[2022] Career Hacking
World's Bestselling Job Search Course

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Below are the top discussions from Reddit that mention this online Udemy course.

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Taught by
Davis Jones

2

Reddit Posts and Comments

0 posts • 7 mentions • top 5 shown below

r/jobs • comment
3 points • scallopini

It's hard to give a blanket answer because people may be struggling with different issues. For me, the biggest struggle was not enjoying talking about myself or selling myself. This course has some pretty good tips on that: https://www.udemy.com/course/golden-gate-bridge/ . Motivation is probably another common struggle, the only thing I can say is try to build some momentum so it feels like you're making progress. For instance, if you've struggled just to get an interview and finally land one but then get rejected. Use the experience of reaching the next stage as motivation to keep trying to get to the stage after that.

r/ProductManagement • comment
1 points • berkozak

Alright, my Fall Guys game is over so I can share a better response now.

This course has worked wonders for me, on my resume and Linkedin profile: https://www.udemy.com/course/golden-gate-bridge

I was simply not aware how bad my resume was and I was getting almost all rejections before taking this course.

I made use of many websites to look for jobs - I could recommend some if you are looking for a job in US.

I would advise applying to all Product roles - some companies use Program managers, some use Product Owners similarly as PMs.

I searched for "product" and all of these keywords on LinkedIn and added everyone I could in locations of my preference: hiring, recruiter, recruiting, recruitment, headhunter, staffing, talent, sourcing - I would also suggest adding all Product people if you can. That also helps as well.

There are many other tips in the course, like updating your LinkedIn header the right way.

r/CompTIA • comment
1 points • gregtwy

I would say the cliché that you should only be down to one page isn't right anymore. Most of my friends have about two pages for a resume. I haven't adjusted mine towards IT yet so be aware this is leaned towards a business management job. I'm moving careers.

This is a tool you will see a lot of resume experts share. Create word clouds – WordItOut . Use it to see what keywords you are using most in your resume and use it again to see what words your job descriptions are looking for. If you need anything else let me know! I also highly recommend a udemy course on resumes if you are still having issues. That's where I learned most of my information haha.

https://imgur.com/a/Mkf469S

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[2021] Career Hacking™: Resume, LinkedIn, Interviewing +More | Udemy

r/marketing • comment
1 points • obelesk411

You can try Acadium to build up a portfolio and recommendations.
https://acadium.com/

This will help you clean up your LinkedIn and network.

https://www.udemy.com/course/golden-gate-bridge/

r/learnjavascript • comment
2 points • atthesummit

*Imp: I am not affiliated with Udemy or any of the instructors, I have just created this plan for my friend to get the first job

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  • Its \~300 hours of content so it should take around 3-6 months, including practice
  • It covers web technologies, in depth JavaScript, Frontend framework like Reactjs & its ecosystem, backend tecnologies like Nodejs & its ecosystem, some other important tools & technologies, TypeScript, interview preparation & resume writing
  • It covers at least 4 major projects

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  1. Introduction to Web Technologies (HTML, CSS, JavaScript, Nodejs, etc) (34 hours)

https://www.udemy.com/course/the-complete-web-developer-zero-to-mastery/

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2)  In depth JavaScript (Your main programming language) (52 hours)

https://www.udemy.com/course/javascript-beginners-complete-tutorial/

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3) Advanced CSS (llayouts & animation) (28 hours)

https://www.udemy.com/course/advanced-css-and-sass/

4) Everything about - Reactjs & its ecosystem (Frontend Framework) (39 hours)

https://www.udemy.com/course/modern-react-bootcamp/

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5) Everything about - Nodejs and MongoDB  & their ecosystem (Backend Technologies) (42 hours)

https://www.udemy.com/course/nodejs-express-mongodb-bootcamp/

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6)  Some other important stuff (Performance, Security, Testing, Other Tools & Technologies) (35 hours)

https://www.udemy.com/course/the-complete-junior-to-senior-web-developer-roadmap/

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7) More in-trend programming language based on JavaScript - TypeScript (the current standard) (25 hours)

https://www.udemy.com/course/typescript-the-complete-developers-guide/

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8) Interview Preparaion (Basic) (13 hours)https://www.udemy.com/course/coding-interview-bootcamp-algorithms-and-data-structure/

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9) Interview Preparation (advanced + LeetCode) (22 hours)

https://www.udemy.com/course/js-algorithms-and-data-structures-masterclass/

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10) Resume writing, LinkedIn, Job Searching, etc (7 hours)

https://www.udemy.com/course/golden-gate-bridge/

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\~ 300 hours of course content

let me know what you think

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ps: This is shared in good faith, there is no affiliation links or I am not going to get a single penny if you take any of the courses :)

This is for those who are comfortable with learning on Udemy

I created a comprehensive all inclusive plan, so thought about sharing it to whom who can really benefit from it