My career has stagnated after almost 9 years and I find myself pigeonholed into working as a full-stack JavaScript CRUD app code monkey.
I’ve been burnt out for a few years now and I despise corporate CRUD development. I find it incredibly tedious and boring, and working in the JavaScript ecosystem is maddening for its own reasons. But these are the only roles I’m hirable for at this point.
At the senior level, people expect expert knowledge of whatever the role entails, so companies seem unlikely to hire for a language stack I haven’t already been using professionally for years.
It seems that escaping upwards into software architecture or management is a common path, but I don’t want to manage and I’m at least a few years out from having the creds for architect.
Has anyone here revitalized or pivoted their career after finding themselves in a similar spot, without leaving tech entirely? If so I’d love to hear what worked for you. Thanks in advance.
When you have done something long enough, opportunities open. It's not because someone has been magically waiting for you. It's more that if you walk down a path, you'll find the other people walking that same path. Many of whom are also much, much more experienced but they've been in your place and are happy to mentor you.
But one catch is you have to already be experienced enough. Build things with a target to get it done in 2 or so weeks max (part time). Then the next thing at 4 weeks. That's one approach.
Draw stuff you see on Codepen. Build a thing in React. Make games. Turn your phone into a massage tool. Make a raytracer. Make a proper AI thing. You want to solve minimum level problems, not do advanced hello worlds, and get a feel for the whole cycle.