Sumit Mukherjee

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Sumit Mukherjee

Sumit Mukherjee

@sumit_codes_

I'll help you get better paying job opportunities

Se unió Nisan 2026
582 Siguiendo691 Seguidores
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Sumit Mukherjee
Sumit Mukherjee@sumit_codes_·
Hey everyone! I'm Sumit. I'm a data engineer who writes content about data engineering and career growth. I help people get into data engineering and tech roles through my mentorship sessions. If you're into data engineering or tech industry, we'll get along. Nice to meet you!
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Sumit Mukherjee
Sumit Mukherjee@sumit_codes_·
Day 1 of tagging @davidgoggins till he reposts this tweet
Sumit Mukherjee@sumit_codes_

I read both of David Goggins' books. Here's what stayed with me. Goggins didn't teach me to run ultras. He taught me that the voice in your head that says "you're not smart enough for data engineering" is the same voice that told him he'd never walk again. It's a liar. Both times He calls it the "governor" - the internal mechanism that pulls you back to safety before you hit your actual limit. I hit mine in month two of learning SQL. Joins broke my brain. I almost quit. The governor said: "You're from a non-tech background. This isn't for you." Goggins taught me to name that voice, then ignore it. The other thing: callousing the mind. You don't wake up tough. You earn it through repetition. One shitty day. One failed query. One rejection. Then another. Then another. Each one adds a layer. My first data engineering interview was a disaster. The second was bad. The third was less bad. The fourth got me an offer. I didn't get better at interviews. I got calloused to the discomfort of not knowing everything. The most underrated lesson from both books: accountability is self-inflicted. Nobody cares about your dreams. Not your friends, not your family, not the hiring manager. Goggins didn't wait for permission to fix his life. He did the work at 4 AM when nobody was watching. I built my first real pipeline at 5 AM. Nobody clapped. Nobody retweeted. That's the work. That's what moves the needle. Two books. One message that rewired me: the only way out is through. Stay hard.

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Sumit Mukherjee
Sumit Mukherjee@sumit_codes_·
I read both of David Goggins' books. Here's what stayed with me. Goggins didn't teach me to run ultras. He taught me that the voice in your head that says "you're not smart enough for data engineering" is the same voice that told him he'd never walk again. It's a liar. Both times He calls it the "governor" - the internal mechanism that pulls you back to safety before you hit your actual limit. I hit mine in month two of learning SQL. Joins broke my brain. I almost quit. The governor said: "You're from a non-tech background. This isn't for you." Goggins taught me to name that voice, then ignore it. The other thing: callousing the mind. You don't wake up tough. You earn it through repetition. One shitty day. One failed query. One rejection. Then another. Then another. Each one adds a layer. My first data engineering interview was a disaster. The second was bad. The third was less bad. The fourth got me an offer. I didn't get better at interviews. I got calloused to the discomfort of not knowing everything. The most underrated lesson from both books: accountability is self-inflicted. Nobody cares about your dreams. Not your friends, not your family, not the hiring manager. Goggins didn't wait for permission to fix his life. He did the work at 4 AM when nobody was watching. I built my first real pipeline at 5 AM. Nobody clapped. Nobody retweeted. That's the work. That's what moves the needle. Two books. One message that rewired me: the only way out is through. Stay hard.
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Priyesh Singh
Priyesh Singh@Alwayspriyesh·
June 6/30 🚀 Today was all about building. ✅ Spent the day working on a project and completed it in 2 days. 🚀 Launching it tomorrow. • Learned more about X growth strategies • Wrote content for X • Continued documenting my journey Growth: 📈 +76 followers 📉 -6 unfollows Lesson of the day: "Consistency compounds. Small actions repeated daily create big results." Thank you to everyone supporting the journey. More exciting things coming tomorrow. 👀 #BuildInPublic
Priyesh Singh@Alwayspriyesh

June 5/30 🚀 Learning: • Anomaly Detection Algorithm • Developing & Evaluating Anomaly Detection • Choosing the Threshold (ε) • Computational Considerations • Quiz Passed ✅ Growth: •+80 followers 📈 and -9 unfollow 📉 Other: • Premiere Pro Tutorials 🎬 • Read a few pages 📖 Lesson of the day: "People crave appreciation more than criticism. Make others feel valued." Let's keep learning and growing together. 🚀 #BuildInPublic

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Sumit Mukherjee
Sumit Mukherjee@sumit_codes_·
Stop measuring yourself against strangers on the internet. Start measuring yourself against who you were yesterday. That's the only scoreboard that counts.
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Sumit Mukherjee
Sumit Mukherjee@sumit_codes_·
Nobody is going to build your pipeline for you. Nobody is going to write your SQL for you. Nobody is going to ship your project, debug your errors, or decide you're ready except you.
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Sumit Mukherjee
Sumit Mukherjee@sumit_codes_·
There's someone on your timeline who just landed a data engineering role in 3 months. Someone else built a killer pipeline project over the weekend. Someone posted their 30 LPA offer letter and you stared at it for way too long. Close the app.
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Sumit Mukherjee
Sumit Mukherjee@sumit_codes_·
@thedankoe The part that pisses me off is that most people already have the hour. They just burn it on scrolling, comparing themselves to strangers, and consuming nonsense. Then they complain they're not making progress. You're not out of time. You're wasting it. There's a difference.
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DAN KOE
DAN KOE@thedankoe·
You only need 1 hour. 1 hour of building. 1 hour of writing. 1 hour of lifting. 1 hour of studying. 1 hour of any form of bettering yourself, because it quickly compounds. 1 hour feels like nothing until you look back 365 hours later and everything's changed.
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Sumit Mukherjee
Sumit Mukherjee@sumit_codes_·
You know what annoys the fuck out of me? People who spend more time studying other people's lives than working on their own. Every day. "This guy got promoted." "That girl started a company." "This creator is growing faster than me." Who gives a fuck? Seriously. WHO GIVES A FUCKKK? Your project isn't moving because you're busy looking at theirs. Your skills aren't improving because you're busy measuring them against someone else's. Your life isn't stuck because somebody else is winning. Your life is stuck because you're sitting there watching. That's the part nobody wants to hear. You know what's funny? Half the people you're jealous of are probably too busy working to even know you exist. But somehow you know everything about them. Their followers. Their salary. Their achievements. Their updates. Their milestones. That's weird as hell. Imagine putting that much attention into your own life. IMAGINE THAT Maybe then you'd have something to talk about besides what everybody else is doing. I'm just tired of hearing grown adults explain their lack of progress by pointing at somebody who's ahead of them. Nobody fucking cares who's ahead. Do your work. Or don't. But stop acting like another person's success is the reason you're standing still.
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Rithwik
Rithwik@Rithwik_24·
@sumit_codes_ What other paths would you suggest if i need to get placed as soon as possible? It would be very helpful for me..
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Sumit Mukherjee
Sumit Mukherjee@sumit_codes_·
My friend had a data engineering interview in 30 days with zero experience. Here is the exact sprint I designed for him. He got the offer.
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Sumit Mukherjee
Sumit Mukherjee@sumit_codes_·
Thank you for reading so far! If this makes any sense to you or helps you in any way, do like and comment and share this with your network!
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Sumit Mukherjee
Sumit Mukherjee@sumit_codes_·
Ship the code. Communicate the context. Make your work impossible to ignore.
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Sumit Mukherjee
Sumit Mukherjee@sumit_codes_·
The skill that got me promoted was not SQL. It was not Python. It was not any tool you will find in a job description. Here is what actually moved me up:
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