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by mdekkers
3375 days ago
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That is exactly the issue. It mostly comes down to code review, i.e. to make sure they produce functional code in a reasonable amount of time, where the code doesn't look like it was written by a crazed monkey on crack. The last few years the latter was increasingly the case. There are many times where, after the first few days, there is a dramatic shift in coding style, and you know that another (possibly junior) dev has taken over the work. As this kind of fraud increases, it becomes increasingly expensive and overall unattractive to work in this fashion. To be honest, right now the market is fucked, which is why I am eager to get out. On the one hand, pressure from "cheap freelancers" has driven down the client expectation of cost, whilst on the other hand, decent freelancers often command rates that are in excess of what I am able to bill. It is unsustainable, and I am out. I am finishing a migration project for a long standing client of mine, and that will probably be the last project I take on that will require me to engage with freelancers. I am already struggling to resource this current project, and I can do without the hassle. I'm scoping out a new startup, and will need to find something to do to keep the money flowing in until that's done. |
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An easy filter when soliciting work is to include some things in the job description that the applicant has to respond to/think about. Most applicants will not, so you can throw them right out.
I also discriminate fairly aggressively based on country, suffice to say that certain regions usually match my requirements better for developers who match their advertised skill level and think critically about the tasks presented to them. Controversial, possibly unfair, but there it is.