
Alex
Frontend developer
“I was overwhelmed in my new role. Talking through expectations and priorities with another dev helped me feel confident and perform better at my ongoing job.”

DevLinkHub connects developers with other developers for private, one-to-one support. Whether you're focused on your current job, searching for a new one, or exploring a second role, you can get and give support from people who've been there.
Need support?
Want to support?
Support at a glance
Active communityReal developers, real codebases, sharing practical support.
A simple flow for developers who need help now and want to give back later.
Step 1
Share your role, stack, and what you're working on right now so we understand the real context.
Step 2
We connect you with 1–2 developers who've solved similar problems, not a public thread.
Step 3
Use focused sessions for debugging, code review, architecture questions, or career decisions.
Step 4
Once you've been helped, you can choose to support other developers on problems you know well.
How money and jobs can flow between developers
DevLinkHub is for real-world work: your current job, your next opportunity, and second jobs or side projects.
Stay on top of expectations, handle pressure, and feel grounded day to day in the work you already have.
Clarify what you want next, tell your story clearly, and plan the steps from where you are now to your next job.
Explore whether a second job or side project makes sense, and how to balance it with your main role and personal life.
Talk through your longer-term direction, boundaries, and how to keep work in a healthy place alongside the rest of your life.
Private, one-to-one support that feels like having a teammate in your corner for your job, next steps, and day-to-day decisions at work.
Public forums are great for general questions. DevLinkHub is for the work you can't really post: client projects, internal responsibilities, and sensitive questions around your job and career.
Share context, screenshots, and code with a small number of vetted developers instead of a public thread that lives forever.
Walk through context, trade‑offs, and real constraints around your work together instead of getting one‑line answers or guesses.
Come back to the same supporters as your work and roles evolve, so they understand your context and history.
A few examples of how developers have already used DevLinkHub to move faster and feel less alone at work.
A frontend dev in their first freelance engagement booked a few sessions to review their architecture and tricky edge cases before handing work to the client.
A backend engineer walked through logs, metrics, and rollout history with another engineer to pinpoint the real cause of an intermittent outage.
A mid‑level engineer used DevLinkHub to review their promotion packet and get feedback from someone who had been on the other side of the table.
DevLinkHub is intentionally small and focused. It's designed for working developers dealing with real constraints, not tutorial projects.
You have tickets, deadlines, and users. You don't have time to piece together partial answers from ten different threads.
You're freelancing, between jobs, or exploring a second project and want to either get support or support others.
You enjoy unblocking others, talking through strategy, and sharing the hard‑won lessons that don't fit in blog posts.
DevLinkHub is built by a developer who has been on both sides of the table: needing help to ship work, and supporting others through tough situations at work and in their careers.
The idea is simple: when developers help each other directly, good work gets shipped, careers get less lonely, and more people can afford to build the lives they want from software. DevLinkHub is a small, private network to make that easier.
Tell us whether you need support or want to support others and what you're working on right now. We'll read every answer and reply within 1–2 business days with next steps.