
How to Actually Use a Web Developer Roadmap: Mike Karan on Better Learning and Must-Have Skills for Junior Developers
Mike is a successful web development business owner and a co-host of the HTML All The Things podcast. He joins us to share his best advice about following roadmaps!
Audio is streamed directly from the publisher (media.transistor.fm) as published in their RSS feed. Play Podcasts does not host this file. Rights-holders can request removal through the copyright & takedown page.
Show Notes
π About the episode
Meet Mike Karan π¨π¦! Mike is a successful web development business owner and a co-host of the HTML All The Things podcast. His podcast and social media platforms have had tremendous growth in 2021, but Mike explains it's not all about the stats: it's about creating value and connecting with people.Β
In this episode, we're talking roadmaps! If you're learning to code, it's easier to follow a roadmap that somebody else has made. But, that can also be tricky: it's not always clear when to branch out or move on to another part of a roadmap. You'll learn how to recognize these opportunities, how to figure out if you should quit learning something, and why you should only focus on one framework at a time. Plus, there's a rant about regex.
π Connect with Mike
β° Timestamps
- Introduction (0:00)
- Mike's podcast and Twitter growth (02:00)
- How Mike chose the front-end developer career path (07:08)
- Step by step guide for learning to become a front-end developer (09:08)
- What can you achieve with just HTML and CSS? When is the right time to learn JavaScript? (14:00)
- How should you look at a roadmap? (17:49)
- Figure out what you hate! (18:48)
- How to know you've given something enough of a try? (21:34)
- When to monetize your skills? (24:51)
- On roadmaps and choosing the right framework (27:21)
- What does a junior developer have to know? (33:47)
- Apply your knowledge! (36:45)
π§° Resources mentioned
βοΈ Leave a Review
If you enjoyed this episode please leave a 5-star review here and let us know who you want to see on the next podcast.
You can also Tweet Alex from Scrimba at @bookercodes and tell them what lessons you learned from the episode so they can thank you personally for tuning in π