From nurse to DevOps engi. Advocates for LinkedIn posting for signaling:
- MUST-KNOW LinkedIn Profile Tips for Job Seekers
- Here are the most actionable LinkedIn tips from the video for job seekers.
- 1. LinkedIn’s Unfair Advantage Is Now
- LinkedIn is experiencing a unique moment: posting content gets you outsized visibility because only 1% of users post, but there are 1 billion users. This means your posts can reach a massive audience with little competition.Â
- 2. Optimize Your Profile for Discovery
- Finish your profile completely: Add a professional photo (14x more views), at least five skills (31x more recruiter messages), and a custom profile URL. - Profile description: Make sure your headline clearly states your current position and top achievements. This is what people see in their feed.
- Banner image: Use a custom banner to highlight your skills or personal brand.Â
- SEO and quantifiable results: In your experience section, use keywords and show measurable impact (e.g., “reduced deployment times by 50%”).Â
- 3. Recommendations Matter
- Give recommendations to others to receive them in return. This section is highly valued by recruiters.Â
- 4. The 500 Connection Rule
- If you have fewer than 500 connections, your visibility is severely limited. Aim to surpass this threshold for a dramatic boost in reach and credibility.Â
- 5. What to Post for Maximum Reach
- Value posts: Share knowledge, tutorials, news, and technical insights
- Personal stories: Be authentic—share wins, struggles, and growth
- Work in public: Document your projects and learning journey
- Consistency: Post 2–5 times per week, preferably on weekdays for best engagement.Â
- 6. Growth Hacks
- Use post templates, incentives, and especially comments—meaningful comments on others’ posts can boost your visibility even if you don’t post yourself.
- *7. Using AI Wisely
- Don’t let AI write your posts entirely; it can make your content sound robotic and hurt credibility. Use AI as a partner to refine and speed up your writing, but always add your own voice.Â
- 8. LinkedIn Premium: Optional
- Premium isn’t necessary for growth. Most benefits come from being active and leveraging the platform’s tools, not from paying for extra features.Â
- If you want to shortcut your growth, the video recommends joining communities like KubeCraft for networking, templates, and support, but the core strategies above are universally applicable. [He has a newsletter on DevOps.](Why 95% of DevOps job seekers fail (insider data)) Huge proponent of Kubernetes. the market is exploding from 7B by 2030. Growth rate: 22.4%. Even ChatGPT runs on Kubernetes.
Here’s how you can turn that plan into a practical roadmap for this weekend and the next month:
🔹 Weekend Plan (Kickstart)
Goal: Launch your Linux home lab for $0 and start documenting it.
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Watch & Follow the Tutorial
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Video: Set up your Linux home lab (likely using VirtualBox or Proxmox on your current PC/laptop).
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Install Ubuntu Server or Debian as your base OS.
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Document on LinkedIn
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Post a short update: “Starting a Linux home lab this weekend with $0 budget – following along with XYZ tutorial. Will share progress + lessons learned as I go.”
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This signals curiosity + initiative + accountability.
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Basic Wins to Achieve
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Learn
ssh
,tmux
,apt
, and basic package installs. -
Run a simple service (e.g., Nginx web server or Docker hello-world container).
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Write down what worked / what broke.
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🔹 Next Step: Build a Meaningful Project (2–4 Weeks)
Pick something that proves real-world skills. Examples:
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Personal Kubernetes Cluster
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Minikube or k3s on your lab → deploy a small app (e.g., your portfolio site or a Flask API).
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Learn Helm, kubectl, config maps, scaling.
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Automation Project
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Bash or Ansible scripts that provision VMs automatically.
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Show you can replace manual ops with reproducible IaC (Infrastructure as Code).
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Monitoring Stack
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Deploy Prometheus + Grafana on your cluster.
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Show resource usage, uptime, dashboards.
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🔹 Apply the Data-Driven Tool Selection
Here’s how you can frame it (and later explain it in interviews / LinkedIn):
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Start with Kubernetes → Industry-standard for orchestration, even if you’re not “ready.”
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Use Docker where needed → but lean toward K8s-native tooling (k3s, kubectl).
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Skip “shiny” tools until there’s a clear need → e.g., don’t learn Terraform until you have infra worth provisioning.
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Collect metrics → track what services/resources you actually use and choose tools accordingly.
🔹 LinkedIn Documentation Strategy
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Week 0: “Starting a Linux home lab from scratch, documenting the journey.”
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Week 1: “Got my first Ubuntu server running + deployed Nginx via Docker. Here’s what I learned.”
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Week 2–3: “Deployed my first app in Kubernetes on my home lab (k3s). Lessons on YAML & debugging pods.”
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Week 4: “Built a monitoring dashboard with Grafana on top of my cluster – now I can see everything at a glance.”
Each post = proof of skill + signals persistence.
👉 Question for you: do you want me to design the exact project (step-by-step, with tech stack + final deliverable), so you can build it out in the next month and have a strong “passion project” for interviews?