|
|
|
|
|
by luckylion
1201 days ago
|
|
But that boom cycle worked for much more than a decade, and it was very similar in most large tech companies. I don't think that devs are paid differently because founders are developers as well and want to promote their own, but rather: there's a lot of stuff to do where you need developers and only so many developers to do them. If you want yours done, you offer more money so developers do them for you. Unless that changes rapidly, I don't think we'll go to "developers make slightly more than the national average". |
|
You missunderstood, I was talking about founders not following the normal management culture, so they do things like "pay our people twice the market rate so we can get the best people!", no regular manager or CEO would do that, and that is how for example programmers could start earning so much more than engineers.
> I don't think we'll go to "developers make slightly more than the national average
That isn't a quote. I said similar pay to other engineers, not everyone. Engineers makes more than typical people.
> there's a lot of stuff to do where you need developers and only so many developers to do them. If you want yours done, you offer more money so developers do them for you.
This was true in the 90's as well, Microsoft was the richest company on earth yet they didn't pay all their programmers significantly more than the typical market rate for engineers. The fast rise in salaries started when lots of companies started to copy Google in the late 00's.