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Ask HN: Working in a startup
1 point by StylifyYourBlog on Dec 17, 2014 | hide | past | favorite | 2 comments
I have recently graduated from college and taken up a job as a frontend developer in a startup. The job itself is fulfilling but I do find that I am missing out on something in life. I have learned lots of new things in the past 3 months and had the opportunity to work with great people on one hand but find that the other things that I like to do (blogging , participating in meetups and doing exercise) have taken a back seat due to the sheer amount of time and energy required for working. Any advice on how to cope with this



Stick with the company for at least a year. You'll learn a lot of valuable skills. Staying with any one employer for at least a year makes it more likely you'll get hired somewhere else. Also everyone wants to know how many years, not months of experience you have with each skill you claim to have.

Be advised that it is quite uncommon for startups to actually succeed. The chances are quite good that your stock options - if any - will not be worth anything at all.

Do the very best you can to stay connected - or GET connected - with a professional network.

Take a long, hard look at whether your startup really will succeed. If you don't think it will, start sending out resumes towards the end of your first year on the job.

If you really do believe it will succeed, then decide for yourself whether it is worth all the effort and sacrifice.

Find some older, more experienced industry people who can give you some insight as to whether your startup will succeed.

Leave the office at least once per day, preferably twice, to go get a coffee or a smoothie. Do this on your own sometimes, so you can think, or invite a colleague. If you never leave the office during such a hard workday, you will burn out for sure.

Say you're having trouble on some code. Ask your boss out for coffee then discuss your problem with him. At Working Software, my boss and I did that every single day for three years.


Thanks for this advice Michael




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