{"id":4416,"date":"2018-03-12T13:05:42","date_gmt":"2018-03-12T13:05:42","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.branex.ae\/blog\/?p=4416"},"modified":"2018-03-15T05:29:41","modified_gmt":"2018-03-15T05:29:41","slug":"mudit-jain-interview","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.branex.ae\/blog\/mudit-jain-interview\/","title":{"rendered":"A Sneak-Peak into the Realm of Web Designing with Mudit Jain"},"content":{"rendered":"

Mudit Jain is a thriving entrepreneur and the CEO and founder of Talkers Code<\/a>, a website replete with an extensive library of free tutorials on web design and programming, touting well over a whopping 100,000 monthly visitors. He is well-loved in the design field since he offers his readers pools of valuable tutorials which help them solve design related issues and problems. In just over 2 years, Mudit has scored 170k monthly page views. He has accomplished that with a smart content marketing strategy, using a combination of sponsored reviews and invaluable content regarding the latest platforms, updates, and tools.<\/p>\n

Branex: How did you come to specialize in web design? What inspired you to walk this path?<\/strong><\/p>\n

Mudit:<\/strong> I had just started learning advanced java in the December of 2013, and it was there that I came across a topic of creating your own website with the help of JSP (Java Server Pages). Once I started exploring deep into the field of web designing, I really got fascinated with the idea of how building and shaping your own creativity, thoughts, and inspiration, which are accessible to the whole world, is just a click away.It was truly an incredible thing, at least for me. And then, I decided to leave the software world behind and started learning complete web designing, including HTML, CSS, jQuery, JavaScript, and PHP for myself. I believe in self-learning since no matter how much you learn from others, the things that you learn from yourself are the things which stay with you the longest.<\/p>\n

Branex: Can you tell us a little about your work history? What was your first real design job and how much work have you done to get to where you are today?<\/strong><\/p>\n

Mudit:<\/strong> As I mentioned above, I started learning Advanced Java in the December of 2013, and in January 2014, I got introduced to web designing, and suddenly it dawned on me that this was what I had always wanted to do for as long as I can remember, because it\u2019s indeed fun to delve in web designing and creating stellar online presences.<\/p>\n

I created my first website for a family business, even though I had very little experience in web designing at that time, just over 2 months to be exact.\u00a0And yet, I created that website of around 20 pages in a mere 3 days. Even though, my favorite Indian festival\u201cHoli\u201d, the festival of colors, was falling in between, so excited was I with the prospect of creating my first ever website, that I actually sat it out at home and worked on my project instead. \u00a0After I had successfully finished on the project and was about to buy a hosting domain for it, the client, one of my uncles, dropped the bomb that the website only ran on Asp or PHP, not JSP!<\/p>\n

Even though all my high hopes had gone down the drain, I came back home and focused all my energy on building it up from scratch again, this time choosing PHP from my arsenal. It Was after I had breathed a sigh of relief after hosting the website that I started working on bigger projects for myself, such as a classified website, an online shopping website, and a personal social network just for the kick of it. After gaining a steadier ground after 7-8 website, I hit upon the idea of launching my own blog where I could write about designing and offer my readers my valuable insights and how-to tutorials, involving the solutions of common problems that designers had to face in web designing and web programming. This is when I started with TalkersCode.<\/p>\n

From the word go, I always worked with a clear vision: I wanted to work for myself instead of laboring away at a 9-5 for someone else. I always believed in why one should work for someone else and take orders from others when you have the resources and the skills to fulfill your dreams.I started to build TalkersCode rather aggressively in my passion and started filling up my blog with 5-7 articles every day just to complete the basic learning section as soon as possible, and start on the web-tricks section, where I could show my clients solutions of many problems with the help of coding. I enjoyed creating tutorials so much that I created 3-4 tutorials every day. Even though each one took 3-4 hours, I was having such a blast that I lost track of time. Today we have more than 200 tutorials to our name, with most being working demos.<\/p>\n

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