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by Novashi
2668 days ago
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This is a good technical approach but if you get this far, your salary won't match the value delivered by your actual skillset. Companies know this. There's not appropriate compensation for people who can get comfortable with this breadth of stuff. Fullstack is currently "exploited" because of this IMO. |
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But - if you do it right (and with a bit of luck), you can work yourself into a position in which you've got a lot of freedom to choose what you want to work on, and that freedom is worth a lot in itself. Because you're the one guy that can "get everything to work smoothly together" and that is able to deliver entire working solutions, while practically all the others may be able to get a single part into good condition, but they stumble when it comes to getting to something working in a greater context. Their solutions will inevitably be less polished than yours.
People are not indifferent to this. It takes a while, but they notice it. And you will be in high demand because your solutions have this really nice tendency to "just work". And nobody will really understand why it is that way. Which means you'll be able to largely direct what you're going to work on next, because since nobody has a real clue why your stuff "just works" all the time, they are doomed to rely on your opinion when it comes to where your specific skill set is most valuably used next.