this post was submitted on 06 Oct 2024
133 points (98.5% liked)
CSCareerQuestions
967 readers
1 users here now
A community to ask questions about the tech industry!
Rules/Guidelines
- Follow the programming.dev site rules
- Please only post questions here, not articles to avoid the discussion being about the article instead of the question
Related Communities
- [email protected] - a general programming community
- [email protected] - general question community
- [email protected] - for questions targeted towards experienced developers
Credits
Icon base by Skoll under CC BY 3.0 with modifications to add a gradient
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
I'm on a similar boat. I've worked in IT programming for almost 10 yrs, and I also got no related degree (I once started a graduation but I didn't finish due to moving, disillusionment and COVID as well).
I've been unemployed for 4 months, and I kind of gave up trying to find a new IT job, switching to seek non-IT jobs. However, I found a hilarious situation where my CV "is too good" to fit non-IT jobs. I had to come up with a new, simpler CV where I omitted most of my past IT experiences, as well as omitting my incomplete graduation. So far, I couldn't find a job. To make matters worse, I'm facing depression and I had to stop my treatment (both the therapies and the medications) because it's a non-free thing, so I'm dealing with untreated depression while unemployment can be potentially worsening for my mental health. It's a fire and gasoline combination waiting to boom as I can't find something to find myself worthy to continue living.
As in, software development? Because if you see any kind of needs gap out there, you have the opportunity to fill that gap. It may take some time, but plenty of people make a modest living out of personally-constructed SAAS.
I'm curious about this, because I have always found every niche I thought I had occupied already, and the idea of trying to start up and beat someone else out felt like a lot difficult proposition for a solo developer without marketing budget or experience.
Honestly, being the first to market simply means you are shouldering the majority of the risk, and taking the majority of the blind leaps into the abyss.
The old adage,
can be very true in business more often than not. As a second-entrant, you can leverage - or avoid - what the first did to prevent yourself from falling into the same potholes they did. Plus, much of what they did - from a tech perspective - may have constrained their later decisions due to tech debt and the need to move fast. You have the ability to maximize similar decisions by building your product with those more advanced options in mind, or at the very least to have the flexibility to add options like that at a later time.