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Those with $120K+ salaries... what do you do?
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44 points
by summerlunch
4797 days ago
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I know a lot of amazing programmers who have been working for about five years, yet they still make less than $100K. I don't want to end up like them in my career and I was wondering how I could set my career path to earn more. |
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Short version: program things which make your employers lots of money, and get in the habit of mentioning that repeatedly when you negotiate aggressively for more compensation. Long version: http://www.kalzumeus.com/2011/10/28/dont-call-yourself-a-pro...
A personal anecdote: In 2006 I wrote CRUD apps, talked to people, and read a lot of documents. In 2013 I will write CRUD apps, talk to people, and read a lot of documents. I'll also get paid probably in excess of 10X what I made in 2006. To the extent that the difference involves programming, it's largely not because I've suddenly graduated to Guru Rockstar Ninja and more because I figured out how to apply programming to a few of capitalism's pressure points. (Mostly involving selling more software.) This turns out to be fantastically more valuable than writing CRUD apps to e.g. manage student lists for university back offices. This difference is a lot more important than other competing explanations like where I live, what industry I work in, or the fact that I changed from J2EE to (mostly) Ruby on Rails in the interim.
There are many HNers whose programming skill is a key asset to their line of work and yet would not be classified as programmers, by the way. I encourage you to not see their jobs as out-of-scope if your goals are making a lot of money while continuing to program. That's quite a bit of the solution set. (Then again, AmaGooBookSoft have many, many uncomplicated "We give you instructions, you producing working code implementing them" jobs which would meet your requirements.)