I feel like I've wasted the better part of my twenties trying to be a professional software engineer and founding two companies. Fortunately I have some money to show for it and I learned a lot, but at this point it seems I'm functionally unemployable / have skills that just don't make the cut anymore.
Building with AI is incredible, but when I get interviews I just flat out can't pass tech screens anymore. I've gotten lucky with a few "forward deployed" roles but for whatever reason, never get a callback after the final round.
I really enjoy software, but I need to actually figure something out that's a real career (earns more than $150k per annum). I'm sort of freaking out given that all this time and money I spent to become an engineer appears to be going to waste. It's been about four months and the prospects just aren't showing up like they used to.
Also, I have zero interest in 996 startup culture. How on earth it became impossible as an american to get a job in software where you make a decent salary and work 50hr weeks is sort of beyond my comprehension as someone in Gen Z.
Curious for advice or if anyone else has made the leap outside of tech. I fear for my mental health and stability if I don't figure something out soon. I flat out just don't know where I want to go next, even applying to sales roles has fallen flat.
I have good contacts for law school, but the notion of burning $200k on the chance that law is still a viable career with AI seems like an even worse decision than logic I applied in my 20s.
Cheers.
leakycap•3mo ago
What is your depth of knowledge in? You say software?
Law would be an risk idea if you don't love it with all your heart, even people who love law hate it by the end of law school.
silvercymbals•3mo ago
I've started two companies, exited one and technically have the skills of a "senior engineer". I've managed teams of engineers and have architected remote factory production systems for one of my companies along with a dozen or so relatively complex web apps in the fintech space.
TylerLives•3mo ago
silvercymbals•3mo ago
But most large orgs look at my resume and run since I have multiple two year stints and stints starting / running my own companies.
I'm also fully willing to admit that relative to "senior engineers" of today, maybe I just suck. In that case, idk how to move to what's next. I'm social, but not exactly normal. Also willing to see the humor in your comment that points to my potential conceit.
rockemsockem•3mo ago
To me that doesn't really say that you have senior engineer skills, i.e. designing scalable systems (both in compute and development-wise), leading multi-person projects, considering trade-offs, etc.
silvercymbals•3mo ago
rockemsockem•3mo ago
silvercymbals•3mo ago
leakycap•3mo ago
brazukadev•3mo ago
TylerLives•3mo ago
silvercymbals•3mo ago
jacktasia•3mo ago
giardini•3mo ago
It's the cymbals - lose 'em!
aaronrobinson•3mo ago
happytoexplain•3mo ago
jlarocco•3mo ago
Maybe your attitude is why you can't find a job?
Nothing in your post indicates you're "in the bay", and in the other 99% of the country $150k is a decent salary.
mothballed•3mo ago
platevoltage•3mo ago
antisthenes•3mo ago
Maybe there is something to that after all.
leakycap•3mo ago
How much do you upcharge people for your services and "products" (often virtual)? What is acceptable to you?
If you had to have a physical copy of the apps you work with, in your truck, had to buy them in advance, pay shipping, store them, then take the right copy with you to a client's house. If they paid $3 would you be OK with $30? $60? You seem incensed with $75
I used to work retail. Belkin cables were under $2 each for the store, they sold them for $39-$69 depending on what it was.
If you work in a professional role, your markup on services (almost no costs involved) and products (usually very low costs) is probably many many thousands of times more than the hardworking tradesperson you think ripped you off when they were solving an issue you needed help with and had the expertise, time, and parts to help.
antisthenes•3mo ago
If the tradesman wants additional income, I have no problem with that, bake it into their hourly rate.
> had to buy them in advance, pay shipping, store them, then take the right copy with you to a client's house.
A warehouse/shipper already does all of this, perhaps not for $3 but for $3 + shipping.
For this purpose in my relationship with tradesmen, I just pay them whatever their rate is to identify what the problem is, and then fix it myself at my own leisure using my materials, unless it involves something hazardous or requires a license.
> I used to work retail. Belkin cables were under $2 each for the store, they sold them for $39-$69 depending on what it was
You certainly don't have to explain these banalities to me (I also worked retail and ecommerce for 11 years) and they don't really contribute to the point. There are scenarios where you can get away with charging exorbitant markups and maybe 1% markup, and everything in-between. The question here is should you take advantage of under-informed homeowners
For professional services, I do mark up my time, obviously, but it is not a 25x markup as in the capacitor case.
If I calculated strictly my bare necessities to live (e.g. mortgage/food/healthcare/utilities), my rough markup would probably be around 2.5x-3x.
red-iron-pine•3mo ago
mothballed•3mo ago
walkabout•3mo ago
I know good developers who’ve done more impressive stuff than that, making at or under this $150k cut-off.
brazukadev•3mo ago
rsynnott•3mo ago
jinushaun•3mo ago
red-iron-pine•3mo ago
competitive in other parts of the US, perhaps, but for serious dyed-in-the-wool devs it's piddly