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by adambratt 4333 days ago
I've worked in a few different industries that are traditionally a lot more corporate than most startups. Most notably, finance.

What I've noticed is that while these companies tend to have older tech guys than you'll find at a lot of startups, it's still a lot younger age-wise than the rest of the business.

I think part of it is that the number of young people who were in tech 20 years ago compared to now was much smaller. This is a new industry and it's not completely far fetched to think that part of the reason why we are missing a lot of grey hairs is that there's simply not as many of them. It's also pretty well known that a lot of older programmers move out of full-time coding roles and into management positions. Granted this isn't universal across the board but it's been proven true in my anecdotal experiences.

Personally, I absolutely love it when I get an applicant who graduated college before 2000. No matter what their skill as a developer, I know they have way more life experience than me. Someone with experience will usually beat out the guy working more hours so for me, it's a no-brainer to hire the older guy who's done it all than a young whipper snapper who's super ambitious but has a massive ego.

1 comments

I am just about to turn 40. Been developing software for 11 and a half years professionally. I realise that I am a lot better developer than I was a while ago. Actually I have seen a lot more problems, and I have a good idea what will work two months down the line, and what will be a constant fire fighting exercise due to a half though through design.

How do I get this across to employers? All they seem interested is if I have experience in MongoDB (which in 9 out of 10 cases seems to be a crap choice).

The typical interview in the silicon valley goes like this:

him: you're coding netflix, which db you use?

you: [insert any relational db name here]

him: but what if you have a gazillion users?

you: ok ok, i'll use mongodb (sigh)

If mongodb is in fact a poor choice for their problem set and they made it anyway, you're better off not being there.

If it WAS the pragmatic or correct choice, then I'd say spend a few days or nights getting up to speed with mongo. Learning to use it is not that hard, it's keeping things working smoothly/tuning when you have a huge cluster and many consumers of it that's hard.

Start consulting or doing independent contractor work? Apply to Fog Creek software or Trello, and let us know whether the reality is as good as the marketing?
I am based in Spain. The job market for senior developers is a bit tougher here.
Come work with us! We're growing fast and love people with lots of experience.

careers@benzinga.com

Would you consider remote? I am a Django dev (at the moment) and have experience in the financial sector, but I am based in Barcelona.
We do!

Barcelona is awesome. Our COO is actually from there originally

Judging from your team photo it doesn't look like that :-) But it is a thought what counts
Yes!

We have people in China, Poland, Russia, Pakistan, France, and India!