| It was 1996 and I just graduated from college in south GA with a degree in CS. I had a choice to work for Total Systems in Columbus GA (https://www.tsys.com/) making $35K (more than enough back then and inline with entry level developers) writing Cobol. https://www.tsys.com/ My other choice was working in Atlanta GA at a company where I interned the year before as a computer operator making $22K. I chose the computer operator job because it would get me to Atlanta and I could figure out my next step after that. They ended up needing to expand to a new contract where they needed programming done six months after I joined to create the new department. I wrote the entire fairly complex data entry system by myself in C. Even today I would consider it one of my more complex green field initiatives. That let me skip the entry level developers job market completely. Another former classmate of mine is still there in 2025 pushing COBOL code. Unfortunately, the mistake I made was staying at my next company that I started working at in 1999 for over 9 years and became an expert beginner. It took me 8 years and three job changes to recover from that and become a true “senior” developer as far as scope, impact, technical skills, etc. Because of…life…and responsibilities. It was another 4 years until I got into BigTech at 46 (no longer there - thankfully). Not that I regret any of my choices. The landscape was different back then. But I preach to all younger grads to get out of enterprise dev/corporate dev as fast as possible and do whatever it takes to get into tech adjacent companies that pay more - yes “grind leetCode and work for a FAANG (or equivalent)” (tm r/cscareerquestion). No I never had to but again times are different starting out. |