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| ▲ | scarface_74 4 days ago | parent | next [-] |
| Life is about choices. You want to make BigTech money you have to play the game. You’re not going to change the way the industry works. It’s fine not to want to play that game and accept that you probably will make less as a “senior developer” working in “the enterprise” as someone just graduating from college and getting a return offer from any of the well known companies. I am 50, married and an empty nester. Spent all of my career working in “the enterprise” and even my one stint at BigTech between the time I was 46-49 was working in the cloud consulting division (full time direct hire) working with enterprise customers and I am now doing the same thing at a smaller company You can put your ego to the side and enjoy making a quarter million a year as a cog or you can keep your ego and not - choices. I made my choice and I continue to turn down opportunities to make more money for better work life balance. But I am making that choice with my eyes wide open. |
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| ▲ | aqueueaqueue 2 days ago | parent [-] | | There is also a world of semi-faangs. Something like working for salesforce or workday or even vercel or fly.io. These pay good money and will interview hard but maybe more accessible than the hard core Faangs. (And Facebook and Amazon are known ad hard places to stay at anyway). Lots of choices out there! | | |
| ▲ | scarface_74 2 days ago | parent [-] | | Looking at levels.fyi… Assuming he could get a job as a senior developer and the definition and responsibilities and qualifications of a senior at these companies are a lot different than those of a “senior” in Enterprise dev, you are still looking at around $225k. While that’s not bad, it’s not the eye popping FAANG level salaries. More than likely he is going to be down leveled since he has no experience with architecture and system design or demonstrated “scope” and “impact” of senior developer. If he gets down leveled to a mid level developer at either of these companies, he’s not doing too much better. And in another reply he stated an unwillingness to do the interview prep. | | |
| ▲ | aqueueaqueue 2 days ago | parent [-] | | Fair enough. I got downleveled into such a company but got paid same as a higher level elsewhere so now there is somewhere to go up! Plus even they have raises at same level. I have no ego and grinded leet and design interviews. Happy with my choice |
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| ▲ | tuckerpo 4 days ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| Warning: unsolicited advice incoming. DFS, at least in the context of big-tech interviews, basically just means searching a 2D matrix, or a graph. It's not some esoteric 160 IQ PhD CS concept. You probably've implemented DFS in your day job without even realizing. I used to think algorithmic interviews were beneath me, too, but then I realized that attitude and insecurity was just getting in my own way. I begrudgingly started treating LeetCode and CodeForces like a game, and it turned out to be more engaging than I expected. I'm also 30 with a family, so I get the time constraints, but just 30 minutes a day for a few months made a huge difference. Put it this way: If someone told you, 'I'll give you $500k, top-tier career opportunities, and a resume that opens doors, but you have to spend 30 minutes a day for six months solving toy programming problems,' would your sincere reply be "no thanks"? |
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| ▲ | scarface_74 4 days ago | parent [-] | | > I'll give you $500k, top-tier career opportunities, and a resume that opens doors And he is not going to spend three months grinding leetCode, after working for an unknown company and walk in the door making $500K. He will make significantly more than he is making now admittedly. And being in BigTech doesn’t guarantee a job or really help on your resume in and of itself after you leave these days. As many people who have been laid off, it won’t even separate you from the noise. Especially if (hypothetical) you, don’t have anything to show for it but you pushed some code maintaining a service. Again no shade toward the original poster. I was about where he is when I was 40. If you take away my AWS account , I turn into a pumpkin - an enterprise dev with above average soft skills. |
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| ▲ | testfit1 4 days ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| I don't think you sound stubborn, I think lots of people think the same way. Wishing you the best of luck in your search. |
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| ▲ | paulcole 4 days ago | parent | prev [-] |
| So you don’t have the time or you do have the time but won’t do it? |