I work as an analyst contractor, these days my roles are often a mixture of development and management. I have been asked by a countless number of people what they need to do to get the jobs I’m offered – and it’s simpler than most expect. The market for talented developers in the United Kingdom (and in many talent-lite communities around the world) is such that anyone who merely knows what they are doing has a very good chance of getting a job. Even a job contracting (which ordinarily has senior-level requirements).
To become a web developer with a good salary and employment expectations you need skills. Below I’ll provide a plan to get you towards the top of the largest market: PHP Web Development. Advanced knowledge of everything on this list would immediately make you one of the best, so just strive to have an exposure if not a comprehensive understanding (though the *starred points are essential). To learn these technologies you should use several in combination on one of the projects listed at the bottom (as well as on ideas of your own). Applied knowledge is much more useful than theoretical, good interviews will often asked about problems encountered to demonstrate that you do actually know your stuff.
When you have completed projects, you can upload them to github (or another public repo) and get help & feedback from the community via freednode irc (##php, etc.) or reddit (/r/php, /r/webdev) etc.
When it comes to writing a CV (resume) for web dev. positions having this code available on a public respository will do wonders for your credibility. You do not need to have commercial experience to get a job. On a CV you can discuss these projects, the technology you used, its pluses/negatives. You should expand on any work you have done (outside of dev. included) that shows you are reliable and personable. Aim to demonstrate enough knowledge that interviewing you will be worth their time. Remember that many companies would prefer to hire a personable developer that they can train up than a highly skilled developer that is difficult to work with.
- http://net.tutsplus.com/tutorials/databases/sql-for-beginners/
- http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/stored-routines.html
- http://net.tutsplus.com/tutorials/an-introduction-to-stored-procedures/
- http://www.htmldog.com/guides/cssbeginner/
- http://net.tutsplus.com/tutorials/html-css-techniques/html-5-and-css-3-the-techniques-youll-soon-be-using/
- http://net.tutsplus.com/tutorials/php/faster-php-mysql-websites-in-minutes/
- http://phpmaster.com/an-introduction-to-redis-in-php-using-predis/
- http://net.tutsplus.com/tutorials/php/test-driven-development-in-php-first-steps/
- http://phpqatools.org/
- http://www.defmacro.org/ramblings/fp.html
- http://jburrows.wordpress.com/2011/06/24/the-state-of-functional-programming-in-php-5-3-x/
- http://blog.lcf.name/2011/12/functional-programming-in-php.html
- http://www.slideshare.net/duleepa/scaling-a-web-site-oscon-tutorial
- http://bitkickers.blogspot.co.uk/2011/12/nginx-ssl-reverse-proxy-tutorial.html
- http://code.flickr.com/blog/2010/02/08/using-abusing-and-scaling-mysql-at-flickr/
- http://www.slideshare.net/crnixon/dealing-with-legacy-php-applications
- http://www.slideshare.net/rowan_m/living-with-legacy-code
- http://fosswire.com/post/2007/04/the-differences-between-the-gpl-lgpl-and-the-bsd/
- http://opensource.org/licenses/alphabetical
- http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_free_software_licenses
- http://try.github.com/levels/1/challenges/1
- http://maverick.inria.fr/~Xavier.Decoret/resources/svn/index.html
- http://framework.zend.com/manual/en/learning.quickstart.intro.html/
- http://book.cakephp.org/2.0/en/index.html
- http://silex.sensiolabs.org/
- http://andyet.net/blog/2010/oct/29/building-a-single-page-app-with-backbonejs-undersc/
- http://jquery.com/
- http://backbonejs.org/
- http://underscorejs.org/
- Basic CRUD Form/Survey/Guestbook website
- Blog using the above libraries
- Shopping Cart/Ecommerce project using these libraries
- Social Networking Site (either microblogger, group sharing, etc.)
- Chat (Rooms)
- File Manager
- Online Build/Deployment Manager (upload & deploy phars?)
- Write documentation and tutorials on your own code
- Write coding standards
- Write designs for different applications you have seen online (how would you design facebook?)
- Outline the way you work, from how you start to deploy to support projects
**Research other solutions to the above problems and compare with your own. **