[Python Mastery] The secret to "ethical self-promotion"?

Hey there,

Here's some food for thought:

There's a difference between *doing* a great job as a Python developer, and *to be seen doing* a great job.

Being a skilled developer among peers—and being noticed as a skilled developer involves different skill sets.

I know the term "marketing" has a bitter aftertaste among our crowd. But for lack of a better word this is what I'm talking about here:

Marketing yourself as a developer.

Signaling to your peers and your bosses that you know what you're doing. That you're dependable, and so on.

Now one (bad) way to do that would be to become "that guy" we all worked with at some point: a shameless self-promoter, a brown-noser.

The egotistical braggart, always clawing his way up the career ladder and constantly tooting his own horn…

Another (better) way to do it would be to improve your programming skills so you can produce "better" code.

Code that catches the attention of your peers.

What if you started sprinkling some of Python's advanced features in your code?

A nice and clean generator expression here, an elegant use of the "with"-statement there…

With some practice you can do this tastefully—only where these features make sense and help make the code more expressive.

And trust me, your colleagues will pick up on this after a while. If they ask you questions, be generous and helpful.

Pull everyone around you UP and help them learn what you know.

Maybe you can give a little presentation on "writing clean Python" for your coworkers a few weeks down the road, after carefully gauging their interest.

There's nothing unethical or egocentric about that kind of "marketing."

It benefits everyone involved, including you.

Happy Pythoning!

— Dan Bader

P.S. My new book can help you pick up those advanced Python skills. It's currently available for early access at a reduced price: Python Tricks—A Buffet of Awesome Python Features

Older messages

[Python Dependency Pitfalls] "Re-inventing the wheel" disease

Friday, November 13, 2020

Hey there, PyPI, the Python packaging repository, now contains more than 100000 third-party packages in total. That's an *overwhelming* number of packages to choose from... And this feeling of

[Python Dependency Pitfalls] Artisanal "from-scratch" development

Friday, November 13, 2020

Hey there, The other day I got this question from Newsletter member Newvick in my email inbox: ~~~ I'm trying to get past the beginner's stage in Python and one problem I have is: When do you

[Python Mastery] What does it mean to "master" Python?

Friday, November 13, 2020

Hey there, A couple of years ago I'd become quite interested in martial arts. Hours upon hours of watching "The Karate Kid" growing up must've taken their toll on me... And so, I

[Python Dependency Pitfalls] How to set the world on fire

Tuesday, November 10, 2020

Hey there, #1 on my list of dependency management pitfalls is there for a good reason: It lead to a single developer causing mayhem and breaking thousands of open-source projects around the world in

A "Pythonic" rant?

Monday, November 9, 2020

Hey there, "Why is Python dependency management so sh*t?" This is a quote that I recently heard from another developer. You know I *love* Python so hearing this instantly made me feel

You Might Also Like

Mapped | The Average Credit Card Debt in Every U.S. State 💳

Thursday, November 28, 2024

Households in richer states have higher average credit card debt but higher incomes allow them to pay it off faster as well. View Online | Subscribe | Download Our App Presented by: Defiance ETFs

Issue 341 - Free supercharging and FSD offer extended for new Teslas

Thursday, November 28, 2024

View this email in your browser If you are just now finding out about Tesletter, you can subscribe here! If you already know Tesletter and want to support us, check out our Patreon page Issue 341 -

Programmer Weekly - Issue 233

Thursday, November 28, 2024

View this email in your browser Programmer Weekly Welcome to issue 233 of Programmer Weekly. Let's get straight to the links this week. Quote of the Week "All programmers are playwrights and

Python Weekly - Issue 678

Thursday, November 28, 2024

View this email in your browser Python Weekly Welcome to issue 678 of Python Weekly. Let's get straight to the links this week. Articles, Tutorials and Talks Let's build a AI Photo Generator

Web Tools #593 - Frameworks, React Tools, Uncats

Thursday, November 28, 2024

WEB VERSION Issue #593 • November 28, 2024 Advertisement Power Your Web Projects with Cloudways This BFCM As a developer, designer, or tech professional, you need reliable hosting that adapts to your

Python Weekly - Issue 678

Thursday, November 28, 2024

View this email in your browser Python Weekly Welcome to issue 678 of Python Weekly. Let's get straight to the links this week. Articles, Tutorials and Talks Let's build a AI Photo Generator

Introducing the Revamped HackerNoon AI Image Gallery

Thursday, November 28, 2024

Top Tech Content sent at Noon! Advertise on this Newsletter! 50% off!! Read this email in your browser How are you, @newsletterest1? 🪐 What's happening in tech today, November 28, 2024? The

Black Friday Giveaway @ Real Python

Thursday, November 28, 2024

Hey there, Just wanted to let you know that we're doing a special giveaway for Black Friday this week at Real Python 🎁🎉 You can get Python education resources worth over $1210, including three

Dispatch 019 🦃

Thursday, November 28, 2024

Watching the Parade • Paying for the Parade • Pirate TV Raid • US v. Microsoft Round 2 • Trump's Anti-Antitrust? • Google Anti-Antitrust The Spyglass Dispatch is a free newsletter sent out daily on

PHPWeekly November 28th 2024

Thursday, November 28, 2024

Curated news all about PHP. Here's the latest edition Is this email not displaying correctly? View it in your browser. PHP Weekly 28th November 2024 Hi everyone, It's Thanksgiving and Black