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Nomadic Developer, The: Surviving and Thriving in the World of Technology Consulting
- By Aaron Erickson
- Published May 5, 2009 by Addison-Wesley Professional.
- Copyright 2009
- Dimensions: 7 X 9-1/4
- Pages: 408
- Edition: 1st
- Book
- ISBN-10: 0-321-60639-6
- ISBN-13: 978-0-321-60639-6
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Product Author Bios
Aaron Erickson is a veteran technology consultant, writer, and technical evangelist with Magenic Technologies, based out of Chicago. He has spent the majority of his career catering to the individual needs of companies of all sizes. His strategic consulting focus has been centered around delivering high-value solutions that break new technological ground and bringing added value to both up-and-coming clients, as well as those who are already established.
For the past 16 years, Aaron has worked with leading-edge companies, providing prescriptive guidance to both the knowledge workers–those who actually produce the software–as well as the management side of the business, including CEOs, CTOs, and other executive staff. His experience has led him to do business with a variety of clients across financial services, supply chain, and insurance, vertical industries. His consulting mantra in recent years has been technology matters, but business results matter more.
Aaron is frequently invited to speak at events such as TechEd, VSLive, and .NET user groups on topics ranging from the highly technical (F#, C#, LINQ, and Functional Programming), to more business-focused topics that open the floor to an exchange of ideas, best practices, and observations about the specialized world of technology consulting.
Aaron has been a Microsoft MVP since 2007. He has written for .NET Developers Journal and InformIT. He blogs at both nomadic-developer.com as well as for Magenic at blog.magenic.com/blogs/aarone. Readers can follow him on Twitter at twitter.com/AaronErickson.
Learn the Real Secrets of Succeeding as a Software or IT Consultant in Any Economic Climate!
Despite economic cycles, the idea of using technology to make a company more efficient and competitive–or perhaps even reach a new market– is appealing to all but the most desperate and cash-starved companies. More and more often, those companies look to technology consultants to fulfill their needs.
There are real advantages to being a consultant. You make contacts with a lot of different people; you get exposure to many industries; and most important, unlike a software developer in the IT department for a brick-and-mortar company, as a technology consultant, you are the profit center…so long as you are billing.
Consulting can be hugely rewarding–but it’s easy to fail if you are unprepared. To succeed, you need a mentor who knows the lay of the land. Aaron Erickson is your mentor, and this is your guidebook.
Erickson has done it all–from Practice Leadership to the lowest level project work. In The Nomadic Developer, he brings together his hardwon insights on becoming successful and achieving success through tough times and relentless change. You’ll find 100% practical advice and real experiences–his own and annotations from those in the trenches. In addition, renowned consultants–such as David Chappell, Bruce Eckel, Deborah Kurata, and Ted Neward–share some of their hard-earned lessons.
With this useful guidebook, you can
- Objectively assess whether the consultant’s life makes sense for you
- Break into the business and build a career path that works
- Avoid the Seven Deadly Firms by identifying unscrupulous technology consultancies and avoiding their traps and pitfalls
- Understand the business models and mechanics that virtually all consulting firms use
- Master secret consulting success tips that are typically left unstated or overlooked
- Gain a competitive advantage by adding more value than your competitors
- Continue your professional development so you stay billable even during bad times
- Profit from both fixed-bid and time-and-materials projects
- Build a personal brand that improves your resiliency no matter what happens
About the Author xiii
About the Annotators xv
Acknowledgments xix
Foreword xxi
Preface xxv
Chapter 1: Why Consulting? 1
Chapter 2: The Seven Deadly Firms 27
Chapter 3: How Technology Consulting Firms Work 59
Chapter 4: Getting In: Ten Unstated Traits That Technology Consulting Firms Look For 97
Chapter 5: What You Need to Ask Before You Join a Technology Consulting Firm 125
Chapter 6: Surviving 157
Chapter 7: Thriving 181
Chapter 8: Your Career Path 207
Chapter 9: Avoiding Career-Limiting Moves 231
Chapter 10: Is Consulting Right for You? 259
Chapter 11: An Anthology of Sage Advice 273
Appendix A: Consultopia: The Ideal Consulting Firm 311
Appendix B: A Consulting Lexicon 325
Index 343
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7 of 9 people found the following review helpful
By Scott "Scott" (Lake Villa, IL United States) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Nomadic Developer: Surviving and Thriving in the World of Technology Consulting (Paperback)
Aaron has done something amazing here. He has written a book that anyone getting into consulting/contracting needs to read and own. The advice is really timeless and technology independent. A lot of the advice in here will help those outside of consulting invest in their careers and understand how to relate to the consultants that they work with.Through this book, the reader learns how to take off the rose colored glasses and see a firm for what it is. You learn how to figure out when you are talking to a body shop and should negotiate for a good rate for the current contract. Likewise, if you are talking to a firm like a Magenic, ThoughtWorks, or something similar, the book lets you know that you should be figuring out if you want to stick with this firm for the long haul (because they are doing the same with you!). The book is easy to read and has the detail needed to assist a contractor in navigating their local market, a consultant in understanding how their... Read more
9 of 12 people found the following review helpful
By
This review is from: The Nomadic Developer: Surviving and Thriving in the World of Technology Consulting (Microsoft Technologies Series) (Kindle Edition)
First a word of disclosure: I work in the Atlanta branch of the same software consulting company that the author works for.Mr. Erikson's book, The Nomadic Developer, explained a lot of things about my own industry that I had never completely thought through before. For the most part I just enjoy developing software and my company affords me an opportunity to do it at a very high level. The Nomadic Developer helped me understand how and why my company does this. The book is full of excellent ontologies of different consulting practices (which the author calls The Seven Deadly Firms), different valued consulting traits, as well as common consulting career-limiting moves (modelled on the seven deadly sins: Gluttony, Envy, etc.), as well as advice on how to get ahead in consulting and where one's consulting career may eventually lead. The book is also an excellent guide for those who think they might want to get into consulting. The author paints a... Read more
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Nomadic Developer: Surviving and Thriving in the World of Technology Consulting (Microsoft Technologies Series) (Kindle Edition)
Truly amazing book based on numerous of facts from the real life. Highly recommend to anyone who is involved into IT consulting.
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Online Sample Chapter
The Nomadic Developer: Surviving and Thriving in the World of Technology Consulting
Table of Contents
About the Author xiii
About the Annotators xv
Acknowledgments xix
Foreword xxi
Preface xxv
Chapter 1: Why Consulting? 1
Chapter 2: The Seven Deadly Firms 27
Chapter 3: How Technology Consulting Firms Work 59
Chapter 4: Getting In: Ten Unstated Traits That Technology Consulting Firms Look For 97
Chapter 5: What You Need to Ask Before You Join a Technology Consulting Firm 125
Chapter 6: Surviving 157
Chapter 7: Thriving 181
Chapter 8: Your Career Path 207
Chapter 9: Avoiding Career-Limiting Moves 231
Chapter 10: Is Consulting Right for You? 259
Chapter 11: An Anthology of Sage Advice 273
Appendix A: Consultopia: The Ideal Consulting Firm 311
Appendix B: A Consulting Lexicon 325
Index 343
Sample Pages
Download the sample pages (includes Chapter 6 and Index)

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