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This article is adapted from my book, Solving for Technology: how to quickly learn valuable new skills in a madly changing technology world.
Everyone dreams, and some dreams eventually translate to plans. Once in a while, it must be said, a plan even inspires some soft stirrings of movement. But achievement? Letâs not get carried away.
Growth is hard. Nevertheless, there are things that we can control that can help the process along. Youâll always need a certain mental toughness and disciplineâââthings Iâm not sure can be taughtâââso thatâll be your responsibility. But there are techniques and tricks specific to technology learning for staying motivated and finding the right frame of mind. Those, as illustrated in the figure, are what weâll talk about in this chapter.
A decision flow that might produce smart learning choicesIdentifying the problem that needs solving
Before plunging head first into your next learning adventure itâs worthwhile taking a moment to ask yourself a few questions. Being clear about why youâre doing something can improve the way you go about it. The idea is to design a learning plan for yourself thatâs a comfortable fit both with where you are now and where you want to be in a year or two.
First off, what exactly do you hope to gain from this new technology? Whatâs currently missing in your career or knowledge stack that this skill will fix?Are you a system administrator who sometimes struggles to understand the needs of the developers you serve, or a developer who sometimes wants to launch your own test environments to see how your application will actually run? Can you hear the clock ticking on your current job and youâd like to leverage your existing skills to quickly pick up new ones?
How can this kind of clarity help? Well, for one thing, itâll certainly make it less likely that youâll end up wasting time by investing in something that wonât end up being helpful. But the big âsavingsâ will come from knowing how deep you should dig.
Hereâs an obvious example. If youâre considering a career in Linux administration, then you should look for a curriculum covering a full range of Linux tools (like my Linux in Action book, for instance). But if youâre only interested in picking up the tools you need to safely provision and launch your web application, then you might be better off with a simple how-to guideâââthe kind that a web search for install web app on lamp server might uncover.
You should also try to calculate the potential payoff: if learning a particular new technology will likely get you a job with a considerably higher salary, then it might be worth spending the time and money on longer courses and even studying for certification exams. But if, on the other hand, the benefits are less dramatic, then you might want to limit the scope of your studies and pursue them in your spare time.
Perhaps most important of all, you should make sure that your new learning project is a good match for your particular strengths and background. Ambition is great, and pushing yourself out of your comfort zone can be rewarding for a thousand reasons. But if, say, the day-to-day work of a sysadminâââor of a Java developerâââhas never attracted you, then itâs foolish to allow an unrealistic ambition to push you into something that youâll probably regret.
I donât know about you, but Iâve known plenty of people whose dreams drove them to catastrophic failures. Take a cousin of mine as an example of doing it right. He really thought heâd love to be a dentist and he had the intelligence and drive to do it. But before making his final decision, he spent a week sitting in a dentistâs office and watching. At the end of the week, his mind was set: the work wasnât for him.
Contrast my cousin with the many professionalsâââincluding a nice handful of dentistsâââIâve known who chose badly and, within a few years, usually end up washing out.
Again: when everything is said and done, the plan has to fit the problemâââyour problemâââthat itâs meant to solve.
Squeezing the most out of your learning
If youâll bear with me just a bit longer, Iâd like to explore a few more thoughts on choosing. Weâll get to actual study tools and best practices later in the book, but some things simply work better when theyâve been fully planned in advance - and education is one of them.
Letâs imagine that youâve narrowed your next-tech options down to a short list of topics that nicely match your background, needs, and understanding of market trends. What kind of filters can you now apply to single out the best choice?
All things being equal, these considerations should show you that all things are not equal.
- Just anticipating that youâll enjoy the learning is important. Naturally, other factors like previous familiarity with a technologyâs larger environment can make a difference. As an example, a background in Linux LXC containers will make learning Docker easier. But thereâs nothing like enthusiasm to help push back the darkness. So if the only distinguishing characteristic between two options is your excitement for one of them, choose excitement every time.
- Old is the new new. Sure, everyone loves working with cutting edge stuff. But getting up to speed quickly on your own will require documentation, and a technology thatâs already been around for a while is probably going to have more wikis, guides, how-toâs, and Stack Overflow threads than something just out of the gate. Even a vendorâs official documentation tends to be a bit rough during its early stages. Getting in early to help out with bug reporting and documentation is wonderful, but if youâre looking to make a fast start, stick with a more mature product. Remember: your time is also a significant cost.
- Thereâs another benefit with learning at least some mature technologies: unexpected employment opportunities. There may not be a broad and sustained market for COBOL programmers, but if thereâs a company (or, more likely, government department) in your neighborhood who happens to be running legacy infrastructure whose admins recently retired, then someone with COBOL experience might just find a happy landing. thatâs not to say that you should necessarily invest too much time in a technology as old as COBOL, but it does illustrate another potential benefit of working with older platforms. A little creative planning might sometimes pay off.
- Not enough spare time to learn? Ask your boss: your company might just let you take an online course or do research on their time. Some companies actively encourage such studying, often earmarking a set percentage of your monthly work hours to learning new skills. Even better, many organizations have enterprise accounts with the more established online learning platformsâââlike Pluralsight.com, where my courses liveâââproviding their employees with unlimited access to courses and other tools.
- A good certification can make it easier to convince employers or clients that you know what youâre doing. But it could also help get you to the point where you actually do know what youâre doing. Thatâs because, as I often like to say, a well designed certification is itâs own reward. More often than not, carefully working through a certâs published exam objectives will automatically connect you with the core topics youâll need through real-world daily use of the tool, and introduce you to the features and functions youâre likely to need. Having said that, certs have historically worked best within the IT domainâââfor system administration, networking, and security tasksâââmore than for programming languages.
Staying inspired
You know how it goes. A few days after starting a new learning project, you find yourself stuck in the weeds of complex syntax and confusing layers of folders and configuration files. Your exciting long-term dreams feel a long way off and your enthusiasm is beginning to fade. Well I never told you it would be easy, right? Expect tough times and plan for them.
Here are a couple of ideas you can incorporate into those plans.
Learn it backwards
Consider breaking some rules. Donât work through all the topics and domains of your technology sequentially, moving from simple to complex and memorizing abstract details stripped of their practical context. Instead learn the details, but only as they become useful as part of practical and fun projects.
Really? Is that something you can get away with? Can you seriously avoid rote learning and memorization when trying to grasp a new technology? Arenât there just too many fundamental details you need to know up front before you can get any real work done?
Perhaps. Unless, of course, you find a way to keep track of the details while working on practical, satisfying, and compelling tasks. As long as you end up covering all the bases, no one gets hurt.
This was the philosophy I employed while writing my Learn Amazon Web Services in a Month of Lunches and Linux in Action books with Manning. The idea was to introduce the reader to real-world projects pretty much right from the first chapter, while making sure that, by the time the bookâs done, weâve checked all the boxes. Hereâs how I described it in Linux in Action:
Donât worry, all the core skills and functionality needed through the first years of a career in Linux administration will be coveredâââand covered wellâââbut only when actually needed for a practical and mission critical project. When youâre done, youâll have learned pretty much what you would have from a traditional source, but you will also know how to complete more than a dozen major administration projects. And be comfortable tackling dozens more.
See if you canât find a way to do that with your learning projects.
Learn it in pieces
Break large projects down into smaller, logical steps. That way, even if you havenât yet managed to produce a final working product, youâll nevertheless be able to confidently point to the components you did complete. Having successfully worked through 80% of the task sounds and feels a whole lot better than staring at a pile of half-baked failed attempts. And it gives you a solid foundation from which you can move on to the next 20%.
A variation of this approach is to spend a few minutes/hours before starting a project taking a good birdâs-eye-view look at all the things youâre going to need to do. Pick out the low-hanging fruitâââthe things that you already mostly understand or for which youâve found easy documentationâââand focus on those first. If you properly document your successes the way Iâll show you in the next chapter, you can take some satisfying and effective shortcuts.
Maintaining a balanced, healthy lifestyle
You know: eat and sleep well, exercise, get out from time to time, stay in close touch with family and friendsâŠand call your mother. You promised you would.
This article is adapted from my book, Solving for Technology: how to quickly learn valuable new skills in a madly changing technology world (also available in an online version).
How to approach learning a new technology was originally published in Hacker Noon on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.
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