Thursday, December 29, 2016

Why presenting could be good for your career

In October I presented a paper at an engineering conference, the first time I have done that in many years. Writing the paper and organizing my thoughts into a coherent story was hard work, but I believe it will help my career in several ways, especially if I keep doing it. Here are some of the benefits I see for being an author and presenter.


It focuses your attention on how you speak not just what you say



Presenting at a conference forces you to notice what other presenters are doing and how they do it. The best speakers will admit that it does not come naturally, it takes practice and getting in the habit of constantly paying attention to what you are doing. 

I see this as a kind of mindfulness. Even if I am pacing back and forth nervouslessly while answering a challenging question, and cannot stop myself at that time, I can at least be mindful in the moment that I am doing it, and have a better chance of managing that reflex the next time. And the ability to be mindful can provide benefits in life generally.


It may help you to be more confident


Confidence comes with doing. Once you have done something challenging, even in a way that leaves room for improvement, no one can take away from you the fact that you did it and survived. More likely than not, most of your colleagues have never done that.

This applies to being an author or presenter. Submitting an abstract is an act of confidence. Submitted a paper for review by strangers is an act of confidence. Standing in front of a group of strangers to present is an act of confidence. So is doing it again.


It may convince you that you know your stuff


I am starting from the assumption that you do know your stuff, because you do. If you have ever had a job, it is because you are good at something. You have probably learned many things during your career, some of which are esoteric, but much of which would be of interest to others.


It may help you tell a more coherent story about yourself


Any presentation, even if it is about work, is part of your own story. It is very easy in the busy pace of modern life, to neglect taking the time to tell your own story. Nothing could be more important in life.

Any presentation should include an About Me slide. Don't just talk about your job or your employer. Don't neglect the personal stuff. Tell people something about what you like, what you do for fun, and what you have learned along the way.

Friday, October 28, 2016

PNSQC Videos Available

Videos of presentations from the 2016 Pacific Northwest Software Quality Conference are now available:

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCpa3JPid8-N0OnEKDqvGY1A/videos

There were lots of good talks at the conference.

Here is the video of my talk on Breaching Barriers to Continuous Delivery:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FllOIVczkxc


Tuesday, October 18, 2016

PNSQC Presentation

Today I gave my presentation at the Pacific Northwest Software Quality Conference (PNSQC) 2016 in Portland. My talk was about a continuous delivery system I helped to build at Vertafore. I had lots of fun presenting and am so glad I came. The people at the conference were very nice and great to work with.

Here is a link to my slides on SlideShare:
http://www.slideshare.net/seekerkeeper/breaching-barriers-to-continuous-delivery-with-automated-test-gates

Thursday, September 8, 2016

Presenting at Eastside DevOps Meetup group

I will be giving my presentation in Bellevue at the Eastside DevOps Meetup on Oct 5. Details at this link:

https://www.meetup.com/Eastside-DevOps-Meetup/events/233957320/

Wednesday, September 7, 2016

PNSQC Conference Schedule Available

The Conference-At-A-Glance schedule for the Pacific Northwest Software Quality Conference is now available:

http://www.pnsqc.org/2016-conference/conference-at-a-glance-2016/#

I will be presenting in the Management track on Tuesday, October 18.

Here is the link to my abstract:

http://www.pnsqc.org/breaching-barriers-continuous-delivery-automated-test-gates/


Tuesday, July 26, 2016

Presenting at PNSQC 2016

I haven't published to this blog in years, but decided it was time to bring it back from hibernation.

I have been accepted as an author at the 2016 Pacific Northwest Software Quality Conference in Portland, Oregon in October. 

I have done plenty of teaching and presenting internally at my employer for the past several years, but it has been almost a decade since I attended a public conference and even longer since I presented at one.

Last year I made a decision to advance my career by attending a conference this year and present if possible. I decided on the PNSQC conference because it is local and because it seemed to be well organized. The reviewers and organizers have been great to work with.

I am very excited about this opportunity.

More details coming soon.

UPDATE: The author page has been posted here:

http://www.pnsqc.org/chris-struble/