaches you how to create data pipelines. That’s the distinguishing factor between a Software Engineer and a Data Engineer. A Data Engineer must know how to create efficient data pipelines and data products using the right technologies for the job.
If you’re failing at interviews or wasting your time on introductory courses, sign up for my email list so that you can join my ranks of successful Data Engineers.