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How did you become a Microsoft MVP? #17

Closed antmdvs closed 4 years ago

antmdvs commented 4 years ago

What does it take to be an MVP? Is MVP a stepping stone to working at MS? How else does it benefit your career?

SeanKilleen commented 4 years ago

Hi @antmdvs, thanks for writing! This is an interesting question because it has a lot of angles and is bound to be personal and contextual. Microsoft has a lot of MVPs operating across a wide variety of areas, so I can't presume to speak for others or for the program officially.

I'll try to take your questions one at a time.

How did you become a Microsoft MVP?

There are multiple, answers to this one -- all of them likely true to some degree:

Who's to say how much each of those items factored in? I can't know. I have no idea if there's a formula, as this is the first time I've received the award. We'll see how next year goes; between a pandemic and being a new dad, my bandwidth for contributions has been significantly limited.

My perspective on it is to treat it as additional validation of the effort I've put into caring about the .NET community. It was wonderful to know that this was noticed and that others found it valuable enough to receive the designation. It is a wonderful feeling. There are plenty of people who deserve to be MVPs who aren't. And if I'm not renewed next year, I'd be sad but it also wouldn't stop me from contributing to the community, blogging, etc. -- I love this stuff.

To say I didn't seek it isn't quite right. For a long time, I hoped it would just happen. But when I realized I had to be nominated, I mentioned to a few people that I was interested in the program. Some thought I was already an MVP (a nice feeling!) but others understood that the process has to be initiated.

What Does it Take to be an MVP?

To summarize, I'd say: It takes putting yourself out there in an effort to help others within this ecosystem.

Is MVP a stepping stone to working at MS?

That's hard to say. It hasn't been for me, at least yet. 😄 One thing that's important to note is that you can't be an MVP and work at Microsoft; you'd have to give it up the designation order to do so.

I think it's healthy for there to be a large group of people outside of Microsoft who are heavily invested in the ecosystem (and in making it better for everyone.) So I don't think the MVP program is necessarily a recruiting avenue for Microsoft. However, the other aspect is that MVPs tend to be known more by Microsoft and interact more with people from Microsoft, so there are opportunities there to connect and I assume sometimes job opportunities are an artifact of those connections.

How Else Does it Benefit Your Career?

I'll have to return to this AMA in a few years to answer, I suppose. 😄 Some immediate benefits:

My hope is that it benefits my career by making it easier to help others and contribute to the community, and helps folks recognize that I'm already committed to doing so.


Let me know if you have any questions or follow-ups! I'll close this issue now to archive it, as I do after I answer any question here. 👍

antmdvs commented 4 years ago

@SeanKilleen Thanks for the thoughtful and informative response as well as your contributions to the community. I saw you speak at CoTB 2018. Hope to see you there again someday. Congratulations on the award and becoming a dad!