New but not new: A lifetime saga with code & dev.

New but not new: A lifetime saga with code & dev.

Well, first off, welcome to my new blog šŸŽ‰

I happen to be Kathy Jean-Joseph, which happens to be an extension of my thoughts and actions. My current motivation for creating this blog is to document my journey to pivoting to a tech career. Deciding to write my journey in several ways has caused me to really think about where Iā€™ve been to get to this point and why Iā€™m here.

What I realized is that it honestly was inevitable and kind of always a part of my life. Let me explainā€¦

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If I honestly look back over my life, Iā€™m not sure how I figured that I would be anything else than on this path as a programmer/engineer/something in tech. In perspective, itā€™s always been a part of my life, but I made a conscious decision to go towards tech on July 10th. I finally put my money where my mouth is and paid for a boot camp with SkillCrush.

I had been dabbling with this decision since 2016, and to be honest, I mightā€™ve just done it then if I couldā€™ve afforded it, but I couldnā€™t at the time. This year was perfect because I finally could, and I honestly could see my paved path to the finish line. I knew my why and my drive. I understood my motivation, and after trying so many other things, I understood why so many of the things I learned would make me love my tech career an eensy-weensy bit more than what I currently do. I could literally take all my schooling and utilize it in one amalgamation of a job: UX design.

But if you asked me 12 years ago (to be exact) what I was going to do professionally, I really, for some reason though I was going to be an OB/GYN. I still have an acronym career, but I had the wrong letters.

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As a millennial, before the term was used, in middle school was the rise of social. Surrounded by #bipoc, I had an eclectic range of personalities, social classes, and activities that I began to see the world through. At the time, my best friend, a Filipina, introduced me to the world of dev and design, unbeknownst to her. She showed me Photoshop and let me borrow her Photoshop 6 cd to install it on my computer.

From there, I was introduced to Xanga, a world where you could be whoever you typed to be. Xanga was a place where you created your platform with code and images. In 2005, at 13 years of age, I was already a front-end developer.

From Xanga, which was mainly attractive to a remnant of people who could afford the internet and really relished writing and blogging, came Myspace, which appealed to the masses and quickly. Itā€™s no surprise that I started designing myspace pages and top 8s. Keeping up with both, I built relationships with like-minded people, and found unique corners of the web to learn new things and one of my favorite things, find new music.

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I found a snapshot via the Wayback Machine. ā€” horsducommun.itsadoozy.com

One of my newfound corners of the web happened to be owned by a webmaster, Emily, who offered to host a free subdomain. I took the offer and built horsducommun.itsadoozy.com. Of course, itā€™s defunct now, but it was my first encounter with FTP and coding built from HTML, CSS, and self-hosted images.

I remember building a carnival-themed site, a coffee-themed site, and so many other things. Of course, I just didnā€™t know how to get people to my site to read it, nor did I worry about stats and analytics like I am today.

Looking at this screenshot of the past, I was aware of information architecture, pertinent information, and (horrible) typography.

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In 2008/9, Tumblr was a place of honest connections. Similar to Reddit, you could find your vice and people who were about it. Mine was music and more intensely so in my high school years. I loved the uncovered, instant classics, and this was my corner of the internet to find it, share it, and be introduced to it.

I remember being introduced to DOOM, Blu & Exile, Janelle Monae, and Lianne La Havas for the first time. All while still coding my pages frequently with Tumblr themes. Still using CSS and HTML to get my point and vision across on my page of who I was and what I was interested in.

Design was still a subtle passion. I actually practiced vectoring and loved it. Vectored a few friends on there. Met lifelong friends on there. Itā€™s still up if you want to scroll through ā€” indignantlybred.tumblr.com.

This reminds me of something else I learned through Tumblr ā€” naming conventions! I can say that Tumblr really began to solidify the need for consistency and branding. On Tumblr, you were found by your @name or subdomain name. If you wanted people to know you, you kept it the same and engaged OFTEN. It also began to solidify digital marketing techniques because, for the first time, at least for me, you could schedule content/blogs.

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Listening to my parents and the real world around me, a career involving computers, no matter how much I liked them and to be on them, was not a job. I come from a Caribbean household where the focus was the Big 3: doctor, lawyer, or (traditional) engineer. They didnā€™t understand computers, programming, or how big it would be a few years later. I honestly think if they did, they wouldā€™ve encouraged me to move forward into a tech career, but thatā€™s not what happened.

I started university as a chem major/Spanish minor. I ended off my 5-year stint as a Psych major/Spanish minor with my degree being held off a year simply because I had to take an exam that I couldnā€™t afford until later.

This was nothing like my formative years. I did continue to do design, and I found a mentor that nurtured my natural ability and formed design thought patterns in me that I still use today.

I was still way off, though. I wanted to be an ABA Therapist for autistic kids.

It was another acronym career, yet, still the wrong one.

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After a year trying to get into a field that didnā€™t want me in it, or so I thought, I begin to take a more serious look into design and marketing. I finally decided to get my Masters in Digital Marketing and use my design talent to just make me more competitive. I decided I didnā€™t have to be perfect, just use it as a catapult in campaigns and projects to brainstorm with and for teams & aid in any pushes for the final product, whatever that may have been.

After graduating, I ended up freelancing for a while. After doing small jobs here and there, I purchased my domain and solidified my brand name. I pushed my self to do print jobs, social/web graphics and even learned how to manipulate WordPress and Shopify themes.

I made some good money, or so I thought, but I was limited to theme capabilities and couldnā€™t really create the full vision of a project as I wanted.

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Now properly learning front-end development and programming languages, Iā€™ll be able to really see a project vision through and not be limited to a theme. Iā€™ll be able to create solutions and view the data that comes from efficacy in design. Iā€™ll be able to think through user personas and use behavior and buyer psychology to design for more significant results in eCommerce.

And Iā€™m excited. Itā€™s been a long time coming.