Book Image

Developer, Advocate!

By : Geertjan Wielenga
Book Image

Developer, Advocate!

By: Geertjan Wielenga

Overview of this book

What exactly is a developer advocate, and how do they connect developers and companies around the world? Why is the area of developer relations set to explode? Can anybody with a passion for tech become a developer advocate? What are the keys to success on a global scale? How does a developer advocate maintain authenticity when balancing the needs of their company and their tech community? What are the hot topics in areas including Java, JavaScript, "tech for good," artificial intelligence, blockchain, the cloud, and open source? These are just a few of the questions addressed by developer advocate and author Geertjan Wielenga in Developer, Advocate!. 32 of the industry's most prominent developer advocates, from companies including Oracle, Microsoft, Google, and Amazon, open up about what it's like to turn a lifelong passion for knowledge sharing about tech into a rewarding career. These advocates run the gamut from working at large software vendors to small start-ups, along with independent developer advocates who work within organizations or for themselves. In Developer, Advocate!, readers will see how developer advocates are actively changing the world, not only for developers, but for individuals and companies navigating the fast-changing tech landscape. More importantly, Developer, Advocate! serves as a rallying cry to inspire and motivate tech enthusiasts and burgeoning developer advocates to get started and take their first steps within their tech community.
Table of Contents (36 chapters)
34
Other Books You May Enjoy
35
Index
36
Packt

Being independent

Geertjan Wielenga: This whole lean approach is something that you're able to promote because you're working for yourself. You're not promoting a particular tech, framework, or company that has a stack that it wants to get out there in the developer world. You're basically just promoting yourself and your services, right?

Adam Bien: Yes, people suspected me of working for Sun Microsystems at one point and they also thought that I was working for Oracle, but I was always independent.

I get hired by product managers and product owners. Actually, for the last project I worked on, a product owner hired me to verify their framework. I said, "You don't need a framework," and this caused an internal escalation, but the developers liked the decision.

"Developers own the code; they should be satisfied, not the advocates."

—Adam Bien

You can't be political when working with clients. You should be politically...