Did you get a competitive salary?
Do you think you are starting your career on a solid footing?
It seems a lot of bootcamps teach with rote, rather than by looking at the underlying concepts. My favorite example is git. I've seen bootcamp grads claim they can use git, but what it really meant is that they memorized a few git commands and as long as they don't stray too far from those, they can sort of work using git. But cherry-picking, rebase, proper branching forget it.
I'm extremely skeptical of bootcamps, especially after learning that some of the TA's at Lambda (the most famous one) are hired to help with teaching as little as two months into the program as students[0]. I guess that counts toward their "placement" stats!
Not only that, but Lambda seems so desperate that they will offer a fresh grad at no cost to any company for a 4 weeks trial period. [1]. And that's, sadly, the most high profile one out there.
Notice there's no "Law Bootcamp" out there.
[0] https://nymag.com/intelligencer/2020/02/lambda-schools-job-p...
1. Not really sure what i learned but did so many algorithms that I could get a job.
2. Got a job with a bum company for $97k
3. Went to a major public tech company and made avg comp of $315k (mainly thanks to their stock taking off).
4. I have spent a lot of free time doing algorithms, coding in different languages, building full stack apps/projects, taking classes and doing online courses.
I think "starting" your career on solid footing is subjective based on your mentality and WHICH bootcamp. I have not heard good things about General Assembly nor their outcomes.
Wasn’t hard because I was having fun. But I guess I “studied” for around 12 hours a day for around 6 months. As I had no piece of paper certifying that I could code, I wrote copious number of apps and one of them was a full stack discord clone app which happened to impress the interviewers.
The interview got me into (arguably) the best graduate programme in my country. And I had an amazing team with interesting (albeit over engineered) stack which was an amazing start to my career.
I strongly considered a bootcamp but I couldn't justify the expense given the amount of free educational material that exists on the internet and uncertainty of how the credential would be perceived.
The program was through the local university but in reality their continuing education department ran a coding camp program from some third party.
Camp was challenging/ but not hard.
I got a job about 5 months after completing the program. The job was for a small company, did not pay “a lot” but once I proved myself my pay quickly went way up.
I really liked the classroom experience and being able to ask questions. Could I have learned it all myself, yes. As quickly at a camp, nope.
What was funny was I was a TERRIBLE college student at that age. At the camp I found as an adult I was the opposite.
IMO career footing is your willingness to figure things out on your own and curiosity.
Feel free to ask any questions.
1. Hardest thing I ever did, up to that point.
2. $105k starting salary
3. The most important thing it did was get me in the door as a software engineer. I actually learned and became decent on the job. I took those skills and built my own company years later.
Hope it helps!
Salary was 90k coming out. I make 125 now, could be making much more but I chose to sacrifice some salary to be at a place with a mission I support.
I was a special ed teacher before and had never made more than 70k.
1. It was challenging for sure, especially from a time management standpoint. I'd estimate that I was putting in 15-25 hours per week between participating in classes and working on group projects. That's a lot to take on while working full time. It starts off easy and ramps up in difficulty as you near your final group project. Fwiw, you can significantly reduce the learning curve by completing some online self-study/tutorials before hand and by investing in a nice laptop.
2. 120k starting salary. I transitioned into a full time software engineering roll with my existing employer. My employer also reimbursed me for a portion of the cost of the program.
3. The bootcamp was an excellent crash course into the world of full stack web development but I don't think it was a good foundation on its own per say. I think that the combination of a bootcamp and some real world experience could make a solid foundation assuming you land in the right work environment.
It takes a ton of work to complete a coding bootcamp and the networking/interviewing that follows is equally challenging. I'd suggest reaching out to individuals who successfully completed the programs you're interested in to get their two cents. Listen to their stories and ask them to reflect on how well they performed in their programs. Maybe you could find them on a LinkedIn alumni group or something like that? You could also reach out to former instructors and I bet they can point you in the right direction. My point is that I think you could really benefit from reaching beyond forums like HN, Reddit, etc for this kind of info/advice.
1. It took 13-14 interviews across 7 months to get my first job.
2. The salary for the area was not competitive, but I wanted to have something.
3. Yes. I applied for my second job two years later, and I had about 48 interviews across a 6 month period. The salary may not be considered competitive to some, but it's a bit over six figures and a lot more than what I made at my first job.