Lecturer of the course "Analytics: the art of managing data"
Posted: Sun Jan 12, 2025 6:14 am
1. Be IT-wise in the new year.
2. Do not rush to make an important IT decision, think through all the details and nuances.
I would like to supplement these tips with my own observations on why it is important to share your IT knowledge with others and be sure to support novice developers.
One day, I realized that the huge layer of practical IT knowledge that I had accumulated during my work was preventing me from moving forward and developing. In a sense, I was “fixated” on this knowledge, which, in the end, no longer helped me find various solutions to problems, but slowed me down.
I decided to change my development vector and became a teacher at Kazan Federal University, and then at Innopolis University. Sharing experience and iceland phone data knowledge with students, advanced engineers, novice analysts in order to structure this knowledge in such a way as to understand how I myself can be more diverse in my career and useful for the guys attending my lectures and practices is priceless!
Therefore, I want to wish you, friends, the following:
- support the guys, comrades, friends who are just starting their path in IT;
- share your motivation and your example of development in the IT industry;
- be sure to share IT knowledge and experience, it will come back to you a hundredfold.
Find an internship. Free. In any company. Just to get real experience in developing an IT product.
3. Learn to independently analyze real IT products. Look at the largest development companies. Study their product line in detail. Superimpose your knowledge of product management on it - who the target audience is, what pain the product solves, what is its user path, what the USP (unique value proposition) sounds like, where it is located, who the product competes with, how much it costs and why, what is the product's functionality, what are its strengths and weaknesses, what channels are used to promote and sell the product. Understand why these channels were chosen.
2. Do not rush to make an important IT decision, think through all the details and nuances.
I would like to supplement these tips with my own observations on why it is important to share your IT knowledge with others and be sure to support novice developers.
One day, I realized that the huge layer of practical IT knowledge that I had accumulated during my work was preventing me from moving forward and developing. In a sense, I was “fixated” on this knowledge, which, in the end, no longer helped me find various solutions to problems, but slowed me down.
I decided to change my development vector and became a teacher at Kazan Federal University, and then at Innopolis University. Sharing experience and iceland phone data knowledge with students, advanced engineers, novice analysts in order to structure this knowledge in such a way as to understand how I myself can be more diverse in my career and useful for the guys attending my lectures and practices is priceless!
Therefore, I want to wish you, friends, the following:
- support the guys, comrades, friends who are just starting their path in IT;
- share your motivation and your example of development in the IT industry;
- be sure to share IT knowledge and experience, it will come back to you a hundredfold.
Find an internship. Free. In any company. Just to get real experience in developing an IT product.
3. Learn to independently analyze real IT products. Look at the largest development companies. Study their product line in detail. Superimpose your knowledge of product management on it - who the target audience is, what pain the product solves, what is its user path, what the USP (unique value proposition) sounds like, where it is located, who the product competes with, how much it costs and why, what is the product's functionality, what are its strengths and weaknesses, what channels are used to promote and sell the product. Understand why these channels were chosen.