![]() ![]() They ended up placing me with a large financial organization in my region and I've been very happy with the experience. I did my research to make sure I wasn't getting scammed and the company was legit. I still had to interview with the clients like a typical job, but the bootcamp company set up the interviews for me.īeing locked into work for a company for 2 years was scary, but I had no job and no direction in my life at the time. I'm a bootcamp grad and part of the deal with my bootcamp was signing a contract to agree to work for one of their clients for 2 years after graduating. In the software dev field, who told me that Jr devs were being recruited from this specific bootcamp. I knew people working for the major corporation I currently work for. I chose the bootcamp I attended out of word of mouth. They should be able to demonstrate high placement in software development as well as list their average graduation salaries. I recommend researching the graduation statistics of any boot camp you are looking for. Regardless of the value I percieved the boot camp had, the value perception of the hiring recruiters is far more important. However, that bootcamp was my "ticket" to finally getting a well paying job in the field because major corporations near me hire directly from the camp I had taken. I don't think a boot camp should be necessary to get into the field. ![]() I think if you've never built your own project, you won't learn from a boot camp as the pace is too fast. I studied coding and built projects on my own for 3 years before doing a boot camp. ![]()
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