Builder.io | San Francisco, CA or Remote | Software Engineer, Tech Support, Head of User Operations
Builder.io (https://www.builder.io) is a visual editor and CMS that connects to any platform or tech stack allowing anyone to create and edit content visually.
We're a small team of experienced developers backed by leading Silicon Valley VCs.
Builder enables our product / marketing teams to iterate, test and customize different parts of the site really quickly. These days we rarely receive marketing tickets because they can build whatever they want in Builder.
As an engineer, it's been great to use our custom components in the web UI, and the ability to connect to our own APIs has been pretty cool as well. Plus, it's super fast and stable. We were initially concerned it might impact load times, but the client sdk is really lightweight and the content loads faster than our own APIs.
Was just able to push/pull okay, overall seems like they're dealing with the outage really well. Their status page is really helpful, they were on twitter quickly, and they tried to restore service to people who might need to push/pull to their repos.
Build at least one project that looks nice. You don't need to spend a lot of time, but buy a nice-looking theme (I used themeforest) and build a simple site for a small business. Then hit up your non-technical network. Show them that you can give them an attractive website, and you'll probably find a few people who are interested in working with you.
When I first started freelancing, I spent 10 hours on a redesign for a local fitness boutique. It was an easy project that earned $700, but I would've done it for free if I knew all the business they'd send my way after. After seeing the site, the receptionist's brother wanted a website for his bike store, another client wanted a new site for his business, even the guy who cut my hair wanted me to make him a website after seeing the one project I had done.
If you can't find anyone in your network that's looking for help, try contacting local businesses with crappy websites. You can create some screen-shots of a potential redesign or even create a working demo page using pre-built themes (check out trial.mysitemyway.com). You'd be surprised at how many projects you can get from this type of outreach.
Nice post, I was in the same position about a year ago. It feels really good when you get to the stage when you can launch a project, which doesn't take very long with Django.
After a few months of working with Python/Django I realized how much else there is to learn and how shitty my first attempts really were. I keep going back over my old scripts every time I learn something new to see if I can improve the code. It's sometimes depressing thinking about how much there is to learn, but the power to create whatever you want is totally worth it!
Working in Education doesn't always have the same instant gratification as other projects, but if you can help people learn then you're going to have a very strong and lasting impact over time. And imagine if you created a product like, Khan Academy, that would increase the knowledge of 1% of the population by 10%. I think that's a worthy goal.
Improving education doesn't have the same immediate benefits, but the way I see it insufficient education is at the root of most of the world's problems. With improving education, you make a ripple which turns into a huge wave.
Immediate and long term results are both worthy and needed. It's just a choice: do you want to work in the world's emergency room, or in patient education?
The neon green on the Opez site is giving me a headache. And the white text on green background is really hard to read. It's an interesting idea, and may be helpful if they can integrate with some of the existing networks - I just really hope they change the color scheme.
That's what I thought too when I saw the title. I didn't think anyone brought actual gifts to interviews, but it's cool to know that someone has! I wonder if anyone would have a negative reaction to bringing actual gifts.
I've never had a 'negative' reaction - the receptionist who saw me at the milk/cookies interview didnt know what to do with me, so she took the milk to the break area, but that was it.
A small tray of cookies (milk's too hard to do) or popcorn (we have palsiespopcorn.com right near the house - easy to pick up), I've found, is generally a nice icebreaker, especially if you have an afternoon interview.
I've also found these to be a really nice thing to bring to new consulting projects for kickoff meetings - few people ever turn down a piece of fudge :) I don't do it all the time, but enough to keep people happy.
Builder.io (https://www.builder.io) is a visual editor and CMS that connects to any platform or tech stack allowing anyone to create and edit content visually.
We're a small team of experienced developers backed by leading Silicon Valley VCs.
We currently have 3 open roles:
- Software Engineer (React + Node.js): https://angel.co/company/builder-io/jobs/711157-full-stack-e...
- Tech Support: https://angel.co/company/builder-io/jobs/694201-technical-sp...
- Head of User Operations: https://angel.co/company/builder-io/jobs/709276-head-of-user...