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Dec 10, 2023
4 min read

Why I started using Peerlist

Peerlist is a powerful social community for people in tech.

It’s my first post written in English here.
I’m not using English as a native, so some expressions might be wrong… Please understand.

Thanks for the positive feedback!

Before beginning, thank you for some reactions to my activity, including Nakshatra Saxena, I was quite surprised because I started it very silently and just started to make collections.

As a some kind of response with gratitude, I want to share my opinion about why I use Peerlist. Note that my thought might be different from many people’s thought who started Peerlist, but it’ll be okay because everyone would be mesmerized on Peerlist for different reasons based on their experience and some other environments.

Peerlist's main message

As I know, Peerlist is a job platform and social community for people in tech, especially including developers. But actually with my case, it’s pretty hard that Peerlist acts as a job platform or something related. I’m from South Korea, even LinkedIn is absolute minority as a platform in here because Koreans usually find a job mainly on domestic platform. International platforms including LinkedIn & Peerlist are mainly used for only few who wants to make a job from abroad. It doesn’t mean that I’m completely closed to offers from other countries, but I think it requires more experience and some courage for me now…😅

So the reason that I’m using Peerlist is mainly based on the second option. I’m just a junior developer running up to 3 years, and I didn’t major in computer science either. I’m also quite shy and introverted, so I still have some hesitations to open my experience or knowledge. So I’ve tried but finally quit some platforms or communities because I felt some “heavy pressure” from them.

Peerlist's collection feature

By contrast, Peerlist gave me the options to start from small sharing & posts. This may not be so interesting to other people, but it’s a huge advantage for me. Peerlist makes me comfortable and inspiring while using the service without pressure and I feel like I’m making my personal archive, not a portfolio, resume or report. Of course, I’m definitely open to trending tech stacks and try to improve myself, but on the other side I’m always eager to develop and stack knowledge naturally and slowly. In this perspective, Peerlist is very suitable for my goals because it provides diversity and freedom to advance myself with community.

Except for this major reason, there are still many advantages with Peerlist like beautiful UI design, many fascinating features and so on. Recently, I’m feeling very satisfied with custom domain options. I won’t say long in this post because it takes too long.
As I’ve searched over the internet, I could easily find some demand with new development society (especially alternative for LinkedIn). I also arrived to Peerlist while I was trying to find services like LinkedIn too. There’s no doubt that Peerlist will satisfy this demand and become bigger if Peerlist team struggles like now.

I think I got excited by myself for a while😅, so I’ll return and remain as a silent supporter for Peerlist. I’m always interested in productive communication related to IT industry, so you can always contact me if you have any opinion.

P.S.

As I mentioned on the first, I didn’t intend to write this blog in English at first, so I think most people viewing this post cannot find more information of me here😅 See you on Peerlist instead! 🚀

Tags

  • Think
  • Peerlist
  • English Article