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by dllthomas
5025 days ago
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As I understand it, it's the bidding that is meant to change the amount developers are paid, not the bonus. I am not sure what problem the bonus was meant to solve. I can speculate that they had a problem with too few developers accepting the offers. If so, they might want to look at whether underemployment is actually a problem amongst those they are allowing in - I would guess "great in practice, not great on paper" is worth more and paid less than "great on paper, not great in practice", and everyone they are targeting is necessarily great on paper. Those who are both great in practice and great on paper are probably also working on whatever they want to be working on already. |
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I suspect it helps address the problem of getting product into the pipeline.
I see the challenge that the 3x guys and gals (not going to inflate that to 25x) don't have a 'job finding' problem or a 'pay' problem. And those are correlated strongly, if an engineer can easily find another job then that engineer and their employer know that they have to pay them enough to keep them around. So these folks don't need a job auction service.
What you can do though is find people who think they are worth a lot more than they are being paid. But they have been unsuccessful in finding another job. Rather than take that as market feedback, they search for other ways to reach out to people who can appreciate what they are worth. This auction site sounds like a really good idea to them.
If you're offering the service you want the people who are really good to use it, so that you can get good quality scores from your customers (employers) so how do you get those folks? You cut them in for a piece of the action.
That's my theory at least.