| I'm in my early thirties, and I have been applying to remote jobs since this pandemic started. I still have not landed a single interview. I was an active "reverse code engineer" around 2005-2011, I worked on reversing popular software protections on both Windows & Symbian, and was involved with a certain famous (at the time) team that released tutorials on those subjects under pseudonyms. That was back when I was in high school and early years into college. I live in a third world country, and in my early twenties I dropped out of college to support my family. I built a business that's unrelated to tech and the pandemic put an end to that, so I started thinking about applying to remote jobs thinking that I can easily land an interview and ace it. Well, the problem was getting an interview. I worked extensively with x86 ASM (MASM, FASM), wrote packers/unpackers in C back in the day, wrote extensions for IDA at some point. When I built the family business, I had free time so over the last few years and I've learned and used a few other languages (Golang, Rust). I've been doing LC and LC-like problems over the years, so I can comfortably solve most DSA problems that I've seen thrown at FAANG candidates, tackled system design questions as well, so I'm familiar with SW architectures of modern software. However, since I don't have a college degree, nor an active online portfolio (github and the like), I don't meet any requirements for any of these jobs which I can do better than a large portion of the SWEs complaining on Blind about their 6 figure TC and how awful WLB is at Facebook. I could do their jobs at a fraction of the TC. Unfortunately, I was an idiot and dropped out of college. |
I'm also from a third world country (and not one with the best of reputations). I don't have a degree either and have way less work experience (or experience of any kind!) than you do. But I've found and held remote jobs, not with ease, but I did it. I did go through a period where it seemed I could not get a single interview, and what I eventually realised after feeling very sorry for myself was that I needed to both package myself better (my CV, while nicely formatted and free of errors, was pretty bad at conveying my strengths) and target my job search better. There are companies out there that are actually remote-friendly (or even remote-first), are open to hiring people outside North America and Europe, care about experience over tertiary education, and compensate well. Yet I kept applying to roles I knew I didn't have an equal (or any!) shot at largely because the companies were popular.